Abraham (in The Bible) was born about 2015 BC (calculated from Genesis 11:26 etc) He died in about 1840 BC. (Gen 25:7-10)
Moses was born about 1590 BC (Ex 6:16, 18, 20; 2:7 etc) and died when he was 120 years old (Deuteronomy 34:7).
So, between the death of Abraham and the birth of Moses there was about 250 years.
Jewish answer:
Tradition is that there were 245 years between the death of Abraham and the birth of Moses.
Chat with our AI personalities
6.
Abraham had Isaac. Isaac had Jacob. Jacob had Levi. Levi had Kohath. Kohath had Amram. Amram had Moses.
120
Mary, Joseph, the three Kings, Moses, David, Rameses, Herod, the Caesars, Ruth, Esther, Abraham, Jacob/Israel, Isaac, Rebekah, Sarah, Rachel, Leah, Noah, Elijah, Solomon, Job---there are more! Add on!!!
There were 40 years between 1861 and 1901.
39 years.
most historians and anthropologist do not recognize moses as a historical figure. the ancient egyptians who recorded history quite well, did not write of moses. for example, locust were a constant threat, the red mud turned the waters red yearly, and ancient egypts 42 negative confessions, which include moses' 10 commandments, predate the hebrew moses by about 1500 years. fifteen hundred years also predates the entrance of the hebrews into egypt (abraham and his family) which was 1250 b.c. Even more interesting is the fact that the last of pyramids built by indigenous african egyptians (Ahmose) had already been constructed - meaning the slave labor of foreignors building pyramids after 1250 is simply unprovable. 400 years after abraham entered egypt and the hebrews were supposedly enslaved places us at about 850 b.c. - at which time foreignors were constantly attacking and occupying parts of egypt - making egypt hardly a place that could have sustained a major slavery campaign. in short, moses is likely a fictional character given the egytian name - ahmose - the name of an egyptian king who actually lived, and expelled the hyksos occupiers, whom many anthropologist believe were foreign invaders (not slaves) from the north.