On a related note concerning the story of Moses (pbuh) and the Pharaoh, there are also to be found other verses in the Qur’an which while not quite a prophecy perhaps, nevertheless is another poignant reminder of the amazing prophetic accuracy of the Qur’an.
**“And Pharaoh said: O Haman! Build for me a tower that haply I may reach the roads, The roads of the heavens, and may look upon the god of Moses, though verily I think him a liar. Thus was the evil that he did made fairseeming unto Pharaoh, and he was debarred from the (right) way. The plot of Pharaoh ended but in ruin. **(Quran 40:36-7)
The following is an excerpt from a
webpage:
For well over a thousand years, the only ‘
Haman’ that was mentioned outside Islamic texts was a Babylonian courtier from the story of the Tower of Babel. Academics derided his mention in the Quran, citing it as proof of Muhammad’s supposedly inaccurately borrowing from the bible; mixing up the Babylonian legend with the much earlier story of the Exodus.
Then, in 1799, one of Napoleon’s captains in Egypt discovered a dark grey-pinkish granite stone in the port city of Rosetta. He showed it to General Abdullah Jacques de Menou, a convert to Islam, who sent it off to Cairo to be studied. The
Rosetta Stone, which dated back to 196 BC, was inscribed in three scripts: Hieroglyphic, Demotic and Greek. Its discovery meant that scholars the world over were finally able to decipher Egyptian hieroglyphs. One result was the decoding of an inscription on a Pharaonic stela from the Mosaic period in Vienna’s Hof-Museum. Curiously, the name ‘
Haman’ was inscribed on the stela, his given title: ‘
chief of the stone quarry workers’. Precisely the man whom a Pharaoh would ask to build a high tower!
From the above, we can see that the Qur’an has once again been proven to be perfectly correct even though it took well over a thousand years after it’s revelation before the evidence came to light.