New Kingdom Fortresses and Imperial Logistics
Archaeological surveys and excavations in the Sinai have documented New Kingdom Egyptian fortresses, waystations, and road networks (e.g., Tell el‑Kharouba and related sites) that illuminate Egyptian control of the eastern frontier and the logistics of imperial movement across the peninsula.
Finds and Implications for Mobility Models
Fortresses, storage installations, and material culture document Egyptian military and administrative presence, providing a tangible backdrop for evaluating models of Late Bronze–Early Iron mobility and for assessing archaeological expectations for large‑scale movements across Sinai.
Relevance to Exodus‑Era Debates and Imperial Studies
While these installations do not prove specific biblical narratives, they ground discussions of Egyptian imperial reach, border control, and the archaeological signatures that large migrations or military movements would leave, helping scholars frame plausible scenarios for population movement and memory formation.
Sources
Egyptian Sinai survey reports; New Kingdom studies
Sinai fortress publications; Tell el‑Kharouba reports
Other Information About Sinai Fortresses and Egyptian Frontier Installations
Egyptological literature; Sinai survey monographs; studies in Near Eastern archaeology and imperial logistics.