Between the creation of Adam and the birth of Moses there were 2368 years, according to traditional chronology.
From the birth of Abraham to the birth of Moses, 420 years elapsed.
Moses lived 40 years in the Pharaohs palace.
Nehemiah has Thirteen Chapters
Nehemiah supervised the building of the city walls. The second Temple, built by many of the people at roughly the same time, took some five years to build.
1000 years
The timeline between Adam and Moses can be derived from genealogies in the Bible, specifically in the book of Genesis. According to Genesis 5, there are 10 generations from Adam to Noah, and Genesis 11 details the generations from Noah to Abraham, totaling around 2,000 years. From Abraham to Moses, which involves the timelines in Exodus and other books, is about another 400 years. In total, this suggests there are approximately 2,400 years between Adam and Moses, though exact figures can vary based on interpretations of biblical chronologies.
Abraham (in the Bible) was born about 2015 BC (calculated from Genesis 11:26 etc) He died in about 1840 BC. (Gen 25:7-10) Moses was born about 1590 BC (Ex 6:16, 18, 20; 2:7 etc) and died when he was 120 years old (Deuteronomy 34:7). So, between the death of Abraham and the birth of Moses there was about 250 years. Jewish answer: Tradition is that there were 245 years between the death of Abraham and the birth of Moses.
150yrs
How many times is Nehemiah going to get a resurrected body? 101
King David and Prophet Moses are separated by several centuries in biblical history. Moses is traditionally dated to have lived around the 13th century BCE, while King David reigned around the 10th century BCE. This places them approximately 300 years apart, with Moses preceding David.
Zero. Throughout our entire history, there have always been Israelites (Jews) who celebrated Tabernacles (Sukkot; Leviticus ch.23), and less-religious or irreligious ones who did not celebrate it. The verse you're thinking of, Nehemiah 8:17, cannot mean that the righteous generations of King David, Solomon, etc., didn't celebrate Tabernacles. Rather, it means that in Nehemiah's time (one thousand years after Moses) there was a resurgence of enthusiasm and repentance.