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Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

Pharaohs Gold
Pharaohs Gold

For 100 years the Pharaohs had ruled the southern countries of Kemet from their base in Thebes, but hated to pay taxes to AAMU (Asians or Hyksos) who ruled the middle and northern area of the country. During the reign of Tao II Seqenenre However, the dispute came to head when the leader of the Overlord and AAMU, Apepi I warned him against a fermenting rebellion. Little is known of what happened next, but from the number of wounds found on the mummified body of Seqenenre, especially to his skull, he seems to have died violently in the battle. If that is the case, there is no record of him in the fight against Apepi, but this is not surprising, since the Pharaoh only ever recorded his victories, not his defeats..

His son was Kamose Pharaoh and he took the fight against the oppressors in the north. Sailing down river, he attacked and conquered a supporter of the AAMU Teti, who held the garrison of Nefrusi. The city was looted, many were slain, and the rest were stripped of their possessions and many of them taken as slaves. Kamose and his army then swept north like a whirlwind, driving the AAMU from the delta.

On the way his men captured a courier with a message from Apepi to the Nubian ruler of Kush, with the request that he attack Kamose from behind and trap him between the two forces. To prevent such an ambush, Kamose sent a detachment of his troops to the western desert, where they took control of the desert route that ran from the south of the country to the north by occupying the Barhriya Oasis, a position from which they controlled the road.

After giving Apepi a bloody nose and destroying many of the cities belonging to him and his followers, not much more is known about Kamose. He only reigned for three years or so, and maybe it was one last battle with Apepi that he fought and lost was his undoing. Whatever happened it is known that AAMU, ApepiĀ  still maintained AvarisĀ  as their capital city in the north.

We believe Thebes in the next Pharaoh, Ahmose I, was the brother of Kamose. Ahmose came to the throne as a young boy and it was many years before he led the armies of Kemet north. The strange Ahmose is that while growing up and still weak Apepi never once attacked Thebes. Maybe Kamose not only had him a bloody nose, maybe he had completely decimated his army.

Ahmose was old enough when he led his army north and five battle against AAMU Avaris fought around the delta, the siege of the city. Abandoned by his commanders responsible for the siege, he took part of the army from the south to Thebes, where he took a stand. On his return to Avaris, Ahmose thought that his commanders had allowed the AAMU to Kemet leave in exchange for giving up the city. Not satisfied with this Ahmose settled through the desert in pursuit of them. He followed them all the way to the south of Palestine, where the AAMU took shelter in Sharuhen. After suffering a siege for three years the AAMU fled to Syria.

Have seen from the AAMU, Ahmose turned south and drove the Nubians of Kush. He drove them back after the second cataract of the Nile and Djehuty appointed viceroy the area to check. While Ahmose Kush was a new rebellion led by Teti and an ally of the AAMU erupted in the north. This rebellion was however destroyed by Ahhotpe, the mother of Ahmose and he received a Golden fly, an award for bravery

Ahmose back to Kush agree to lay down a rebellion, and returned to Palestine and even so far have reached the Euphrates. Apart from the details of his family and some construction projects, is little to add to the story of Ahmose. But then something must be added, he was the man who finally freed from the rich black land of the Nile for those foreign devils The AAMU.

Exodus 12:35-36 Egyptians gave everything that comes out.

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