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When Serug was thirty years old he fathered Nahor. (Genesis 11, 22)
After the birth of Nahor, Serug lived two hundred years and fathered sons and daughters. (Genesis 11, 23)
When Nahor was twenty-nine years old he fathered Terah. (Genesis 11, 24)
After the birth of Terah, Nahor lived a hundred and nineteen years and fathered sons and daughters. (Genesis 11, 25)
When Terah was seventy years old he fathered Abram, Nahor and Haran. (Genesis 11, 26)
Terah's life lasted two hundred and five years; then he died at Haran. (Genesis 11, 32)
So Abram went as Yahweh told him, and Lot went with him. Abram was seventy-five years old when he left Haran. (Genesis 12, 4)
For twelve years they had been under the yoke of Chedor-Laomer, but in the thirteenth year they revolted. (Genesis 14, 4)
In the fourteenth year Chedor-Laomer arrived and the kings who had allied themselves with him. They defeated the Rephaim at Ashteroth-Carnaim, the Zuzim at Ham, the Emim in the Plain of Kiriathaim, (Genesis 14, 5)
He said to him, 'Bring me a three-year-old heifer, a three-year-old she-goat, a three-year-old ram, a turtledove and a young pigeon.' (Genesis 15, 9)
Then Yahweh said to Abram, 'Know this for certain, that your descendants will be exiles in a land not their own, and be enslaved and oppressed for four hundred years. (Genesis 15, 13)
Thus, after Abram had lived in the land of Canaan for ten years, Sarai took Hagar her Egyptian slave-girl and gave her to Abram as his wife. (Genesis 16, 3)
