answersLogoWhite

0

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.
User Avatar

Wiki User

13y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

What caused pharaoh to let the hebrews go?

The ten plagues (Exodus ch.7-12).


What was the pharaoh's heart like in the story of Exodus?

In the majority of the Plagues, Pharaoh hardened his own heart. Only in a few of the later plagues did God harden Pharaoh's heart. These later cases were a punishment for Pharaoh having hardened his own heart while he still had free will.


Why did the the pharaoh of Egypt finally decide to free the Hebrews?

God brought many plagues upon Pharaoh's country (Exodus ch.7-12).


How did God convince the Pharaoh to set the Israelites free?

In the biblical story, God used a series of plagues to demonstrate his power and persuade the Pharaoh to release the Israelites. After witnessing the devastating plagues firsthand, the Pharaoh eventually relented and allowed the Israelites to leave Egypt.


How did the egyptians handle the 10 plagues of Egypt?

That is not stated. What is stated, is how Pharaoh and his advisers reacted to the plagues. In the majority of the plagues, Pharaoh hardened his own heart; and in the first two, even his advisers did the same. Only later did their attitude soften. See Exodus chapters 7-12.


Who is the pharos during the exodus?

During the Exodus, the Pharaoh is the ruler of Egypt who opposes Moses and the Israelites' departure from slavery. Traditionally identified as Ramses II in many interpretations, the Pharaoh's hardened heart leads to a series of plagues inflicted upon Egypt by God, ultimately culminating in the Exodus of the Israelites. His refusal to let the people go signifies the struggle between divine will and human authority.


Why did God send the frogs upon Egypt?

God sent ten plagues upon Egypt (Exodus ch.7-12), not only the plague of frogs. The purpose of the plagues was to impress upon Pharaoh and the Egyptians that God is the Boss (Exodus 7:5) and that the Israelites must be freed in order to serve Him (Exodus 7:26).The K'li Yakar commentary writes that, since the Egyptians worshiped the Nile, God symbolically trounced their false belief by making the Nile a source of anguish in the first two plagues. Also, since Pharaoh refused to recognize the voice of God (Exodus 5:2), He forced Pharaoh to listen to the constant croaking of the frogs (and later the unnaturally loud thunder during the hailstorms (Exodus 9:28) (K'li Yakar).


What prompted the pharaoh to free the Hebrews?

The plagues which God brought upon Egypt (Exodus ch.7-12).


Why did the pharaoh continue to be stubborn?

At first, he made a conscious decision to refuse to permit the freeing of the Israelites. In a few of the later plagues, God Himself hardened Pharaoh's heart, for a reason given in Exodus ch.10.


What book is the 10 plagues in?

Exodus


Was the Pharaoh during the Exodus killed along with his army?

Yes, Pharaoh died along with the entire Egyptian army.


What did God make Pharaoh?

God made pharaoh the 10 plagues.