There are 2 common answers to this question. The traditional answer is that Moses wrote most of the first 5 books of The Bible. Others believe that these books were complied from 4 different sources, called J (for Jehovah or YHWH); E (for Elohim); P (for Priest); and D (for Deutronomic). Personally, I believe the evidence is scant for the JEPD theory. Ultimately, we don't know for sure who wrote the pentateuch.
Enid Blyton has wrote all the famous five books
Tradition has Moses writing the first five books of the Bible. See related link:
Moses wrote the first five books in the bible only.
The four anonymous authors, or sources, who wrote the first five books of the Bible are now known as:The Yahwist, who wrote in Judah around the ninth century BCEThe Elohist, who wrote in Israel probably during the eighth century BCEThe Deuteronomist, who wrote during the seventh century BCEThe Priestly Source, who wrote around the sixth century BCE.
I have written lots of books the last five years
The five books of the Torah and first five books of the Old Testament are ordered as follows:GenesisExodusLeviticusNumbersDeuteronomy
He wrote five books
she wrote the gregor books first
Ancient Egyptians wrote the world's first medical books on scrolls of papyrus paper!
Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy, the first five books of the Bible, are commonly called the books of Moses. While these books do give a detailed account of the life of Moses, the Laws therein, were given by God, to the children of Israel, through Moses.
Yes, the first five books of the bible. The pentatuch is the first five books of the old testament. It is also called the books of Moses, or the Torah. Genisis Exodous Leviticus Numbers Deuteronomy
The last five books Roald Dahl wrote were: "My Year" "Roald Dahl's Revolting Recipes" "Esio Trot" "The Vicar of Nibbleswicke" "The Minpins"