Hyksos
The Hyksos kings were a group of Baal worshiping invaders from Canaan (modern day Israel) who ruled Egypt from 1650 bc as pharao's from the 15th dynasty until 1550 bc. They ruled from Avaris in the Nile delta region with the crook symbol (later synonym for criminal) and introduce the use of horses (first domesticated in Atlantis) and chariots. They used black Nubians as slaves and were in alliance with the Nesilim. Like the Babylonians, they used the lion symbol (later House of Judah). The Hyksos kings were Salitis, Semqen, Aperanat, Khyan, Yanassi, Sakir-Har, Apophis and Kamudi. The 16th dynasty ruled from Thebes. |
Akhenaten pharaoh of the 18th Dynasty, son of Queen Tiyee (Nordic bloodline of Yuya) and Amenhotep III, who ruled Egypt from 1353 bc to 1336 bc, introduced monotheism (the God program) in Egypt with the worship of the sun disk Aten at the city Amarna (sun gazing as daily morning ritual). He moved to Anu/Heliopolis, for his education under the supervision of snake priests of sun god Ra.
Horemheb, Ramses 1 and Seti planned a military coup against him. To prevent civil war, he abdicated the throne to his son Tutanchaten who changed his name into Tutanchamun and restored the old religion.
Ramesses II moved the Egyptian capital to Pi-Ramesses, close to Avaris and Tanis.
In the jewish bible of the Judaism cult Akhenaten became the biblical figure Moses and the Nile delta region of Avaris the Land of Goshen (propaganda story in which the Atentists were not expelled but were liberated slaves). The phrase 'stranger in a strange land' in Exodus refers to Moses as a foreign king, his descent from the Hyksos.