Archaelogical Evidence Supporting the Exodus Account

Using the correct numbers and manuscripts completes an ancient puzzle. Image: Thutmose III Academics who take the biblical narrative seriously about the Exodus from Egypt are divided about when it happened. Mention of Rameses (Gen. 47:11; Ex. 12:37; Nu. 33:3) suggests a later date, which raises all kinds of conflicts with history and causes a cloud of doubt about the story. But those mentions may be an indication of when the narrative was put to scroll, not when the events occurred. If you take the Bible dates and numbers seriously, which I did in a very careful study, you come up with an Exodus date of about 1446 BC/BCE (before Christ or before the common era). That makes Amenhotep II, a militant king who often raided Canaan for slaves and concubines, the pharaoh of the Exodus, in which case, by around 1500 BCE Israel was a cohesive ethnic group with an identity worthy of mention along with other well-established groups and states. So although the question may never be set...