The Israelites were never freed from Assyrian captivity. They adapted their religious beliefs to those of their captors and gradually blended into the culture that surrounded them, losing their ethnic identity. Their modern-day descendants are probably among the Iraqis, Syrians and other Middle Eastern peoples.
The Judahites, former inhabitants of Judah, were freed from Chaldean (Babylonian) captivity by King Cyrus of Persia, and allowed to return to Judah.
freed
Freed or emancipated.
free or freed (freed is past tense and past participle)
the Exodus
The Torah relates that Moses freed the slaves, with God's help.
God caused them to be freed. Moses acted as God's messenger to speak to Pharaoh and to lead the Israelites. See also:More about MosesMore about the Exodus from Egypt
When Assyrian settlers mixed with Israelites still living in Israel, Samaritans developed a hybrid religion.
probably the Exodus out of Egypt when god freed the Israelites from slavery
if you mean from egyptians its moses
Yes, "freed" is a word. It is the past tense and past participle of the verb "free," which means to release from captivity or confinement.
After Pharaoh freed the Israelites, they were pursued by the Egyptians, who sought to recapture them as they left Egypt. The Egyptians, led by Pharaoh, caught up to the Israelites at the Red Sea, where they were ultimately defeated when Moses parted the waters, allowing the Israelites to escape and the Egyptian army to be drowned. Thus, it was the Egyptians who first attempted to recapture the Israelites after their liberation.
It honors the Exodus, when God freed the Israelites from Egyptian slavery.