The Exodus: Fact or Fiction?
Evidence of Israel’s Exodus from Egypt

Dated to c. 1219 B.C.E., the Merneptah Stele is the earliest extrabiblical record of a people group called Israel. Set up by Pharaoh Merneptah to commemorate his military victories, the stele proclaims, “Ashkelon is carried off, and Gezer is captured. Yeno’am is made into nonexistence; Israel is wasted, its seed is not.” Ashkelon, Gezer and Yeno’am are followed by an Egyptian hieroglyph that designates a town. Israel is followed by a hieroglyph that means a people. Photo: Maryl Levine.
Is the biblical Exodus fact or fiction?
This is a loaded question. Although biblical scholars and archaeologists argue about various aspects of Israel’s Exodus from Egypt, many of them agree that the Exodus occurred in some form or another.
The question “Did the Exodus happen” then becomes “When did the Exodus happen?” This is another heated question. Although there is much debate, most people settle into two camps: They argue for either a 15th-century B.C.E. or 13th-century B.C.E. date for Israel’s Exodus from Egypt.
The article “Exodus Evidence: An Egyptologist Looks at Biblical History” from the May/June 2016 issue of Biblical Archaeology Review1 wrestles with both of these questions—“Did the Exodus happen?” and “When did the Exodus happen?” In the article, evidence is presented that generally supports a 13th-century B.C.E. Exodus during the Ramesside Period, when Egypt’s 19th Dynasty ruled.
The article examines Egyptian texts, artifacts and archaeological sites, which demonstrate that the Bible recounts accurate memories from the 13th century B.C.E. For instance, the names of three places that appear in the biblical account of Israel’s Exodus from Egypt correspond to Egyptian place names from the Ramesside Period (13th–11th centuries B.C.E.). The Bible recounts that, as slaves, the Israelites were forced to build the store-cities of Pithom and Ramses. After the ten plagues, the Israelites left Egypt and famously crossed the Yam Suph (translated Red Sea or Reed Sea), whose waters were miraculously parted for them. The biblical names Pithom, Ramses and Yam Suph (Red Sea or Reed Sea) correspond to the Egyptian place names Pi-Ramesse, Pi-Atum and (Pa-)Tjuf. These three place names appear together in Egyptian texts only from the Ramesside Period. The name Pi-Ramesse went out of use by the beginning of Egypt’s Third Intermediate Period, which began around 1085 B.C.E., and does not reappear until much later.
FREE ebook: Ancient Israel in Egypt and the Exodus.
These specific place names recorded in the biblical text demonstrate that the memory of the biblical authors for these traditions predates Egypt’s Third Intermediate Period. This supports a 13th-century Exodus during the Ramesside Period because it is only during the Ramesside Period that the place names Pi-Ramesse, Pi-Atum and (Pa-)Tjuf (Red Sea or Reed Sea) are all in use.
A worker’s house from western Thebes also seems to support a 13th-century Exodus. In the 1930s, archaeologists at the University of Chicago were excavating the mortuary Temple of Aya and Horemheb, the last two pharaohs of Egypt’s 18th Dynasty, in western Thebes. The temple was first built by Aya in the 14th-century B.C.E., but Horemheb usurped and expanded the temple when he became pharaoh. (He ruled from the late 14th century through the early 13th century B.C.E.) Horemheb chiseled out every place where Aya’s name had been and replaced it with his own. Later—during the reign of Ramses IV (12th century B.C.E.)—the Temple of Aya and Horemheb was demolished.
During their excavations, the University of Chicago uncovered a house and part of another house belonging to the workers who were given the task of demolishing the temple. The plan of the complete house is the same as that of the four-room house characteristic of Israelite dwellings during the Iron Age. However, unlike the Israelite models that were usually constructed of stone, the Theban house was made of wattle and daub. It is significant that this house was built in Egypt at the same time that Israelites were constructing four-room houses in Canaan. The similarities between the two have caused some to speculate that the builders of the Theban house were either proto-Israelites or a group closely related to the Israelites.

Is this a proto-Israelite house? This plan shows the 12th-century B.C.E. worker’s house in western Thebes next to the Temple of Aya and Horemheb. The house is undoubtedly a four-room house. In Canaan, the four-room house is considered an ethnic marker for the presence of Israelites during the Iron Age. Is the Biblical Exodus fact or fiction? This favors “fact,” so the question becomes, “When did the Exodus happen?” The presence of such a house in Egypt during the 12th century B.C.E. seems to support an Exodus during the Ramesside Period. Photo: Courtesy of Manfred Bietak.
A third piece of evidence for the Exodus is the Onomasticon Amenope. The Onomasticon Amenope is a list of categorized words from Egypt’s Third Intermediate Period. Written in hieratic, the papyrus includes the Semitic place name b-r-k.t, which refers to the Lakes of Pithom. Even in Egyptian sources, the Semitic name for the Lakes of Pithom was used instead of the original Egyptian name. It is likely that a Semitic-speaking population lived in the region long enough that their name eventually supplanted the original.
Watch full-length lectures from the Out of Egypt: Israel’s Exodus Between Text and Memory, History and Imagination conference, which addressed some of the most challenging issues in Exodus scholarship. The international conference was hosted by Calit2’s Qualcomm Institute at UC San Diego in San Diego, CA.
Another compelling piece of evidence for the Exodus is found in the biblical text itself. A history of enslavement is likely to be true. The article explains:
The storyline of the Exodus, of a people fleeing from a humiliating slavery, suggests elements that are historically credible. Normally, it is only tales of glory and victory that are preserved in narratives from one generation to the next. A history of being slaves is likely to bear elements of truth.

Exodus: Fact or fiction? This four-room house from Izbet Sartah, Israel, shares many similarities with the 12th-century B.C.E. worker’s house uncovered in western Thebes. Photo: Israel Finkelstein/Tel Aviv University.
So, is the biblical Exodus fact or fiction? Scholars and people of many faiths line up on either side of the equation, and some say both. Archaeological discoveries have verified that parts of the biblical Exodus are historically accurate, but archaeology can’t tell us everything. Although archaeology can illuminate aspects of the past and bring parts of history to life, it has its limits.
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It certainly is exciting when the archaeological record matches with the biblical account—as with the examples described here. However, while this evidence certainly adds weight to the historical accuracy of elements of the biblical account, it can’t be used to “prove” that every detail of the Exodus story in the Bible is true.
To learn more about evidence for Israel’s Exodus from Egypt, read the full article “Exodus Evidence: An Egyptologist Looks at Biblical History” in the May/June 2016 issue of Biblical Archaeology Review.
Subscribers: Read the full article “Exodus Evidence: An Egyptologist Looks at Biblical History” in the May/June 2016 issue of Biblical Archaeology Review.
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This Bible History Daily feature was originally published on April 10, 2016.
Notes
1. This BAR article is a free abstract from Manfred Bietak’s article “On the Historicity of the Exodus: What Egyptology Today Can Contribute to Assessing the Biblical Account of the Sojourn in Egypt” in Thomas E. Levy, Thomas Schneider and William H.C. Propp, eds., Israel’s Exodus in Transdisciplinary Perspective: Text, Archaeology, Culture and Geoscience (Cham: Springer, 2015). In Bietak’s article, the scholarly debate about the archaeological remains and the onomastic data of Wadi Tumilat is more elaborately treated.
Related reading in Bible History Daily
Out of Egypt: Israel’s Exodus Between Text and Memory, History and Imagination
All-Access members, read more in the BAS Library
The Exodus and the Crossing of the Red Sea, According to Hans Goedicke
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A clue to the timing of the Exodus which appears to be overlooked is Iron was in use when the Israelites killed King Og
(Og king of Bashan was the last of the Rephaites. His bed was decorated with iron and was more than nine cubits long and four cubits wide. It is still in Rabbah of the Ammonites.) Deut. 3:11 New International Version.
The five Books of Moses has be categorically determined that they are works of fiction, not facts. This is just as ridiculous as Aliens in Ancient times. You show one house and you say that it is Israelis and then jump to conclusions that the Exodus is real. Bonkers and bad archeology. Sorry to break it to all of you, Bible is fiction, just like Santa Clause.
Why are you so hateful towards Christians? Do you have some kind of grudge?
Hello Josh, I disagree!
Here my own logic. Jesus Is Logical. I means he talks with Logic that Make Sense. In John 14:29 NASB Jesus said “29 Now I have told you before it happens, so that when it happens, you may believe.” The Logic here is If I tell you that it will storm tomorrow, you will say Big Deal. But if I say to you that it will storm 74 days from today at 1 pm in your town with orange rain, you will be very skeptical. You even may forget this conversation till it truly happen and then you will say that guy knows something, he told me exactly that!!! That is the The Logic of John 14:29
Here is a prophecy being fulfilled before your own eyes!
In Mark 13:1-2 As He was going out of the temple, one of His disciples *said to Him, “Teacher, behold [a]what wonderful stones and [b]what wonderful buildings!” 2 And Jesus said to him, “Do you see these great buildings? Not one stone will be left upon another which will not be torn down.”
Here is why this passage is important
1- At that time, there was no known imminent threat to the temple.
2- That Building, The Temple, was the Heart of The Jewish Life & Worship. They were willing to defend it with every thing
3- The destruction was not accomplished by The Jesus “Team, i.e. His Disciples” to fulfill their Boss prophecy
4- The one who did it were the Romans to crush the Jewish uprising. During that they believed that there were some gold between the stones, that is why they literally turned every stone.
5- The ones that is maintaining the Destruction till this moment are the Muslims who built the mosque on top of the Temple.
6- Islam came 6-7 centuries after Jesus!!!
7- Despite the Rich Jews worldwide, Despite Return to their Promised Land, Despite the Power of their Army, They Can Not Build The Most Important and Central Building in their lives!
Please go back to John 14:29 and be Candid with yourself, Is that humanly possible? Is that a Fiction?
If you are still in doubt, why you do not raise (Earnestly and Sincerely) your eyes to the Lord of Lords and Ask One Question, Please Help My Weak Faith, Show me Yourself!
I can Assure you with one thing, If you are truthful and sincere, He will give evidence beyond any doubt. You will be The Most Fulfilled Person. You will be in my prayers. Blessings Brother
“Here is a prophecy being fulfilled before your own eyes!
In Mark 13:1-2 As He was going out of the temple, one of His disciples *said to Him, “Teacher, behold [a]what wonderful stones and [b]what wonderful buildings!” 2 And Jesus said to him, “Do you see these great buildings? Not one stone will be left upon another which will not be torn down.””
This “prophecy” is a bit ridiculous to claim. In a time where civilizations conquered and destroyed each other, you are claiming a reference to a temple being destroyed is prophecy? Jerusalem was an occupied city near the outskirts of the Roman Empire, which was at war with the neighboring Persian Empire. That isn’t a prophecy at all to say a temple might be destroyed.
Also, the “Logic of John” could be applied to absolutely anyone who makes any predictions that are near true.
The video series “Patterns of Evidence” traces the MOST likely and REALISTIC path of The Exodus. See https://www.patternsofevidence.com/
Both the Bible and Josephus have Israel starting the Exodus from the west side of the Nile, not the east Nile Delta.
“So the Hebrews went out of Egypt….Now they took their journey by Letopolis, a place at that time deserted, but where Babylon was built afterwards, when Cambyses laid Egypt waste….” (Antiquities, II, 15, 1) Letopolis was the second nome on the west side of the Nile.
“And the LORD shall utterly destroy the tongue of the Egyptian sea; and with his mighty wind shall he shake his hand over the river, and shall smite it in the seven streams, and make men go over dryshod. And there shall be an highway for the remnant of his people, which shall be left, from Assyria; like as it was to Israel in the day that he came up out of the land of Egypt” (Isaiah 11:15–16). How was God going to destroy “the tongue of the Egyptian sea”? By “his mighty wind,” as when they crossed the Red Sea (Exodus 14:21), “over the river” (Nile) and “the seven streams” (Delta). And then “men go over dryshod,” “like as” the Red Sea crossing of Exodus. Which means that Israel left from the west side of the Nile River.
Some use Exodus 13:17–18, which says Israel was “near” or close to the Promised Land. “God led them not through the way of the land of the Philistines, although that was near.” Gesenius’ Lexicon gave for this word “something short.” It was the shortest or quickest route, but not that Israel was close to the Promised Land. The same word is translated “short” in Job 17:12, KJV.
Video, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lqC5C_reCfo
Book (free), https://www.truechristianshortstoriesfreebygmmatheny.com/the-quest-for-the-red-sea-crossing.html