// todo need optimize like in event.jsp. Add indexing or not indexing this page. Asiatic Exploitation and Enslavement (1 jan 1826 ano antes da era comum – 1 jan 1703 ano antes da era comum) (Linha do tempo)
30
/pt/
AIzaSyAYiBZKx7MnpbEhh9jyipgxe19OcubqV5w
April 1, 2024
3075965
478378
2

Asiatic Exploitation and Enslavement (1 jan 1826 ano antes da era comum – 1 jan 1703 ano antes da era comum)

Descrição:

Gertoux, Gérard (2015). Moses and the Exodus Chronological, Historical and Archaeological Evidence

Evidence also points to increasing numbers of Asiatics within Egypt, large numbers of whom seem to have been in domestic service (people well open to exploitation, in fact akin to slavery). In Brooklyn papyrus 35.1446102, almost 2/3 of one household's staff (95 names) have Asiatic names, while other documents contain titles such as “officer in charge of Asiatic troops” and “scribe of the Asiatics”. This document, dated from year 10 of Amenemhet III (1836-1791) to year 2 of Sobekhotep III (c. -1700), is a record of the Bureau of labour103. It shows that there were many Asiatics who were working for Egyptian masters. The document further indicates that these Asiatic names were systematically changed into Egyptian names, which is consistent with the Egyptian custom of that time, as stated in the biblical text in the case of Joseph (Gn 41:45). Most of these names are clearly West Semitic as Aquba, Menahem, Asher, Shiphra (Ex 1:15), Hiabi-ilu, Sakar and [Ab]i-Baal, Baal-tuya104. Several names also contain the form Aper(u) ‘pr(w) which could be the cause of the designation of an ethnic group

From the 12th dynasty these Asiatics (Aamu), who accounted for between 1/6 (at Abydos) and 1/3 (at Kahun) of the population of Egypt106, would be considered Egyptians "of Asiatic origin" (Hyksos). They are conventionally represented as Egyptians (only their Asiatic origin is mentioned in the texts). Many of these Asiatics entered the country as prisoners of war, others were born in Egypt from Asiatic parent. They were employed in households, on agricultural estates and in the service of temples. Their presence is evident in lists of household members and working crews on papyri, especially the ones of Kahun. A study of texts on funerary stele and other material of the time, shows that among 2600 people who appear on these objects, 800 were either themselves Aamu (‘3m.w) or had Aam (‘3m) relatives, or stood in some kind of —often job-related— connection with them. On a stele from Abydos, belonging to Amenyseneb, overseer of the monthly priesthood of a temple at Abydos, among 17 men and women whose figures are preserved, 3 are designated as Aamu: the brewer Iri, a female miller Senebit, and a man called Sobekiry. About 12% of workers portrayed in the tomb of Pahery, governor of El-Kab (c. -1480), were Asiatic (through representation of their heads). To sum up, the arrival of Asiatics in Egypt, from the 12th dynasty, was the result of continuing immigration from Syria-Palestine, which is consistent with the biblical account (Gn 41:41-45,50-1; 46:5-7,27). We therefore should not talk of an ‘invasion’. It is in such a context that the Hyksos dynasties appeared.

Adicionado na linha do tempo:

Data:

1 jan 1826 ano antes da era comum
1 jan 1703 ano antes da era comum
~ 123 years