If it can't even get simple facts like massive slave uprisings right why should its legitimacy be taken seriously?
IT'S A BOOK OF
FABLES! STORIES PEOPLE TELL TO EACH OTHER FOR FUN! NOT HISTORICAL DOCUMENTS! ITS LIKE EXPECTING A STAR TREK EPISODE TO HAVE 100% CORRECT SCIENCE OR A HOUSE EPISODE TO BE A PORTRAYER OF REALITY.
Except for the millions of Bible thumpers who actually do view it as fact.
They also view the existence of an imaginary deity as factual. And a whole, long list of other things that I am sure you are familiar with.
The City of Troy was eventually found after hundreds of years of being considered a myth.
Does that mean that the Illias is true to every word?
No, just that there was a city named Troy, and it was raided by Greeks. Nothing else. Might not be for that damn woman though.
Salem's Lot references real events. Does that mean we should treat it as an accurate historical source?
Even when attempted to be objective, there is no historical source that is fully accurate.
You seem to assume that it must be either a fully true or not true at all. It is not that simple, especially for historians, who rely on biased accounts anyway.
When it comes to ancient history, a book of fables is often better then nothing, because fables reference places, events, people that did in fact, exist. Doesn't mean that the fables are true.
Tell that to the millions of Bible Thumpers that feel otherwise.
Tell the fact to the millions of Bible Thumpers that they worship a deity that does not exist and they have poured effort and money for an organization that is essentially a scam-pyramid.
If someone takes the Bible as a 100% accurate source of history, then they are obviously wrong and not proper historians.
That does not mean that it is 100% wrong. Grains of information and references may be correct to some extent, enough to be considered occasionally a puzzle piece to give a more complete view of history. If a puzzle piece is proven wrong by more objective evidence, then it is obviously wrong and forfeited.