Posted on 03/28/2006 10:58:04 PM PST by SunkenCiv
Georgeos Diaz-Montexano, scriptologist and Egyptologist amateur, has been able to identify the names of the Hyksos kings like pertaining to the group of languages and proto-Greek or Mycenaean's dialects.
The true ethnic origin of the mysterious Hyksos that were able to take control of the power of a considerable part of Old Egypt, during centuries XVII to the XVI before Christ, has been always a true challenge for the Egyptologists. However, the generalized opinion more for a long time has been that the Hyksos would be Semitic towns, fundamentally coastal inhabitants of the strip Syrian-Palestine, that is, Canaanites or proto-Phoenicians. Nevertheless, as it indicates Diaz-Montexano, to date an identification had not been made signs or solid of each one of the names of the Hyksos kings according to the data contributed by Manetho in its chronicle of Egypt; in fact, as soon as only two of the six names of Hyksos kings mentioned by this Egyptian amanuenses have been able to relate approximately - to other two names of Semitic origin.
(Excerpt) Read more at rowleyregis.com ...
"....I'm really, really not aware of any such thinking. It has been claimed (for years, really) that at least some of the Sea Peoples (who are much later in Egyptian history) came from the Greek islands, the mainland, and from Anatolia. That's not my view, but it is very common. I've never heard any such origin offered for the Hyksos...."
I made posted my remark before linking to the article and reading it, but the author evidently agrees with me:
"..."...These names only appear registered in the oldest dialects of the Greek, which does not seem no chance. If my hypothesis arrives to be accepted by the experts in Greek philology and Indo-European, in the names of kings Hyksos de Manetho we would have a testimony of the older Indo-European forms known these names that later superlived in the Doric's and Aeolian Greek dialects. Dialects that are considered already existed at the same time of the Dynasties of the Hyksos... I probably think that the Hyksos could be proto-Greek Indo-European towns, of Minoico-Mycenean origin, and this would explain the considerable amount of found evidences of this civilization in Avaris... ". - Diaz Montexano comments...."
(Babelfish makes a mess of things, doesn't it?)
Manfred Bietak related:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/891225/posts?page=20#20
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/971487/posts?page=132#132
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/1180724/posts?page=18#18
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1457410/posts?page=13#13
And from another web search:KUP, Chapter 6Recently Manfred Bietak, the archaeologist who is excavating ancient Avaris, reported the discovery of a room covered with Minoan frescoes, and dated it to the beginning of the XVIII dynasty; presumably this was a place where Minoan traders or ambassadors stayed, while visiting the main city of northeast Egypt.
by Charles Kimball
images of Bietak's Minoan finds, from "Minoan Wall-Paintings unearthed at Ancient Avaris":Helmi, EzbetFormerly called Tell el-Qirqafa. Amsterdam University survey of 1984 noted the presence of a quartzite block in the village, measuring 100 x (75+) x 17cm, pierced by a central square shaft. This site was probably the location of the Djadu of the 12th dynasty, found by Labib Habachi. Now the site is the focus of a major excavation by the Austrian Institute, working under cultivated fields some 800 metres west of their excavations at Tell ed-Daba. Major discoveries include Minoan wall paintings, an Eighteenth Dynasty palace, a Hyksos palace and water-supply system.
Gallery 1
Gallery 2
Gallery 3
Bietak, M., Minoan Wall-Paintings unearthed at Ancient Avaris, Egyptian Archaeology. The Bulletin of the Egyptian Exploration Society 2, 1992, p. 26.
On the other hand, here is a web site that claims that the Hykso were none other than the ancient Jews! (makes a pretty good argument for it, too....)
http://www.imninalu.net/Hyksos.htm
:') But that isn't true, and the arguments aren't sound, just rehashed anti-Jewish junk, some of which dates to ancient times (Apion, most notoriously; but also Josephus, who wrote "Against Apion" as a rebuttal to Apion's "Against the Jews").
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Just updating the GGG info, not sending a general distribution. |
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