Patrick Clarke
Biography
Patrick Clarke is an Egyptologist with primary interests in the pharaonic tombs of the Valley of the Kings, particularly the tomb cutting techniques, wall decorating, and associated texts. Long ago convinced that the Egyptian chronology is over-extended by several centuries, Patrick has spent two decades researching into, and writing about, the conflicts of the Egyptian chronology with that of the Old Testament. He is constructing a revised chronology demonstrating that the Old Testament history from the beginning of Genesis onwards is completely reliable. Patrick currently resides in France with his wife Anne, and son Daniel.
Articles
Journal of Creation
- Why Pharaoh Hatshepsut is not to be equated to the Queen of Sheba
- Is Hatshepsut the biblical ‘Queen of Sheba’? Letter to the Editor by David Down. Reply: Patrick Clarke
- Was Thutmose III the biblical Shishak?—Claims for the ‘Jerusalem’ bas-relief at Karnak investigated
- The biomedical properties of ancient Egyptian black eye makeup
- Was Jerusalem the Kadesh of Thutmose III’s 1st Asiatic campaign?—topographic and petrographic evidence
- Thutmose III was not the Shishak of 1 Kings 14:25–26. Letter to the Editor from Drew Worthen. Reply: Patrick Clarke
- Wisdom literature and the question of priority—Solomon’s Proverbs or Amenemope’s Instruction
- Egyptian coins in the time of Joseph
- The Stele of Merneptah—assessment of the final ‘Israel’ strophe and its implications for chronology
- The Queen of Sheba and the Ethiopian problem
- Joseph’s Zaphenath Paaneah—a chronological key
Creation magazine
- A healing gift from the Creator
- Butterflies fly on designer wings
- Egyptian blue: The science of the ancients and their ‘eternal’ colour
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