By walking, approximately 2 weeks.
The above answer is absolutely right. The reason it took the Israelites 40 years was because of their unbelief in not wanting to enter the promised land. They also went by a more round about route which would have made it take a month or two longer anyway. Much of the 40 years was spent at Kadesh-Barnea in the Negev region.
The Book of Exodus tells us that the Israelites travelled from Egypt to the Promised Land, but does not provide sufficient detail to establish the length of this journey. There is considerable debate as to just what route they would have taken.On the other hand, the respected Israeli archaeologist, Israel Finkelstein says that over ninety per cent of scholars say there never was an Exodus from Egypt as described in The Bible. The Israelites did not actually travel from Egypt to the Promised Land.
Joshua and Caleb were the only two of the adults who left Egypt to enter the Promised Land. There were many more who entered the land with them.
two
The land mass of Egypt is - 386,662 square miles The land mass of Wyoming is - 97,814 square miles To determine how many times larger Egypt is then Wyoming you divide: 386,662/97,814 = 3.953 Egypt is 3.953 times larger than Wyoming
The exact size of the Promised Land is uncertain as it is a religious and historical concept rather than a specific geographical location. The term typically refers to the area of land promised by God to the Israelites in the Hebrew Bible.
Promised Land - novel - has 182 pages.
The Old Testament speaks of him leading them to 'The Promised Land', that is, a land where they could set up their own separate independent nation without fear of persecution and enslavement by regional Superpowers such as Egypt. Many people believe that The Promised Land was a kind of second Garden of Eden, a 'land of milk and honey' (Exodus 3:8) that would be Paradisical in nature. It was an area where God promised them that they could be free from abuse, and that would be agriculturally fertile and water-rich enough for them to generate a plentiful food supply and to create their own state.
The Book of Exodus tells us that the Israelites travelled from Egypt to the Promised Land, but does not provide sufficient detail to establish the length of this journey. There is considerable debate as to just what route they would have taken.On the other hand, the respected Israeli archaeologist, Israel Finkelstein says that over ninety per cent of scholars say there never was an Exodus from Egypt as described in the Bible. The Israelites did not actually travel from Egypt to the Promised Land.
It has been reported that almost all biblical scholars now agree that there never was an Exodus from Egypt, nor a military conquest of Canaan as described in the Bible. The historical answer is therefore that no Hebrews started out from Egypt or entered the Promised Land after forty years in the wilderness.However, Exodus does say that approximately six hundred thousand fighting men left Egypt. Numbers goes to considerable lengths to demonstrate this figure, and furthermore says that almost exactly the same number entered the Promised Land forty years later. It has been estimated that 600,000 fighting men would be equivalent to a total population of at least two and a half million people, including priests, women, children and the elderly. This is both the number supposed to have left Egypt and to have entered the Promised Land. As none of those who left Egypt would be permitted to enter th Promised Land (except Joshua and Caleb), then many millions more must have been born, died and were buried in the wilderness.
"Manchild in the Promised Land" by Claude Brown has 415 pages in its original edition.
its approximated that over 700 Jews made it to the promised land
How Many Miles From Egypt to New York?