{
"item_title" : "Moses",
"item_author" : [" D. Sennfelt "],
"item_description" : "In the Afar Depression of East Africa, at the tripoint where Ethiopia, Eritrea, and Djibouti meet, there is a volcano the local people have called Moussa Ali since before the Arabic tongue carried the name. Moussa. Moses. The mountain of Moses. No one living knows when the identification was made. The name simply is - worn into the landscape by repetition, generation after generation, surviving every political disruption because something in the place warranted keeping it alive. This book proposes that the mountain earned its name. Moses: The African Origins of the Covenant argues that the man the biblical tradition calls Moses was Ahmose-Ankh - eldest son and designated heir of Ahmose I, founder of Egypt's Eighteenth Dynasty. His name was erased from the monuments after Year 17 of his father's reign, chiselled from stone with the thoroughness the Egyptian state reserved for its most serious offenders. He did not die. He fled south - along the Nile into Nubia, through the Ethiopian highlands, into the volcanic rift of the Afar Depression - and the Egyptian administrative record's silence is the trace of his departure. The evidence assembled here is threefold. The Egyptian archive provides the erasure - the damnatio memoriae of a crown prince whose offence was grave enough to warrant the removal of his name from history. The geography of the Afar provides the landscape - Lake Abhe Bad's papyrus margins as the sea of reeds, its limestone chimneys as the pillars of cloud and fire, Moussa Ali's caldera as the mountain of fire and smoke that Exodus 19 describes in volcanic detail. And the southern priestly tradition - the Meroitic civilization of the upper Nile, the Kandake lineage of queens who embodied the divine feminine across centuries of African highland history, the priestly household of Jethro and Zipporah who transmitted to a fugitive prince the deepest knowledge of the pre-flood world's most ancient civilization - provides the formation that made Moses capable of receiving and transmitting what he received on the mountain. This is not the Sinai. This is Africa. The Exodus narrative is not a Near Eastern story with an Egyptian prologue. It is an African story whose protagonist was formed in Africa, whose geography is African, whose theological sources are African, and whose living institutional expression - in the Ethiopian church's canonical scripture, in the Beta Israel community's archaic liturgical practices, in the guardian monk who maintains his lifelong vigil over the Ark in a treasury in Aksum - remains African to this day. Moses: The African Origins of the Covenant is the first book to assemble this case in full: the Egyptian administrative history, the Afar Depression's volcanic geology, the Meroitic civilization's astronomical traditions, the precessional architecture of the forty-year processional, and the theological framework of the Atlantean wisdom tradition that Moses received from the southern priestly lineage and carried northward in the acacia-and-gold vessel that three of the world's great religions have organized themselves around ever since. The mountain is still there. The name is still there. The argument has been waiting as long as both.",
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Overview
In the Afar Depression of East Africa, at the tripoint where Ethiopia, Eritrea, and Djibouti meet, there is a volcano the local people have called Moussa Ali since before the Arabic tongue carried the name. Moussa. Moses. The mountain of Moses. No one living knows when the identification was made. The name simply is - worn into the landscape by repetition, generation after generation, surviving every political disruption because something in the place warranted keeping it alive.
This book proposes that the mountain earned its name. Moses: The African Origins of the Covenant argues that the man the biblical tradition calls Moses was Ahmose-Ankh - eldest son and designated heir of Ahmose I, founder of Egypt's Eighteenth Dynasty. His name was erased from the monuments after Year 17 of his father's reign, chiselled from stone with the thoroughness the Egyptian state reserved for its most serious offenders. He did not die. He fled south - along the Nile into Nubia, through the Ethiopian highlands, into the volcanic rift of the Afar Depression - and the Egyptian administrative record's silence is the trace of his departure. The evidence assembled here is threefold. The Egyptian archive provides the erasure - the damnatio memoriae of a crown prince whose offence was grave enough to warrant the removal of his name from history. The geography of the Afar provides the landscape - Lake Abhe Bad's papyrus margins as the sea of reeds, its limestone chimneys as the pillars of cloud and fire, Moussa Ali's caldera as the mountain of fire and smoke that Exodus 19 describes in volcanic detail. And the southern priestly tradition - the Meroitic civilization of the upper Nile, the Kandake lineage of queens who embodied the divine feminine across centuries of African highland history, the priestly household of Jethro and Zipporah who transmitted to a fugitive prince the deepest knowledge of the pre-flood world's most ancient civilization - provides the formation that made Moses capable of receiving and transmitting what he received on the mountain. This is not the Sinai. This is Africa. The Exodus narrative is not a Near Eastern story with an Egyptian prologue. It is an African story whose protagonist was formed in Africa, whose geography is African, whose theological sources are African, and whose living institutional expression - in the Ethiopian church's canonical scripture, in the Beta Israel community's archaic liturgical practices, in the guardian monk who maintains his lifelong vigil over the Ark in a treasury in Aksum - remains African to this day. Moses: The African Origins of the Covenant is the first book to assemble this case in full: the Egyptian administrative history, the Afar Depression's volcanic geology, the Meroitic civilization's astronomical traditions, the precessional architecture of the forty-year processional, and the theological framework of the Atlantean wisdom tradition that Moses received from the southern priestly lineage and carried northward in the acacia-and-gold vessel that three of the world's great religions have organized themselves around ever since. The mountain is still there. The name is still there. The argument has been waiting as long as both.This item is Non-Returnable
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Details
- ISBN-13: 9798258331786
- ISBN-10: 9798258331786
- Publisher: Independently Published
- Publish Date: April 2026
- Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 1.01 inches
- Shipping Weight: 1.33 pounds
- Page Count: 454
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