Historical Substantiation of Edomites Stealing the Yisraelite Heritage (Dan 11:14, Isa 33:14, Isa 42:24, Eze 7:22. Eze 35:10)
The following New Columbia Encyclopedia reference shows the edomites in Alexandria, Egypt were stealing the Yisraelite heritage and ruling over the true Yisraelites in Yisrael as early as 341 B.C.E.:
“The Persians again became dominant in 341 B.C. Egypt, rich and ill-defended, fell to Alexander the Great with no resistance in 332 B.C. When his brief empire faded, Egypt in the wars of his successors (the Diadochi) fell to his general Ptolemy, who became king as Ptolemy I. All the succeeding kings of the dynasty were also named Ptolemy. The great city of Alexandria became the intellectual center and fountainhead of the Hellenistic world. The Ptolemies maintained a formidable empire for more than two centuries and exercised great power in the E Mediterranean. The priesthood remained in native hands, but the splendor of the Ptolemaic government weighed heavily upon the overtaxed and hard-working peasantry. The Jewish population was large – perhaps as much as a seventh of the total population – and even the Palestinian Jews looked to the Alexandrian Jews for guidance. The rising power of Rome soon overshadowed Egypt, but it was not until Ptolemy XI sought Roman aid through POMPEY to regain his throne that Rome actually obtained (58 B.C.) a foothold in Egypt itself.”
The New Columbia Encyclopedia, Page 839(under the Egypt section). Fourth Edition 1975, Third Printing, Copyright Columbia University Press.
“The Persians again became dominant in 341 B.C. Egypt, rich and ill-defended, fell to Alexander the Great with no resistance in 332 B.C. When his brief empire faded, Egypt in the wars of his successors (the Diadochi) fell to his general Ptolemy, who became king as Ptolemy I. All the succeeding kings of the dynasty were also named Ptolemy. The great city of Alexandria became the intellectual center and fountainhead of the Hellenistic world. The Ptolemies maintained a formidable empire for more than two centuries and exercised great power in the E Mediterranean. The priesthood remained in native hands, but the splendor of the Ptolemaic government weighed heavily upon the overtaxed and hard-working peasantry. The Jewish population was large – perhaps as much as a seventh of the total population – and even the Palestinian Jews looked to the Alexandrian Jews for guidance. The rising power of Rome soon overshadowed Egypt, but it was not until Ptolemy XI sought Roman aid through POMPEY to regain his throne that Rome actually obtained (58 B.C.) a foothold in Egypt itself.”
The New Columbia Encyclopedia, Page 839(under the Egypt section). Fourth Edition 1975, Third Printing, Copyright Columbia University Press.