Jakob - pannous/hieros GitHub Wiki

Egyptian hieroglyps preserve a fantastic case of biblical historicity and of astonishing continuity in names over the Millenia:

One of the Hyksos Kings is called.
𓇋 𓄿 𓎡 𓃀 I.A.K.B which in all likeliness is a rendering of our Jacob!

This is most remarkable and relevant. We also find the name of his followers:
𓇋 𓄿 𓎡 𓃀 𓇋 𓇋 𓁸 𓏥||mourners|Jakobians

The only thing to add is the possibility that the Semitic etymology of this name is flawed, and that the original reading might have been closer to

𓇋 𓄿 𓎡 𓃀 Vi.ar K.b* which could naturally mean anything.

Fortunately we have a prominent vocabulary entry for the first part:
𓇋 𓄿 𓅱 𓀀 𓏪 Old Man `i.air.o > Hiero < gero
or 𓇋𓄿 vyear > vielle

So 'Jacob' might have been HieroCoptus, or somthing very different.

A connection to Kadmos of Greek mythology is not supported by anything other than one letter '𓎡', and the fact that the last king of the Hyksos, Khamudi, matches some of the legends and archaeological findings about Kadmos quite nicely.

𓇋 𓄿 𓎡 𓃀 𓇋 𓇋 𓁸 𓏥||mourners|Jakobiner! < Copt? יַעֲקֹב Jaʿakow = Jisrael ⋍ 1800BC ! 'Fersenhalter' 𓃀
𓇋 𓄿 𓎡 𓃀 𓇋 𓇋 𓁸 𓏥||mourners|Jakobiner<Isaak<Abraham
𓇋 𓄿 𓎡 𓃀 𓇋 𓇋 𓁸 𓏥||mourners|Jakob's Steinsäule: 𓊽𓏤גַּלְעֵד/𓉼מצפה 𓉻𓏤𓆱 letzter Kontakt mit Gott!
𓇋 𓄿 𓎡 𓃀 𓇋 𓇋 𓁸 𓏥||mourners|Jakob's Söhne = Zwölf Stämme Israels! Ruben, Simeon, Levi, Juda, Issachar und Sebulon. Josef und Benjamin. Dan und Naftali. Gad und Ascher.
𓇋 𓄿 𓎡 𓃀 𓇋 𓇋 𓁸 𓏥||mourners| ... Seinen Sohn Josef bevorzugt, Streit um Landrechte, vergewaltigt

The Semitic custom of treating all names with 'Ja' as semitic seems like a cheap trick.
It's like saying that He=God therefore Heracles must mean 'God' + r-c-l (whatever word you find: God-recalls ...). This custom is very unsatisfying (and in most cases likely wrong). Names should not be used to identify the ethnics of Kings.