The Ipuwer Papyrus describes Egypt as afflicted…
1629 BCE to 1486 BCE
One symptom of this collapse of order is the lament that servants are leaving their servitude and acting rebelliously.
The sole surviving manuscript of the Ipuwer Papyrus, a single papyrus holding an ancient Egyptian poem, called The Admonitions of Ipuwer or The Dialogue of Ipuwer and the Lord of All, dates to the later thirteenth century BCE (no earlier than the Nineteenth dynasty in the New Kingdom).
The admonitions are thought to hearken back to the First Intermediate Period (2181-2055 BCE) and record a decline in international relations and a general impoverishment in Egypt.
The dating of the original composition of the poem, which appears to describe how Hyksos took over Egypt at the end of the Fourteenth Dynasty, is disputed, but several scholars have suggested a date between the late Sixth Dynasty and the Second Intermediate Period (from about 1650 BCE to 1600 BCE).