Yesterday I was reading through some things while working on "The Horns of Moses" and then today, I made an interesting discovery.
The first text is Gary Greenberg's "Osarseph and Exodus: Literary Reflections in an Egyptian Mirror" Delivered at the annual meeting of the International Society of Biblical Literature, Lausanne, Switzerland 1997" which is located here:
http://ggreenberg.tripod.com/ancientne/osar.html
In this discussion, he tells us:
The first text is Gary Greenberg's "Osarseph and Exodus: Literary Reflections in an Egyptian Mirror" Delivered at the annual meeting of the International Society of Biblical Literature, Lausanne, Switzerland 1997" which is located here:
http://ggreenberg.tripod.com/ancientne/osar.html
In this discussion, he tells us:
GGreenberg said:ABSTRACT
The story of Osarseph, preserved by Josephus and attributed by him to an Egyptian priest named Manetho, tells of the struggles between a rebellious Egyptian priest named Osarseph and a Pharaoh Amenhotep and his son “Ramesses also called Sethos