The Pharaoh's Daughter (54 page)

Read The Pharaoh's Daughter Online

Authors: Mesu Andrews

BOOK: The Pharaoh's Daughter
7.73Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

So I went with 1250 BCE—as did Cecil B. DeMille and Walt Disney.

With the date of the Exodus established, and Moses's age given in Scripture, it should have been an easy process to establish which king ordered Hebrew baby boys to be killed. Simply add eighty years to 1250 BCE—right?

According to Ian Shaw in
The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt
, the reigning pharaoh in 1330 BCE was—drumroll, please—King Tut.

Wait! Tut had no daughters. In fact, he died before he and his sister-wife had any children. Ankhe-Senpaaten's (Senpa's) miscarriages are historically accurate. So how could Pharaoh's daughter pull Moses from the Nile when Pharaoh had no daughters?

Because King Tut had a sister, who would have been Pharaoh Akhenaten's daughter—Meryetaten-tasherit. I fictionalized her adoption by Horemheb to create an important connection.

Keep reading. You'll love the way Egyptian history and God's Word fit together.

Finding Moses

The walls of Egypt's Great Hypostyle Hall tell us much about the New Kingdom's pharaohs and their military campaigns. On the northern exterior wall, Pharaoh Sety is accompanied into the Libyan and Syrian campaigns by a “group marshaller” or “fan bearer” named
Mehy.
But this mysterious character has no recorded genealogy or burial among a civilization of meticulous record-keeping. How can it be?

Further confusing Egyptologists, biblical scholars, and hobbyists,
Mehy's
name and likeness were rubbed out and in some places replaced by Sety's son, Rameses II. Of course, other pharaohs were known to replace the name of a previous pharaoh on monuments, but why would Rameses II try to erase a simple fan bearer or commander?

When I discovered
Mehy
was most likely a nickname for Horemheb (also from Ian Shaw's book,
The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt
), I knew I could link Moses to Pharaoh Horemheb and needed to link Tut's sister (Moses's Egyptian mother) to Horemheb as well. Thus, the fictional adoption of Anippe.

But Mehy isn't fiction, and neither is Moses. Are they the same man? Only God knows.

Finding God

Writing a biblical novel is both frustrating and exhilarating. It's like a treasure hunt; I get to dig into ancient texts to find often-overlooked details that affirm, clarify, and sometimes deepen my understanding of God's Word. However, sometimes that historical knowledge confuses me or seems to contradict God's Word (like the instance of Pharaoh's daughter perhaps being Tut's sister).

During the writing of
The Pharaoh's Daughter
, our God has been so near, guiding me through each roadblock and confusing Egyptian record. He has patiently shown me—much like Mered and El-Shaddai showed Bithiah—that He is real, present, and very capable to manage each problem that seems insurmountable.

I pray, dear reader, that you too will find the great El-Shaddai to be a real and present Guide from this moment forward.

The L
ORD
bless you

and keep you;

the L
ORD
make his face shine on you

and be gracious to you;

the L
ORD
turn his face toward you

and give you peace.

—N
UMBERS
6
:
24
–
26

Other books

Max Lucado by Facing Your Giants
The Great Arab Conquests by Kennedy, Hugh
Pandora's Box by K C Blake
Falling In by Hopkins, Andrea
Down the Rabbit Hole by Monica Corwin
Live to Tell by G. L. Watt
El juego de los Vor by Lois McMaster Bujold
The Fall of the Year by Howard Frank Mosher