The order of the 10 Plauges: 1.the water that turned into blood and killed all marine life/fish 2.frogs 3.lice 4.flies 5.the livestock got diseases 6.uncurable boils (ugh!) 7.hail, thunder/ bad storms 8.locusts 9.darkness 10.death of all firstborn firstborn Egyptains (people and animals) they could be saved if the Israelites put lamb's blood on their door
The Egyptian goddess of epidemics is Sekhmet. She is depicted as a lioness and is associated with war, healing, and disease. Sekhmet was believed to unleash plagues upon humanity but could also provide healing and protection from diseases when appeased. Her dual nature reflects the balance between destruction and healing in Egyptian mythology.
Without anything more specific than that, the answer would have to be "animals for food and people found guilty of capital crimes". If you are specifically referring to the Exodus story in Egypt, it could be one of two things. If "they" refers to the Egyptians loyal to Pharaoh, it would be the male babies of every Hebrew slave. If "they" refers to God, it would be large quantities of fish (plague 1), large quantities of livestock (plague 5), an immense amount of crops (plagues 7 & 8), and every Egyptian firstborn son (plague 10).
There isn't really one. There is the ankh, the symbol of life, but thats the closest you can get
No one knows the answer since the Bible does not clearly say. Most likely, to be ambiguous, the plagues lasted as long as Pharoah could stand it; then he would call Moses and tell him something like, "I have sinned. Remove the plague and your people may leave." Once the plague was removed, Pharaoh would change his mind. Therefore, the plagues each seemed to last as long as the Egyptian king could stand it. I'm sorry that I can't be of more help, but the Bible does not say.
Well, honey, Moses had to play a high-stakes game of chicken with Pharaoh for a while. It took a total of ten plagues raining down on Egypt before Pharaoh finally caved and let the Israelites skedaddle out of there. So, to answer your question, it took Moses ten plagues worth of convincing to get Pharaoh to release the people.
An Egyptian word that starts with N could be Nefertiti who was an Egyptian queen and the wife of Akhenaten, an Egyptian Pharoah.
I assume you are referencing the 10 plagues of the Exodus. According to the Bible, they were not, and could not have been, man-made. For example, Exodus 8:5 says that the plague of frogs came up from the fresh water after Aaron stretched out his hand over the waters. The plague of flies came one day after Moses warned pharaoh and the flies avoided the areas where the Jews lived (Exodus 8:20-24). And consider the final plague: the death of every firstborn son of the Egyptians which struck at midnight (Ex 11:4-5, 7).
A:The terrible plagues described in the Bible, including the nation-wide loss of the first-borns, would have caused enormous social upheaval and economic distress, so it should be easy to tell from the copious Egyptian records of the time just when this happened and who was king, or pharaoh, at the same time. However nothing appears anywhere in the record. Egypt remained prosperous right through the Late Bronze Age, and there is no hint of any event that could have resulted from these terrible plagues. Historians conclude they did not happen as described in the Bible.
yes. I know more about rome than you.
They wanted to find the Promise Land where its green and plenty of water is for all
Erosion.People.Rain.Wind.