The Book of Jubilees, also known as 'Little Genesis' or 'Kufale', is a pseudepigraphal text of the Old Testament that rewrites the history of Genesis and part of Exodus, with emphasis on the division of time into jubilees and weeks of years. It is canonical only in the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church and preserved entirely in Ge'ez. The book was originally written in Hebrew around the 2nd century BC and is cited by the Early Church Fathers.
Jubilees
Chapter 45
And Israel went to the land of Egypt, to the land of Goshen, on the new moon of the fourth month, in the second year of the third week in the forty-fifth jubilee.
And Joseph went to meet his father Jacob, to the land of Goshen, and he fell on his father's neck and wept.
And Israel said to Joseph: "Now let me die, because I have seen you, and now blessed be the Lord God of Israel, the God of Abraham and the God of Isaac, who has not withheld His mercy and His grace from His servant Jacob.
And it is enough for me that I have seen your face while I am still alive; yes, true is the vision I had in Bethel. Blessed be the Lord my God forever, and blessed be His name!"
And Joseph and his brothers ate bread before their father and drank wine, and Jacob rejoiced with very great joy because he saw Joseph eating with his brothers and drinking before him, and he blessed the Creator of all things who had preserved him, and preserved for him his twelve sons.
And Joseph gave to his father and to his brothers a gift. The right to dwell in the land of Goshen and in Rameses and in all the region around, which he ruled before Pharaoh. And Israel and his sons dwelt in the land of Goshen, the best part of the land of Egypt, and Israel was one hundred and thirty years old when he came to Egypt.
And Joseph sustained his father and his brothers and also their possessions with bread as much as sufficed them for the seven years of famine.
And the land of Egypt suffered because of the famine, and Joseph acquired all the land of Egypt for Pharaoh in exchange for food, and he obtained the possessions of the people and their cattle and everything for Pharaoh.
And the years of the famine were completed, and Joseph gave the people of the land seed and food that they might plant in the eighth year, because the river had flooded all the land of Egypt.
For in the seven years of famine it had not flooded and had only irrigated some places on the banks of the river, but now it had flooded and the Egyptians sowed the land, and it yielded much corn in that year.
And this was the first year of the fourth week of the forty-fifth jubilee.
And Joseph took of the corn of the harvest the fifth part for the king and left four parts for him for food and seed, and Joseph made this an ordinance for the land of Egypt until this day.
And Israel lived in the land of Egypt seventeen years, and all the days that he lived were three jubilees, one hundred and forty-seven years, and he died in the fourth year of the fifth week of the forty-fifth jubilee.
And Israel blessed his sons before he died and told them everything that would happen to them in the land of Egypt; and he made known to them what would befall them in the last days, and blessed them and gave Joseph two portions in the land.
And he slept with his fathers, and he was buried in the double cave in the land of Canaan, near Abraham, his father, in the tomb which he dug for himself in the double cave in the land of Hebron.
And he gave all his books and the books of his fathers to Levi, his son, that he might preserve them and renew them for his children until this day.