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Yes, the portable, prefabricated Israelite Tabernacle-Shrine in the desert (ʾohel moʿed אהל מועד ”tent of meeting”) finds its closest parallel in the ancient Egyptian tent of Pharaoh.[1] Moreover, even the nature and terminology of the utinsels used in that portable temple have their origin in ancient Egyptian.[2]

One can see a life-size model of the Tabernacle here:

[1] Kenneth A. Kitchen, "The Tabernacle–A Bronze Age Artifact," Eretz-Israel, 24 (1993):119-129; Michael M. Homan, “The Divine Warrior in His Tent: A Military Model for Yahweh’s Tabernacle,” Bible Review, 16/6 (Dec 2000):22-33,35; K. Kitchen, “The Desert Tabernacle: Pure Fiction or Plausible Account?” Bible Review, 16/6 (Dec 2000): 14-21.

[2] John A. Tvedtnes, "Egyptian Etymologies for Biblical Cultic Paraphernalia," in Sarah Israelit-Groll, ed., Scripta Hierosolymitana, 28 (Jerusalem, 1982), 215-221; Abraham S. Yahuda, The Language of the Pentateuch in its Relation to Egyptian (Oxford Univ Press, 1933/Kessinger, 2003).

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