He was three months old.
He was three months. pharaoh's daughter found him and adopted him
Moses was born to a family of Israelites in a time when the Pharoah of Egypt had ordered every Israelite baby boy to be killed. To save him, Moses's mother and sister Miriam wove a basket, put Moses in, and sent it down the Nile. Miriam followed the basket until it was carried by the Nile into the Pharoah's palace. There, a princess found the boy, and loved him instantly. After this point there are two variations of the tale. The first is that the Princess already had a son (Ramases), but decided to raise Moses as well, and the second variation is that Miriam asked the Princess if she wanted someone to feed the baby. The Princess agreed and Miriam fetched her mother. The Princess asked Moses' mother to care for him until he was old enough to live in the palace with her.Not exactly. The Biblical Narritive (found in Exodus), agrees with the above answer until the suggestion that there's "two variations" of the story. The princess named the baby "Moses" herself, and allowed Miriam to take the child back to a Hebrew for rearing until he was of age (all found in Scripture). Where exactly Ramasees comes into play is a mystery.
It has been here since the time of Moses It has been here since the time of Moses
Her name was AsisA Bible perspective:As the question is categorized under "Old Testament," it should be noted that Scripture doesn't provide her name, identifying her only as "Pharaoh's daughter." The account is found in Exodus 2.
Mali is not and was never near the Nile River.
River Nile and the Jordan.
It is the river Nile. and Jordan.
The Nile River is an important river mentioned in the Old Testament.
No they don't but if they do you must not let them sleep in the Moses basket after 4-5 months old but depending on there weight and size.
Moses was 80 years old at the Exodus, and as this was dated as 1446BC [Ussher] it would make him born 1526BC .
the river nile is 27 years old
Exodus, mostly. His laws and the census of the twelve tribes are found in Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy.