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Akhenaten

Akhenaten (pronounced /ˌækəˈnɑːtən/),[8] also spelled Akhenaton[3][9][10] or Echnaton[11] (Ancient Egyptian: ꜣḫ-n-jtn ʾŪḫə-nə-yātəy, pronounced [ˈʔuːχəʔ ˈjaːtəj],[12][13] meaning "Effective for the Aten"), was an ancient Egyptian pharaoh reigning c. 1353–1336[3] or 1351–1334 BC,[4] the tenth ruler of the Eighteenth Dynasty. Before the fifth year of his reign, he was known as Amenhotep IV (Ancient Egyptian: jmn-ḥtp, meaning "Amun is satisfied", Hellenized as Amenophis IV).

  • Akhenaten
  • Amenhotep IV
Amenophis IV, Naphurureya, Ikhnaton[1][2]
Statue of Akhenaten at the Egyptian Museum
Pharaoh
Reign
  • 1353–1336 BC[3]
  • 1351–1334 BC[4]
PredecessorAmenhotep III
SuccessorSmenkhkare
Consorts
Children
FatherAmenhotep III
MotherTiye
Died1336 or 1334 BC
Burial
[6][7]
MonumentsAkhetaten, Gempaaten
Religion
Dynasty18th Dynasty of Egypt

As a pharaoh, Akhenaten is noted for abandoning Egypt's traditional polytheism and introducing Atenism, or worship centered around Aten. The views of Egyptologists differ as to whether the religious policy was absolutely monotheistic, or whether it was monolatristic, syncretistic, or henotheistic.[14][15] This culture shift away from traditional religion was reversed after his death. Akhenaten's monuments were dismantled and hidden, his statues were destroyed, and his name excluded from lists of rulers compiled by later pharaohs.[16] Traditional religious practice was gradually restored, notably under his close successor Tutankhamun, who changed his name from Tutankhaten early in his reign.[17] When some dozen years later, rulers without clear rights of succession from the Eighteenth Dynasty founded a new dynasty, they discredited Akhenaten and his immediate successors and referred to Akhenaten as "the enemy" or "that criminal" in archival records.[18][19]

Akhenaten was all but lost to history until the late-19th-century discovery of Amarna, or Akhetaten, the new capital city he built for the worship of Aten.[20] Furthermore, in 1907, a mummy that could be Akhenaten's was unearthed from the tomb KV55 in the Valley of the Kings by Edward R. Ayrton. Genetic testing has determined that the man buried in KV55 was Tutankhamun's father,[21] but its identification as Akhenaten has since been questioned.[6][7][22][23][24]

Akhenaten's rediscovery and Flinders Petrie's early excavations at Amarna sparked great public interest in the pharaoh and his queen Nefertiti. He has been described as "enigmatic", "mysterious", "revolutionary", "the greatest idealist of the world", and "the first individual in history", but also as a "heretic", "fanatic", "possibly insane", and "mad".[14][25][26][27][28] Public and scholarly fascination with Akhenaten comes from his connection with Tutankhamun, the unique style and high quality of the pictorial arts he patronized, and the religion he attempted to establish, foreshadowing monotheism.

Family

 
Akhenaten, Nefertiti and their children

The future Akhenaten was born Amenhotep, a younger son of pharaoh Amenhotep III and his principal wife Tiye. Akhenaten had an elder brother, crown prince Thutmose, who was recognized as Amenhotep III's heir. Akhenaten also had four or five sisters: Sitamun, Henuttaneb, Iset, Nebetah, and possibly Beketaten.[29] Thutmose's early death, perhaps around Amenhotep III's thirtieth regnal year, meant that Akhenaten was next in line for Egypt's throne.[30]

Akhenaten was married to Nefertiti, his Great Royal Wife. The exact timing of their marriage is unknown, but inscriptions from the pharaoh's building projects suggest that they married either shortly before or after Akhenaten took the throne.[10] For example, Egyptologist Dimitri Laboury suggests that the marriage took place in Akhenaten's fourth regnal year.[31] A secondary wife of Akhenaten named Kiya is also known from inscriptions. Some Egyptologists theorize that she gained her importance as the mother of Tutankhamun.[32] William Murnane proposes that Kiya is the colloquial name of the Mitanni princess Tadukhipa, daughter of the Mitanni king Tushratta who had married Amenhotep III before becoming the wife of Akhenaten.[33][34] Akhenaten's other attested consorts are the daughter of the Enišasi ruler Šatiya and another daughter of the Babylonian king Burna-Buriash II.[35]

 
This limestone relief of a royal couple in the Amarna style has variously been attributed as Akhenaten and Nefertiti, Smenkhkare and Meritaten, or Tutankhamun and Ankhesenamun.

Akhenaten could have had seven or eight children based on inscriptions. Egyptologists are fairly certain about his six daughters, who are well attested in contemporary depictions.[36] Among his six daughters, Meritaten was born in regnal year one or five; Meketaten in year four or six; Ankhesenpaaten, later queen of Tutankhamun, before year five or eight; Neferneferuaten Tasherit in year eight or nine; Neferneferure in year nine or ten; and Setepenre in year ten or eleven.[37][38][39][40] Tutankhamun, born Tutankhaten, was most likely Akhenaten's son, with Nefertiti or another wife.[41][42] There is less certainty around Akhenaten's relationship with Smenkhkare, Akhenaten's coregent or successor[43] and husband to his daughter Meritaten; he could have been Akhenaten's eldest son with an unknown wife or Akhenaten's younger brother.[44][45]

Some historians, such as Edward Wente and James Allen, have proposed that Akhenaten took some of his daughters as wives or sexual consorts to father a male heir.[46][47] While this is debated, some historical parallels exist: Akhenaten's father Amenhotep III married his daughter Sitamun, while Ramesses II married two or more of his daughters, even though their marriages might simply have been ceremonial.[48][49] In Akhenaten's case, his oldest daughter Meritaten is recorded as Great Royal Wife to Smenkhkare but is also listed on a box from Tutankhamun's tomb alongside pharaohs Akhenaten and Neferneferuaten as Great Royal Wife. Additionally, letters written to Akhenaten from foreign rulers make reference to Meritaten as "mistress of the house." Egyptologists in the early 20th century also believed that Akhenaten could have fathered a child with his second oldest daughter Meketaten. Meketaten's death, at perhaps age ten to twelve, is recorded in the royal tombs at Akhetaten from around regnal years thirteen or fourteen. Early Egyptologists attribute her death to childbirth, because of the depiction of an infant in her tomb. Because no husband is known for Meketaten, the assumption had been that Akhenaten was the father. Aidan Dodson believes this to be unlikely, as no Egyptian tomb has been found that mentions or alludes to the cause of death of the tomb owner. Further, Jacobus van Dijk proposes that the child is a portrayal of Meketaten's soul.[50] Finally, various monuments, originally for Kiya, were reinscribed for Akhenaten's daughters Meritaten and Ankhesenpaaten. The revised inscriptions list a Meritaten-tasherit ("junior") and an Ankhesenpaaten-tasherit. According to some, this indicates that Akhenaten fathered his own grandchildren. Others hold that, since these grandchildren are not attested to elsewhere, they are fictions invented to fill the space originally portraying Kiya's child.[46][51]

Early life

 
Akhenaten's elder brother Thutmose, shown in his role as High Priest of Ptah. Akhenaten became heir to the throne after Thutmose died during their father's reign.

Egyptologists know very little about Akhenaten's life as prince Amenhotep. Donald B. Redford dates his birth before his father Amenhotep III's 25th regnal year, c. 1363–1361 BC, based on the birth of Akhenaten's first daughter, who was likely born fairly early in his own reign.[4][52] The only mention of his name, as "the King's Son Amenhotep," was found on a wine docket at Amenhotep III's Malkata palace, where some historians suggested Akhenaten was born. Others contend that he was born at Memphis, where growing up he was influenced by the worship of the sun god Ra practiced at nearby Heliopolis.[53] Redford and James K. Hoffmeier state, however, that Ra's cult was so widespread and established throughout Egypt that Akhenaten could have been influenced by solar worship even if he did not grow up around Heliopolis.[54][55]

Some historians have tried to determine who was Akhenaten's tutor during his youth, and have proposed scribes Heqareshu or Meryre II, the royal tutor Amenemotep, or the vizier Aperel.[56] The only person we know for certain served the prince was Parennefer, whose tomb mentions this fact.[57]

Egyptologist Cyril Aldred suggests that prince Amenhotep might have been a High Priest of Ptah in Memphis, although no evidence supporting this had been found.[58] It is known that Amenhotep's brother, crown prince Thutmose, served in this role before he died. If Amenhotep inherited all his brother's roles in preparation for his accession to the throne, he might have become a high priest in Thutmose's stead. Aldred proposes that Akhenaten's unusual artistic inclinations might have been formed during his time serving Ptah, the patron god of craftsmen, whose high priest were sometimes referred to as "The Greatest of the Directors of Craftsmanship."[59]

Reign

Coregency with Amenhotep III

There is much controversy around whether Amenhotep IV ascended to Egypt's throne on the death of his father Amenhotep III or whether there was a coregency, lasting perhaps as long as 12 years. Eric Cline, Nicholas Reeves, Peter Dorman, and other scholars argue strongly against the establishment of a long coregency between the two rulers and in favor of either no coregency or one lasting at most two years.[60] Donald B. Redford, William J. Murnane, Alan Gardiner, and Lawrence Berman contest the view of any coregency whatsoever between Akhenaten and his father.[61][62]

Most recently, in 2014, archaeologists found both pharaohs' names inscribed on the wall of the Luxor tomb of vizier Amenhotep-Huy. The Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities called this "conclusive evidence" that Akhenaten shared power with his father for at least eight years, based on the dating of the tomb.[63] However, this conclusion has since been called into question by other Egyptologists, according to whom the inscription only means that construction on Amenhotep-Huy's tomb started during Amenhotep III's reign and ended under Akhenaten's, and Amenhotep-Huy thus simply wanted to pay his respects to both rulers.[64]

Early reign as Amenhotep lV

 
Wooden standing statue of Akhenaten. Currently in the Egyptian Museum of Berlin

Akhenaten took Egypt's throne as Amenhotep IV, most likely in 1353[65] or 1351 BC.[4] It is unknown how old Amenhotep IV was when he did this; estimates range from 10 to 23.[66] He was most likely crowned in Thebes, or less likely at Memphis or Armant.[66]

The beginning of Amenhotep IV's reign followed established pharaonic traditions. He did not immediately start redirecting worship toward the Aten and distancing himself from other gods. Egyptologist Donald B. Redford believes this implied that Amenhotep IV's eventual religious policies were not conceived of before his reign, and he did not follow a pre-established plan or program. Redford points to three pieces of evidence to support this. First, surviving inscriptions show Amenhotep IV worshipping several different gods, including Atum, Osiris, Anubis, Nekhbet, Hathor,[67] and the Eye of Ra, and texts from this era refer to "the gods" and "every god and every goddess." The High Priest of Amun was also still active in the fourth year of Amenhotep IV's reign.[68] Second, even though he later moved his capital from Thebes to Akhetaten, his initial royal titulary honored Thebes—his nomen was "Amenhotep, god-ruler of Thebes"—and recognizing its importance, he called the city "Southern Heliopolis, the first great (seat) of Re (or) the Disc." Third, Amenhotep IV did not yet destroy temples to the other gods and he even continued his father's construction projects at Karnak's Precinct of Amun-Re.[69] He decorated the walls of the precinct's Third Pylon with images of himself worshipping Ra-Horakhty, portrayed in the god's traditional form of a falcon-headed man.[70]

Artistic depictions continued unchanged early in Amenhotep IV's reign. Tombs built or completed in the first few years after he took the throne, such as those of Kheruef, Ramose, and Parennefer, show the pharaoh in the traditional artistic style.[71] In Ramose's tomb, Amenhotep IV appears on the west wall, seated on a throne, with Ramose appearing before the pharaoh. On the other side of the doorway, Amenhotep IV and Nefertiti are shown in the window of appearances, with the Aten depicted as the sun disc. In Parennefer's tomb, Amenhotep IV and Nefertiti are seated on a throne with the sun disc depicted over the pharaoh and his queen.[71]

While continuing the worship of other gods, Amenhotep IV's initial building program sought to build new places of worship to the Aten. He ordered the construction of temples or shrines to the Aten in several cities across the country, such as Bubastis, Tell el-Borg, Heliopolis, Memphis, Nekhen, Kawa, and Kerma.[72] He also ordered the construction of a large temple complex dedicated to the Aten at Karnak in Thebes, northeast of the parts of the Karnak complex dedicated to Amun. The Aten temple complex, collectively known as the Per Aten ("House of the Aten"), consisted of several temples whose names survive: the Gempaaten ("The Aten is found in the estate of the Aten"), the Hwt Benben ("House or Temple of the Benben"), the Rud-Menu ("Enduring of monuments for Aten forever"), the Teni-Menu ("Exalted are the monuments of the Aten forever"), and the Sekhen Aten ("booth of Aten").[73]

Around regnal year two or three, Amenhotep IV organized a Sed festival. Sed festivals were ritual rejuvenations of an aging pharaoh, which usually took place for the first time around the thirtieth year of a pharaoh's reign and every three or so years thereafter. Egyptologists only speculate as to why Amenhotep IV organized a Sed festival when he was likely still in his early twenties. Some historians see it as evidence for Amenhotep III and Amenhotep IV's coregency, and believed that Amenhotep IV's Sed festival coincided with one of his father's celebrations. Others speculate that Amenhotep IV chose to hold his festival three years after his father's death, aiming to proclaim his rule a continuation of his father's reign. Yet others believe that the festival was held to honor the Aten on whose behalf the pharaoh ruled Egypt, or, as Amenhotep III was considered to have become one with the Aten following his death, the Sed festival honored both the pharaoh and the god at the same time. It is also possible that the purpose of the ceremony was to figuratively fill Amenhotep IV with strength before his great enterprise: the introduction of the Aten cult and the founding of the new capital Akhetaten. Regardless of the celebration's aim, Egyptologists believe that during the festivities Amenhotep IV only made offerings to the Aten rather than the many gods and goddesses, as was customary.[59][74][75]

Name change

Among the last documents that refer to Akhenaten as Amenhotep IV are two copies of a letter to the pharaoh from Ipy, the high steward of Memphis. These letters, found in Gurob and informing the pharaoh that the royal estates in Memphis are "in good order" and the temple of Ptah is "prosperous and flourishing," are dated to regnal year five, day nineteen of the growing season's third month. About a month later, day thirteen of the growing season's fourth month, one of the boundary stela at Akhetaten already had the name Akhenaten carved on it, implying that the pharaoh changed his name between the two inscriptions.[76][77][78][79]

Amenhotep IV changed his royal titulary to show his devotion to the Aten. No longer would he be known as Amenhotep IV and be associated with the god Amun, but rather he would completely shift his focus to the Aten. Egyptologists debate the exact meaning of Akhenaten, his new personal name. The word "akh" (Ancient Egyptian: ꜣḫ) could have different translations, such as "satisfied," "effective spirit," or "serviceable to," and thus Akhenaten's name could be translated to mean "Aten is satisfied," "Effective spirit of the Aten," or "Serviceable to the Aten," respectively.[80] Gertie Englund and Florence Friedman arrive at the translation "Effective for the Aten" by analyzing contemporary texts and inscriptions, in which Akhenaten often described himself as being "effective for" the sun disc. Englund and Friedman conclude that the frequency with which Akhenaten used this term likely means that his own name meant "Effective for the Aten."[80]

Some historians, such as William F. Albright, Edel Elmar, and Gerhard Fecht, propose that Akhenaten's name is misspelled and mispronounced. These historians believe "Aten" should rather be "Jāti," thus rendering the pharaoh's name Akhenjāti or Aḫanjāti (pronounced /ˌækəˈnjɑːtɪ/), as it could have been pronounced in Ancient Egypt.[81][82][83]

Amenhotep IV Akhenaten
Horus name

Kanakht-qai-Shuti

"Strong Bull of the Double Plumes"




Meryaten

"Beloved of Aten"

Nebty name





Wer-nesut-em-Ipet-swt

"Great of Kingship in Karnak"






Wer-nesut-em-Akhetaten

"Great of Kingship in Akhet-Aten"

Golden Horus name



Wetjes-khau-em-Iunu-Shemay

"Crowned in Heliopolis of the South" (Thebes)






Wetjes-ren-en-Aten

"Exalter of the Name of Aten"

Prenomen


Neferkheperure-waenre
"Beautiful are the Forms of Re, the Unique one of Re"
Nomen


Amenhotep Netjer-Heqa-Waset

"Amun is Satisfied, Divine Lord of Thebes"





Akhenaten

"Effective for the Aten"

Founding Amarna

 
One of the stele marking the boundary of the new capital Akhetaten

Around the same time he changed his royal titulary, on the thirteenth day of the growing season's fourth month, Akhenaten decreed that a new capital city be built: Akhetaten (Ancient Egyptian: ꜣḫt-jtn, meaning "Horizon of the Aten"), better known today as Amarna. The events Egyptologists know the most about during Akhenaten's life are connected with founding Akhetaten, as several so-called boundary stelae were found around the city to mark its boundary.[84] The pharaoh chose a site about halfway between Thebes, the capital at the time, and Memphis, on the east bank of the Nile, where a wadi and a natural dip in the surrounding cliffs form a silhouette similar to the "horizon" hieroglyph. Additionally, the site had previously been uninhabited. According to inscriptions on one boundary stela, the site was appropriate for Aten's city for "not being the property of a god, nor being the property of a goddess, nor being the property of a ruler, nor being the property of a female ruler, nor being the property of any people able to lay claim to it."[85]

Historians do not know for certain why Akhenaten established a new capital and left Thebes, the old capital. The boundary stelae detailing Akhetaten's founding is damaged where it likely explained the pharaoh's motives for the move. Surviving parts claim what happened to Akhenaten was "worse than those that I heard" previously in his reign and worse than those "heard by any kings who assumed the White Crown," and alludes to "offensive" speech against the Aten. Egyptologists believe that Akhenaten could be referring to conflict with the priesthood and followers of Amun, the patron god of Thebes. The great temples of Amun, such as Karnak, were all located in Thebes and the priests there achieved significant power earlier in the Eighteenth Dynasty, especially under Hatshepsut and Thutmose III, thanks to pharaohs offering large amounts of Egypt's growing wealth to the cult of Amun; historians, such as Donald B. Redford, therefore posited that by moving to a new capital, Akhenaten may have been trying to break with Amun's priests and the god.[86][87][88]

 
Talatat blocks from Akhenaten's Aten temple in Karnak

Akhetaten was a planned city with the Great Temple of the Aten, Small Aten Temple, royal residences, records office, and government buildings in the city center. Some of these buildings, such as the Aten temples, were ordered to be built by Akhenaten on the boundary stela decreeing the city's founding.[87][89][90]

The city was built quickly, thanks to a new construction method that used substantially smaller building blocks than under previous pharaohs. These blocks, called talatats, measured 12 by 12 by 1 ancient Egyptian cubits (c. 27 by 27 by 54 cm), and because of the smaller weight and standardized size, using them during constructions was more efficient than using heavy building blocks of varying sizes.[91][92] By regnal year eight, Akhetaten reached a state where it could be occupied by the royal family. Only his most loyal subjects followed Akhenaten and his family to the new city. While the city continued to be built, in years five through eight, construction work began to stop in Thebes. The Theban Aten temples that had begun were abandoned, and a village of those working on Valley of the Kings tombs was relocated to the workers' village at Akhetaten. However, construction work continued in the rest of the country, as larger cult centers, such as Heliopolis and Memphis, also had temples built for Aten.[93][94]

International relations

 
Amarna letter EA 362, titled A Commissioner Murdered. In this letter, Rib-Hadda of Byblos informs the pharaoh of the death of Pawura, an Egyptian commissioner.
 
Painted limestone miniature stela. It shows Akhenaten standing before 2 incense stands, Aten disc above. From Amarna, Egypt – 18th Dynasty. The Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology, London
 
Head of Akhenaten

The Amarna letters have provided important evidence about Akhenaten's reign and foreign policy. The letters are a cache of 382 diplomatic texts and literary and educational materials discovered between 1887 and 1979,[95] and named after Amarna, the modern name for Akhenaten's capital Akhetaten. The diplomatic correspondence comprises clay tablet messages between Amenhotep III, Akhenaten, and Tutankhamun, various subjects through Egyptian military outposts, rulers of vassal states, and the foreign rulers of Babylonia, Assyria, Syria, Canaan, Alashiya, Arzawa, Mitanni, and the Hittites.[96]

The Amarna letters portray the international situation in the Eastern Mediterranean that Akhenaten inherited from his predecessors. In the 200 years preceding Akhenaten's reign, following the expulsion of the Hyksos from Lower Egypt at the end of the Second Intermediate Period, the kingdom's influence and military might increased greatly. Egypt's power reached new heights under Thutmose III, who ruled approximately 100 years before Akhenaten and led several successful military campaigns into Nubia and Syria. Egypt's expansion led to confrontation with the Mitanni, but this rivalry ended with the two nations becoming allies. Slowly, however, Egypt's power started to wane. Amenhotep III aimed to maintain the balance of power through marriages—such as his marriage to Tadukhipa, daughter of the Mitanni king Tushratta—and vassal states. Under Amenhotep III and Akhenaten, Egypt was unable or unwilling to oppose the rise of the Hittites around Syria. The pharaohs seemed to eschew military confrontation at a time when the balance of power between Egypt's neighbors and rivals was shifting, and the Hittites, a confrontational state, overtook the Mitanni in influence.[97][98][99][100]

Early in his reign, Akhenaten was evidently concerned about the expanding power of the Hittite Empire under Šuppiluliuma I. A successful Hittite attack on Mitanni and its ruler Tushratta would have disrupted the entire international balance of power in the Ancient Middle East at a time when Egypt had made peace with Mitanni; this would cause some of Egypt's vassals to switch their allegiances to the Hittites, as time would prove. A group of Egypt's allies who attempted to rebel against the Hittites were captured, and wrote letters begging Akhenaten for troops, but he did not respond to most of their pleas. Evidence suggests that the troubles on the northern frontier led to difficulties in Canaan, particularly in a struggle for power between Labaya of Shechem and Abdi-Heba of Jerusalem, which required the pharaoh to intervene in the area by dispatching Medjay troops northwards. Akhenaten pointedly refused to save his vassal Rib-Hadda of Byblos—whose kingdom was being besieged by the expanding state of Amurru under Abdi-Ashirta and later Aziru, son of Abdi-Ashirta—despite Rib-Hadda's numerous pleas for help from the pharaoh. Rib-Hadda wrote a total of 60 letters to Akhenaten pleading for aid from the pharaoh. Akhenaten wearied of Rib-Hadda's constant correspondences and once told Rib-Hadda: "You are the one that writes to me more than all the (other) mayors" or Egyptian vassals in EA 124.[101] What Rib-Hadda did not comprehend was that the Egyptian king would not organize and dispatch an entire army north just to preserve the political status quo of several minor city states on the fringes of Egypt's Asiatic Empire.[102] Rib-Hadda would pay the ultimate price; his exile from Byblos due to a coup led by his brother Ilirabih is mentioned in one letter. When Rib-Hadda appealed in vain for aid from Akhenaten and then turned to Aziru, his sworn enemy, to place him back on the throne of his city, Aziru promptly had him dispatched to the king of Sidon, where Rib-Hadda was almost certainly executed.[103]

In a view discounted by the 21st century,[104] several Egyptologists in the late 19th and 20th centuries interpreted the Amarna letters to mean that Akhenaten was a pacifist who neglected foreign policy and Egypt's foreign territories in favor of his internal reforms. For example, Henry Hall believed Akhenaten "succeeded by his obstinate doctrinaire love of peace in causing far more misery in his world than half a dozen elderly militarists could have done,"[105] while James Henry Breasted said Akhenaten "was not fit to cope with a situation demanding an aggressive man of affairs and a skilled military leader."[106] Others noted that the Amarna letters counter the conventional view that Akhenaten neglected Egypt's foreign territories in favour of his internal reforms. For instance, Norman de Garis Davies praised Akhenaten's emphasis on diplomacy over war, while James Baikie said that the fact "that there is no evidence of revolt within the borders of Egypt itself during the whole reign is surely ample proof that there was no such abandonment of his royal duties on the part of Akhenaten as has been assumed."[107][108] Indeed, several letters from Egyptian vassals notified the pharaoh that they have followed his instructions, implying that the pharaoh sent such instructions.[109] The Amarna letters also show that vassal states were told repeatedly to expect the arrival of the Egyptian military on their lands, and provide evidence that these troops were dispatched and arrived at their destination. Dozens of letters detail that Akhenaten—and Amenhotep III—sent Egyptian and Nubian troops, armies, archers, chariots, horses, and ships.[110]

Only one military campaign is known for certain under Akhenaten's reign. In his second or twelfth year,[111] Akhenaten ordered his Viceroy of Kush Tuthmose to lead a military expedition to quell a rebellion and raids on settlements on the Nile by Nubian nomadic tribes. The victory was commemorated on two stelae, one discovered at Amada and another at Buhen. Egyptologists differ on the size of the campaign: Wolfgang Helck considered it a small-scale police operation, while Alan Schulman considered it a "war of major proportions."[112][113][114]

Other Egyptologists suggested that Akhenaten could have waged war in Syria or the Levant, possibly against the Hittites. Cyril Aldred, based on Amarna letters describing Egyptian troop movements, proposed that Akhenaten launched an unsuccessful war around the city of Gezer, while Marc Gabolde argued for an unsuccessful campaign around Kadesh. Either of these could be the campaign referred to on Tutankhamun's Restoration Stela: "if an army was sent to Djahy [southern Canaan and Syria] to broaden the boundaries of Egypt, no success of their cause came to pass."[115][116][117] John Coleman Darnell and Colleen Manassa also argued that Akhenaten fought with the Hittites for control of Kadesh, but was unsuccessful; the city was not recaptured until 60–70 years later, under Seti I.[118]

Overall, archeological evidence suggests that Akhenaten paid close attention to the affairs of Egyptian vassals in Canaan and Syria, though primarily not through letters such as those found at Amarna but through reports from government officials and agents. Akhenaten managed to preserve Egypt's control over the core of its Near Eastern Empire (which consisted of present-day Israel as well as the Phoenician coast) while avoiding conflict with the increasingly powerful and aggressive Hittite Empire of Šuppiluliuma I, which overtook the Mitanni as the dominant power in the northern part of the region. Only the Egyptian border province of Amurru in Syria around the Orontes River was lost to the Hittites when its ruler Aziru defected to the Hittites; ordered by Akhenaten to come to Egypt, Aziru was released after promising to stay loyal to the pharaoh, nonetheless turning to the Hittites soon after his release.[119]

Later years

 
In regnal year twelve, Akhenaten received tributes and offerings from allied countries and vassal states at Akhetaten, as depicted in the tomb of Meryra II.

Egyptologists know little about the last five years of Akhenaten's reign, beginning in c. 1341[3] or 1339 BC.[4] These years are poorly attested and only a few pieces of contemporary evidence survive; the lack of clarity makes reconstructing the latter part of the pharaoh's reign "a daunting task" and a controversial and contested topic of discussion among Egyptologists.[120] Among the newest pieces of evidence is an inscription discovered in 2012 at a limestone quarry in Deir el-Bersha, just north of Akhetaten, from the pharaoh's sixteenth regnal year. The text refers to a building project in Amarna and establishes that Akhenaten and Nefertiti were still a royal couple just a year before Akhenaten's death.[121][122][123] The inscription is dated to Year 16, month 3 of Akhet, day 15 of the reign of Akhenaten.[121]

Before the 2012 discovery of the Deir el-Bersha inscription, the last known fixed-date event in Akhenaten's reign was a royal reception in regnal year twelve, in which the pharaoh and the royal family received tributes and offerings from allied countries and vassal states at Akhetaten. Inscriptions show tributes from Nubia, the Land of Punt, Syria, the Kingdom of Hattusa, the islands in the Mediterranean Sea, and Libya. Egyptologists, such as Aidan Dodson, consider this year twelve celebration to be the zenith of Akhenaten's reign.[124] Thanks to reliefs in the tomb of courtier Meryre II, historians know that the royal family, Akhenaten, Nefertiti, and their six daughters, were present at the royal reception in full.[124] However, historians are uncertain about the reasons for the reception. Possibilities include the celebration of the marriage of future pharaoh Ay to Tey, celebration of Akhenaten's twelve years on the throne, the summons of king Aziru of Amurru to Egypt, a military victory at Sumur in the Levant, a successful military campaign in Nubia,[125] Nefertiti's ascendancy to the throne as coregent, or the completion of the new capital city Akhetaten.[126]

Following year twelve, Donald B. Redford and other Egyptologists proposed that Egypt was struck by an epidemic, most likely a plague.[127] Contemporary evidence suggests that a plague ravaged through the Middle East around this time,[128] and ambassadors and delegations arriving to Akhenaten's year twelve reception might have brought the disease to Egypt.[129] Alternatively, letters from the Hattians might suggest that the epidemic originated in Egypt and was carried throughout the Middle East by Egyptian prisoners of war.[130] Regardless of its origin, the epidemic might account for several deaths in the royal family that occurred in the last five years of Akhenaten's reign, including those of his daughters Meketaten, Neferneferure, and Setepenre.[131][132]

Coregency with Smenkhkare or Nefertiti

Akhenaten could have ruled together with Smenkhkare and Nefertiti for several years before his death.[133][134] Based on depictions and artifacts from the tombs of Meryre II and Tutankhamun, Smenkhkare could have been Akhenaten's coregent by regnal year thirteen or fourteen, but died a year or two later. Nefertiti might not have assumed the role of coregent until after year sixteen, when a stela still mentions her as Akhenaten's Great Royal Wife. While Nefertiti's familial relationship with Akhenaten is known, whether Akhenaten and Smenkhkare were related by blood is unclear. Smenkhkare could have been Akhenaten's son or brother, as the son of Amenhotep III with Tiye or Sitamun.[135] Archaeological evidence makes it clear, however, that Smenkhkare was married to Meritaten, Akhenaten's eldest daughter.[136] For another, the so-called Coregency Stela, found in a tomb at Akhetaten, might show queen Nefertiti as Akhenaten's coregent, but this is uncertain as the stela was recarved to show the names of Ankhesenpaaten and Neferneferuaten.[137] Egyptologist Aidan Dodson proposed that both Smenkhkare and Neferiti were Akhenaten's coregents to ensure the Amarna family's continued rule when Egypt was confronted with an epidemic. Dodson suggested that the two were chosen to rule as Tutankhaten's coregent in case Akhenaten died and Tutankhaten took the throne at a young age, or rule in Tutankhaten's stead if the prince also died in the epidemic.[43]

Death and burial

 
Akhenaten's sarcophagus reconstituted from pieces discovered in his original tomb in Amarna, now in the Egyptian Museum, Cairo.
 
The desecrated royal coffin found in Tomb KV55

Akhenaten died after seventeen years of rule and was initially buried in a tomb in the Royal Wadi east of Akhetaten. The order to construct the tomb and to bury the pharaoh there was commemorated on one of the boundary stela delineating the capital's borders: "Let a tomb be made for me in the eastern mountain [of Akhetaten]. Let my burial be made in it, in the millions of jubilees which the Aten, my father, decreed for me."[138] In the years following the burial, Akhenaten's sarcophagus was destroyed and left in the Akhetaten necropolis; reconstructed in the 20th century, it is in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo as of 2019.[139] Despite leaving the sarcophagus behind, Akhenaten's mummy was removed from the royal tombs after Tutankhamun abandoned Akhetaten and returned to Thebes. It was most likely moved to tomb KV55 in Valley of the Kings near Thebes.[140][141] This tomb was later desecrated, likely during the Ramesside period.[142][143]

Whether Smenkhkare also enjoyed a brief independent reign after Akhenaten is unclear.[144] If Smenkhkare outlived Akhenaten, and became sole pharaoh, he likely ruled Egypt for less than a year. The next successor was Nefertiti[145] or Meritaten[146] ruling as Neferneferuaten, reigning in Egypt for about two years.[147] She was, in turn, probably succeeded by Tutankhaten, with the country being administered by the vizier and future pharaoh Ay.[148]

 
Profile view of the skull (thought to be Akhenaten) recovered from KV55

While Akhenaten—along with Smenkhkare—was most likely reburied in tomb KV55,[149] the identification of the mummy found in that tomb as Akhenaten remains controversial to this day. The mummy has repeatedly been examined since its discovery in 1907. Most recently, Egyptologist Zahi Hawass led a team of researchers to examine the mummy using medical and DNA analysis, with the results published in 2010. In releasing their test results, Hawass's team identified the mummy as the father of Tutankhamun and thus "most probably" Akhenaten.[150] However, the study's validity has since been called into question.[6][7][151][152][153] For instance, the discussion of the study results does not discuss that Tutankhamun's father and the father's siblings would share some genetic markers; if Tutankhamun's father was Akhenaten, the DNA results could indicate that the mummy is a brother of Akhenaten, possibly Smenkhkare.[153][154]

Legacy

With Akhenaten's death, the Aten cult he had founded fell out of favor: at first gradually, and then with decisive finality. Tutankhaten changed his name to Tutankhamun in Year 2 of his reign (c. 1332 BC) and abandoned the city of Akhetaten.[155] Their successors then attempted to erase Akhenaten and his family from the historical record. During the reign of Horemheb, the last pharaoh of the Eighteenth Dynasty and the first pharaoh after Akhenaten who was not related to Akhenaten's family, Egyptians started to destroy temples to the Aten and reuse the building blocks in new construction projects, including in temples for the newly restored god Amun. Horemheb's successor continued in this effort. Seti I restored monuments to Amun and had the god's name re-carved on inscriptions where it was removed by Akhenaten. Seti I also ordered that Akhenaten, Smenkhkare, Neferneferuaten, Tutankhamun, and Ay be excised from official lists of pharaohs to make it appear that Amenhotep III was immediately succeeded by Horemheb. Under the Ramessides, who succeeded Seti I, Akhetaten was gradually destroyed and the building material reused across the country, such as in constructions at Hermopolis. The negative attitudes toward Akhenaten were illustrated by, for example, inscriptions in the tomb of scribe Mose (or Mes), where Akhenaten's reign is referred to as "the time of the enemy of Akhet-Aten."[156][157][158]

Some Egyptologists, such as Jacobus van Dijk and Jan Assmann, believe that Akhenaten's reign and the Amarna period started a gradual decline in the Egyptian government's power and the pharaoh's standing in Egyptian's society and religious life.[159][160] Akhenaten's religious reforms subverted the relationship ordinary Egyptians had with their gods and their pharaoh, as well as the role the pharaoh played in the relationship between the people and the gods. Before the Amarna period, the pharaoh was the representative of the gods on Earth, the son of the god Ra, and the living incarnation of the god Horus, and maintained the divine order through rituals and offerings and by sustaining the temples of the gods.[161] Additionally, even though the pharaoh oversaw all religious activity, Egyptians could access their gods through regular public holidays, festivals, and processions. This led to a seemingly close connection between people and the gods, especially the patron deity of their respective towns and cities.[162] Akhenaten, however, banned the worship of gods beside the Aten, including through festivals. He also declared himself to be the only one who could worship the Aten, and required that all religious devotion previously exhibited toward the gods be directed toward himself. After the Amarna period, during the Nineteenth and Twentieth Dynastiesc. 270 years following Akhenaten's death—the relationship between the people, the pharaoh, and the gods did not simply revert to pre-Amarna practices and beliefs. The worship of all gods returned, but the relationship between the gods and the worshipers became more direct and personal,[163] circumventing the pharaoh. Rather than acting through the pharaoh, Egyptians started to believe that the gods intervened directly in their lives, protecting the pious and punishing criminals.[164] The gods replaced the pharaoh as their own representatives on Earth. The god Amun once again became king among all gods.[165] According to van Dijk, "the king was no longer a god, but god himself had become king. Once Amun had been recognized as the true king, the political power of the earthly rulers could be reduced to a minimum."[166] Consequently, the influence and power of the Amun priesthood continued to grow until the Twenty-first Dynasty, c. 1077 BC, by which time the High Priests of Amun effectively became rulers over parts of Egypt.[160][167][168]

Akhenaten's reforms also had a longer-term impact on Ancient Egyptian language and hastened the spread of the spoken Late Egyptian language in official writings and speeches. Spoken and written Egyptian diverged early on in Egyptian history and stayed different over time.[169] During the Amarna period, however, royal and religious texts and inscriptions, including the boundary stelae at Akhetaten or the Amarna letters, started to regularly include more vernacular linguistic elements, such as the definite article or a new possessive form. Even though they continued to diverge, these changes brought the spoken and written language closer to one another more systematically than under previous pharaohs of the New Kingdom. While Akhenaten's successors attempted to erase his religious, artistic, and even linguistic changes from history, the new linguistic elements remained a more common part of official texts following the Amarna years, starting with the Nineteenth Dynasty.[170][171][172]

Akhenaten is also recognized as a Prophet in the Druze faith.[173][174]

Atenism

 
Relief fragment showing a royal head, probably Akhenaten, and early Aten cartouches. Aten extends Ankh (sign of life) to the figure. Reign of Akhenaten. From Amarna, Egypt. The Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology, London
 
Pharaoh Akhenaten (center) and his family worshiping the Aten, with characteristic rays seen emanating from the solar disk. Later such imagery was prohibited.

Egyptians worshipped a sun god under several names, and solar worship had been growing in popularity even before Akhenaten, especially during the Eighteenth Dynasty and the reign of Amenhotep III, Akhenaten's father.[175] During the New Kingdom, the pharaoh started to be associated with the sun disc; for example, one inscription called the pharaoh Hatshepsut the "female Re shining like the Disc," while Amenhotep III was described as "he who rises over every foreign land, Nebmare, the dazzling disc."[176] During the Eighteenth Dynasty, a religious hymn to the sun also appeared and became popular among Egyptians.[177] However, Egyptologists question whether there is a causal relationship between the cult of the sun disc before Akhenaten and Akhenaten's religious policies.[177]

Implementation and development

The implementation of Atenism can be traced through gradual changes in the Aten's iconography, and Egyptologist Donald B. Redford divided its development into three stages—earliest, intermediate, and final—in his studies of Akhenaten and Atenism. The earliest stage was associated with a growing number of depictions of the sun disc, though the disc is still seen resting on the head of the falcon-headed sun god Ra-Horakhty, as the god was traditionally represented.[178] The god was only "unique but not exclusive."[179] The intermediate stage was marked by the elevation of the Aten above other gods and the appearance of cartouches around his inscribed name—cartouches traditionally indicating that the enclosed text is a royal name. The final stage had the Aten represented as a sun disc with sunrays like long arms terminating in human hands and the introduction of a new epithet for the god: "the great living Disc which is in jubilee, lord of heaven and earth."[180]

In the early years of his reign, Amenhotep IV lived at Thebes, the old capital city, and permitted worship of Egypt's traditional deities to continue. However, some signs already pointed to the growing importance of the Aten. For example, inscriptions in the Theban tomb of Parennefer from the early rule of Amenhotep IV state that "one measures the payments to every (other) god with a level measure, but for the Aten one measures so that it overflows," indicating a more favorable attitude to the cult of Aten than the other gods.[179] Additionally, near the Temple of Karnak, Amun-Ra's great cult center, Amenhotep IV erected several massive buildings including temples to the Aten. The new Aten temples had no roof and the god was thus worshipped in the sunlight, under the open sky, rather than in dark temple enclosures as had been the previous custom.[181][182] The Theban buildings were later dismantled by his successors and used as infill for new constructions in the Temple of Karnak; when they were later dismantled by archaeologists, some 36,000 decorated blocks from the original Aten building here were revealed that preserve many elements of the original relief scenes and inscriptions.[183]

One of the most important turning points in the early reign of Amenhotep IV is a speech given by the pharaoh at the beginning of his second regnal year. A copy of the speech survives on one of the pylons at the Karnak Temple Complex near Thebes. Speaking to the royal court, scribes or the people, Amenhotep IV said that the gods were ineffective and had ceased their movements, and that their temples had collapsed. The pharaoh contrasted this with the only remaining god, the sun disc Aten, who continued to move and exist forever. Some Egyptologists, such as Donald B. Redford, compared this speech to a proclamation or manifesto, which foreshadowed and explained the pharaoh's later religious reforms centered around the Aten.[184][185][186] In his speech, Akhenaten said:

The temples of the gods fallen to ruin, their bodies do not endure. Since the time of the ancestors, it is the wise man that knows these things. Behold, I, the king, am speaking so that I might inform you concerning the appearances of the gods. I know their temples, and I am versed in the writings, specifically, the inventory of their primeval bodies. And I have watched as they [the gods] have ceased their appearances, one after the other. All of them have stopped, except the god who gave birth to himself. And no one knows the mystery of how he performs his tasks. This god goes where he pleases and no one else knows his going. I approach him, the things which he has made. How exalted they are.[187]

 
Akhenaten depicted as a sphinx at Amarna.

In Year Five of his reign, Amenhotep IV took decisive steps to establish the Aten as the sole god of Egypt. The pharaoh "disbanded the priesthoods of all the other gods ... and diverted the income from these [other] cults to support the Aten." To emphasize his complete allegiance to the Aten, the king officially changed his name from Amenhotep IV to Akhenaten (Ancient Egyptian: ꜣḫ-n-jtn, meaning "Effective for the Aten").[183] Meanwhile, the Aten was becoming a king itself. Artists started to depict him with the trappings of pharaohs, placing his name in cartouches—a rare, but not unique occurrence, as the names of Ra-Horakhty and Amun-Ra had also been found enclosed in cartouches—and wearing a uraeus, a symbol of kingship.[188] The Aten may also have been the subject of Akhenaten's royal Sed festival early in the pharaoh's reign.[189] With Aten becoming a sole deity, Akhenaten started to proclaim himself as the only intermediary between Aten and his people, and the subject of their personal worship and attention[190]—a feature not unheard of in Egyptian history, with Fifth Dynasty pharaohs such as Nyuserre Ini proclaiming to be sole intermediaries between the people and the gods Osiris and Ra.[191]

 
Inscribed limestone fragment showing early Aten cartouches, "the Living Ra Horakhty". Reign of Akhenaten. From Amarna, Egypt. The Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology, London
 
Fragment of a stela, showing parts of 3 late cartouches of Aten. There is a rare intermediate form of god's name. Reign of Akhenaten. From Amarna, Egypt. The Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology, London

By Year Nine of his reign, Akhenaten declared that Aten was not merely the supreme god, but the only worshipable god. He ordered the defacing of Amun's temples throughout Egypt and, in a number of instances, inscriptions of the plural 'gods' were also removed.[192][193] This emphasized the changes encouraged by the new regime, which included a ban on images, with the exception of a rayed solar disc, in which the rays appear to represent the unseen spirit of Aten, who by then was evidently considered not merely a sun god, but rather a universal deity. All life on Earth depended on the Aten and the visible sunlight.[194][195] Representations of the Aten were always accompanied with a sort of hieroglyphic footnote, stating that the representation of the sun as all-encompassing creator was to be taken as just that: a representation of something that, by its very nature as something transcending creation, cannot be fully or adequately represented by any one part of that creation.[196] Aten's name was also written differently starting as early as Year Eight or as late as Year Fourteen, according to some historians.[197] From "Living Re-Horakhty, who rejoices in the horizon in his name Shu-Re who is in Aten," the god's name changed to "Living Re, ruler of the horizon, who rejoices in his name of Re the father who has returned as Aten," removing the Aten's connection to Re-Horakhty and Shu, two other solar deities.[198] The Aten thus became an amalgamation that incorporated the attributes and beliefs around Re-Horakhty, universal sun god, and Shu, god of the sky and manifestation of the sunlight.[199]

 
Siliceous limestone fragment of a statue. There are late Aten cartouches on the draped right shoulder. Reign of Akhenaten. From Amarna, Egypt. The Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology, London

Akhenaten's Atenist beliefs are best distilled in the Great Hymn to the Aten.[200] The hymn was discovered in the tomb of Ay, one of Akhenaten's successors, though Egyptologists believe that it could have been composed by Akhenaten himself.[201][202] The hymn celebrates the sun and daylight and recounts the dangers that abound when the sun sets. It tells of the Aten as a sole god and the creator of all life, who recreates life every day at sunrise, and on whom everything on Earth depends, including the natural world, people's lives, and even trade and commerce.[203] In one passage, the hymn declares: "O Sole God beside whom there is none! You made the earth as you wished, you alone."[204] The hymn also states that Akhenaten is the only intermediary between the god and Egyptians, and the only one who can understand the Aten: "You are in my heart, and there is none who knows you except your son."[205]

Atenism and other gods

Some debate has focused on the extent to which Akhenaten forced his religious reforms on his people.[206] Certainly, as time drew on, he revised the names of the Aten, and other religious language, to increasingly exclude references to other gods; at some point, also, he embarked on the wide-scale erasure of traditional gods' names, especially those of Amun.[207] Some of his court changed their names to remove them from the patronage of other gods and place them under that of Aten (or Ra, with whom Akhenaten equated the Aten). Yet, even at Amarna itself, some courtiers kept such names as Ahmose ("child of the moon god", the owner of tomb 3), and the sculptor's workshop where the famous Nefertiti Bust and other works of royal portraiture were found is associated with an artist known to have been called Thutmose ("child of Thoth"). An overwhelmingly large number of faience amulets at Amarna also show that talismans of the household-and-childbirth gods Bes and Taweret, the eye of Horus, and amulets of other traditional deities, were openly worn by its citizens. Indeed, a cache of royal jewelry found buried near the Amarna royal tombs (now in the National Museum of Scotland) includes a finger ring referring to Mut, the wife of Amun. Such evidence suggests that though Akhenaten shifted funding away from traditional temples, his policies were fairly tolerant until some point, perhaps a particular event as yet unknown, toward the end of the reign.[208]

Archaeological discoveries at Akhetaten show that many ordinary residents of this city chose to gouge or chisel out all references to the god Amun on even minor personal items that they owned, such as commemorative scarabs or make-up pots, perhaps for fear of being accused of having Amunist sympathies. References to Amenhotep III, Akhenaten's father, were partly erased since they contained the traditional Amun form of his name: Nebmaatre Amunhotep.[209]

After Akhenaten

Following Akhenaten's death, Egypt gradually returned to its traditional polytheistic religion, partly because of how closely associated the Aten became with Akhenaten.[210] Atenism likely stayed dominant through the reigns of Akhenaten's immediate successors, Smenkhkare and Neferneferuaten, as well as early in the reign of Tutankhaten.[211] For some years the worship of Aten and a resurgent worship of Amun coexisted.[212][213]

Over time, however, Akhenaten's successors, starting with Tutankhaten, took steps to distance themselves from Atenism. Tutankhaten and his wife Ankhesenpaaten dropped the Aten from their names and changed them to Tutankhamun and Ankhesenamun, respectively. Amun was restored as the supreme deity. Tutankhamun reestablished the temples of the other gods, as the pharaoh propagated on his Restoration Stela: "He reorganized this land, restoring its customs to those of the time of Re. ... He renewed the gods' mansions and fashioned all their images. ... He raised up their temples and created their statues. ... When he had sought out the gods' precincts which were in ruins in this land, he refounded them just as they had been since the time of the first primeval age."[214] Additionally, Tutankhamun's building projects at Thebes and Karnak used talatat's from Akhenaten's buildings, which implies that Tutankhamun might have started to demolish temples dedicated to the Aten. Aten temples continued to be torn down under Ay and Horemheb, Tutankhamun's successors and the last pharaohs of the Eighteenth Dynasty. Horemheb might also have ordered the demolition of Akhetaten, Akhenaten's capital city.[215] Further underlining the break with Aten worship, Horemheb claimed to have been chosen to rule by the god Horus. Finally, Seti I, the second pharaoh of the Nineteenth Dynasty, ordered the name of Amun to be restored on inscriptions where it had been removed or replaced by Aten.[216]

Artistic depictions

 
Akhenaten in the typical Amarna period style.
 
Statue of Akhenaten in the collection of the Egyptian Museum, Cairo.

Styles of art that flourished during the reigns of Akhenaten and his immediate successors, known as Amarna art, are markedly different from the traditional art of ancient Egypt. Representations are more realistic, expressionistic, and naturalistic,[217][218] especially in depictions of animals, plants and people, and convey more action and movement for both non-royal and royal individuals than the traditionally static representations. In traditional art, a pharaoh's divine nature was expressed by repose, even immobility.[219][220][221]

The portrayals of Akhenaten himself greatly differ from the depictions of other pharaohs. Traditionally, the portrayal of pharaohs—and the Egyptian ruling class—was idealized, and they were shown in "stereotypically 'beautiful' fashion" as youthful and athletic.[222] However, Akhenaten's portrayals are unconventional and "unflattering" with a sagging stomach; broad hips; thin legs; thick thighs; large, "almost feminine breasts;" a thin, "exaggeratedly long face;" and thick lips.[223]

Based on Akhenaten's and his family's unusual artistic representations, including potential depictions of gynecomastia and androgyny, some have argued that the pharaoh and his family have either had aromatase excess syndrome and sagittal craniosynostosis syndrome, or Antley–Bixler syndrome.[224] In 2010, results published from genetic studies on Akhenaten's purported mummy did not find signs of gynecomastia or Antley-Bixler syndrome,[21] although these results have since been questioned.[225]

Arguing instead for a symbolic interpretation, Dominic Montserrat in Akhenaten: History, Fantasy and Ancient Egypt states that "there is now a broad consensus among Egyptologists that the exaggerated forms of Akhenaten's physical portrayal... are not to be read literally".[209][226] Because the god Aten was referred to as "the mother and father of all humankind," Montserrat and others suggest that Akhenaten was made to look androgynous in artwork as a symbol of the androgyny of the Aten.[227] This required "a symbolic gathering of all the attributes of the creator god into the physical body of the king himself", which will "display on earth the Aten's multiple life-giving functions".[226] Akhenaten claimed the title "The Unique One of Re", and he may have directed his artists to contrast him with the common people through a radical departure from the idealized traditional pharaoh image.[226]

Depictions of other members of the court, especially members of the royal family, are also exaggerated, stylized, and overall different from traditional art.[219] Significantly, and for the only time in the history of Egyptian royal art, the pharaoh's family life is depicted: the royal family is shown mid-action in relaxed, casual, and intimate situations, taking part in decidedly naturalistic activities, showing affection for each other, such as holding hands and kissing.[228][229][230][231]

 
Small statue of Akhenaten wearing the Egyptian Blue Crown of War

Nefertiti also appears, both beside the king and alone, or with her daughters, in actions usually reserved for a pharaoh, such as "smiting the enemy," a traditional depiction of male pharaohs.[232] This suggests that she enjoyed unusual status for a queen. Early artistic representations of her tend to be indistinguishable from her husband's except by her regalia, but soon after the move to the new capital, Nefertiti begins to be depicted with features specific to her. Questions remain whether the beauty of Nefertiti is portraiture or idealism.[233]

Speculative theories

 
Sculptor's trial piece of Akhenaten.

Akhenaten's status as a religious revolutionary has led to much speculation, ranging from scholarly hypotheses to non-academic fringe theories. Although some believe the religion he introduced was mostly monotheistic, many others see Akhenaten as a practitioner of an Aten monolatry,[234] as he did not actively deny the existence of other gods; he simply refrained from worshiping any but the Aten.

Akhenaten and monotheism in Abrahamic religions

The idea that Akhenaten was the pioneer of a monotheistic religion that later became Judaism has been considered by various scholars.[235][236][237][238][239] One of the first to mention this was Sigmund Freud, the founder of psychoanalysis, in his book Moses and Monotheism.[235] Basing his arguments on his belief that the Exodus story was historical, Freud argued that Moses had been an Atenist priest who was forced to leave Egypt with his followers after Akhenaten's death. Freud argued that Akhenaten was striving to promote monotheism, something that the biblical Moses was able to achieve.[235] Following the publication of his book, the concept entered popular consciousness and serious research.[240][241]

Freud commented on the connection between Adonai, the Egyptian Aten and the Syrian divine name of Adonis as stemming from a common root;[235] in this he was following the argument of Egyptologist Arthur Weigall. Jan Assmann's opinion is that 'Aten' and 'Adonai' are not linguistically related.[242]

There are strong similarities between Akhenaten's Great Hymn to the Aten and the Biblical Psalm 104, but there is debate as to relationship implied by this similarity.[243][244]

Others have likened some aspects of Akhenaten's relationship with the Aten to the relationship, in Christian tradition, between Jesus Christ and God, particularly interpretations that emphasize a more monotheistic interpretation of Atenism than a henotheistic one. Donald B. Redford has noted that some have viewed Akhenaten as a harbinger of Jesus. "After all, Akhenaten did call himself the son of the sole god: 'Thine only son that came forth from thy body'."[245] James Henry Breasted likened him to Jesus,[246] Arthur Weigall saw him as a failed precursor of Christ and Thomas Mann saw him "as right on the way and yet not the right one for the way".[247]

Although scholars like Brian Fagan (2015) and Robert Alter (2018) have re-opened the debate, in 1997, Redford concluded:

Before much of the archaeological evidence from Thebes and from Tell el-Amarna became available, wishful thinking sometimes turned Akhenaten into a humane teacher of the true God, a mentor of Moses, a christlike figure, a philosopher before his time. But these imaginary creatures are now fading away as the historical reality gradually emerges. There is little or no evidence to support the notion that Akhenaten was a progenitor of the full-blown monotheism that we find in the Bible. The monotheism of the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament had its own separate development—one that began more than half a millennium after the pharaoh's death.[248]

Possible illness

 
Hieratic inscription on a pottery fragment. It records year 17 of Akhenaten's reign and references wine of the house of Aten. From Amarna, Egypt. The Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology, London
 
Limestone trial piece of a king, probably Akhenaten, and a smaller head of uncertain gender. From Amarna, Egypt – 18th Dynasty. The Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology, London

The unconventional portrayals of Akhenaten—different from the traditional athletic norm in the portrayal of pharaohs—have led Egyptologists in the 19th and 20th centuries to suppose that Akhenaten had some kind of genetic abnormality.[223] Various illnesses have been put forward, with Frölich's syndrome or Marfan syndrome being mentioned most commonly.[249]

Cyril Aldred,[250] following up earlier arguments of Grafton Elliot Smith[251] and James Strachey,[252] suggested that Akhenaten may have had Frölich's syndrome on the basis of his long jaw and his feminine appearance. However, this is unlikely, because this disorder results in sterility and Akhenaten is known to have fathered numerous children. His children are repeatedly portrayed through years of archaeological and iconographic evidence.[253]

Burridge[254] suggested that Akhenaten may have had Marfan syndrome, which, unlike Frölich's, does not result in mental impairment or sterility. People with Marfan syndrome tend towards tallness, with a long, thin face, elongated skull, overgrown ribs, a funnel or pigeon chest, a high curved or slightly cleft palate, and larger pelvis, with enlarged thighs and spindly calves, symptoms that appear in some depictions of Akhenaten.[255] Marfan syndrome is a dominant characteristic, which means those affected have a 50% chance of passing it on to their children.[256] However, DNA tests on Tutankhamun in 2010 proved negative for Marfan syndrome.[257]

By the early 21st century, most Egyptologists argued that Akhenaten's portrayals are not the results of a genetic or medical condition, but rather should be interpreted as stylized portrayals influenced by Atenism.[209][226] Akhenaten was made to look androgynous in artwork as a symbol of the androgyny of the Aten.[226]

Cultural depictions

Akhenaten's life, accomplishments, and legacy have been preserved and depicted in many ways, and he has figured in works of both high and popular culture since his rediscovery in the 19th century AD. Akhenaten—alongside Cleopatra and Alexander the Great—is among the most often popularized and fictionalized ancient historical figures.[258]

On page, Amarna novels most often take one of two forms. They are either a Bildungsroman, focusing on Akhenaten's psychological and moral growth as it relates to establishing Atenism and Akhetaten, as well as his struggles against the Theban Amun cult. Alternatively, his literary depictions focus on the aftermath of his reign and religion.[259] A dividing line also exists between depictions of Akhenaten from before the 1920s and since, when more and more archeological discoveries started to provide artists with material evidence about his life and times. Thus, before the 1920s, Akhenaten had appeared as "a ghost, a spectral figure" in art, while since he has become realistic, "material and tangible."[260] Examples of the former include the romance novels In the Tombs of the Kings (1910) by Lilian Bagnall—the first appearance by Akhenaten and his wife Nefertiti in fiction—and A Wife Out of Egypt (1913) and There Was a King in Egypt (1918) by Norma Lorimer. Examples of the latter include Akhnaton King of Egypt (1924) by Dmitry Merezhkovsky, Joseph and His Brothers (1933–1943) by Thomas Mann, Akhnaton (1973) by Agatha Christie, and Akhenaten, Dweller in Truth (1985) by Naguib Mahfouz. Akhenaten also appears in The Egyptian (1945) by Mika Waltari, which was adapted into the movie The Egyptian (1953). In this movie, Akhenaten, portrayed by Michael Wilding, appears to represent Jesus Christ and his followers proto-Christians.[261]

A sexualized image of Akhenaten, building on early Western interest in the pharaoh's androgynous depictions, perceived potential homosexuality, and identification with Oedipal storytelling, also influenced modern works of art.[262] The two most notable portrayals are Akenaten (1975), an unfilmed screenplay by Derek Jarman, and Akhnaten (1984), an opera by Philip Glass.[263][264] Both were influenced by the unproven and scientifically unsupported theories of Immanuel Velikovsky, who equated Oedipus with Akhenaten,[265] although Glass specifically denies his personal belief in Velikovsky's Oedpius theory, or caring about its historical validity, instead being drawn to its potential theatricality.[266]

In the 21st century, Akhenaten appeared as an antagonist in comic books and video games. For example, he is the major antagonist in limited comic-book series Marvel: The End (2003). In this series, Akhenaten is abducted by an alien order in the 14th century BC and reappears on modern Earth seeking to restore his kingdom. He is opposed by essentially all of the other superheroes and supervillains in the Marvel comic book universe and is eventually defeated by Thanos.[267] Additionally, Akhenaten appears as the enemy in the Assassin's Creed Origins The Curse of the Pharaohs downloadable content (2017), and must be defeated to remove his curse on Thebes.[267] His afterlife takes the form of 'Aten', a location that draws heavily on the architecture of the city of Amarna.[268]

American death metal band Nile depicted Akhenaten's judgement, punishment, and erasure from history at the hands of the pantheon that he replaced with Aten, in the song "Cast Down the Heretic", from their 2005 album Annihilation of the Wicked. He was also featured on the cover artwork of their 2009 album, Those Whom the Gods Detest.

Ancestry

See also

Notes and references

Notes

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  234. ^ Montserrat 2003, p. 36.
  235. ^ a b c d Freud 1939.
  236. ^ Stent 2002, pp. 34–38.
  237. ^ Assmann 1997.
  238. ^ Shupak 1995.
  239. ^ Albright 1973.
  240. ^ Chaney 2006a, pp. 62–69.
  241. ^ Chaney 2006b.
  242. ^ Assmann 1997, pp. 23–24.
  243. ^ Hoffmeier 2015, pp. 246–256: "...it seems best to conclude for the present that the "parallels" between Amarna hymns to Aten and Psalm 104 should be attributed to "the common theology" and the "general pattern"...";

    Hoffmeier 2005, p. 239: "...There has been some debate whether the similarities direct or indirect borrowing... it is unlikely that "the Israelite who composed Psalm 104 borrowed directly from the sublime Egyptian 'Hymn to the Aten'," as Stager has recently claimed.";

    Alter 2018, p. 54: "...I think there may be some likelihood, however unprovable, that our psalmist was familiar with at least an intermediate version of Akhenaton's hymn and adopted some elements from it.";

    Brown 2014, p. 61–73: "the question of the relationship between Egyptian hymns and the Psalms remains open"

  244. ^ Assmann 2020, pp. 40–43: "Verses 20–30 cannot be understood as anything other than a loose and abridged translation of the "Great Hymn":...";

    Day 2014, pp. 22–23: "...a significant part of the rest Of Psalm 104 (esp. vv. 20–30) is dependent on... Akhenaten's Hymn to the Sun god Aten... these parallels almost all come in the same order:...";

    Day 2013, pp. 223–224: "...this dependence is confined to vv. 20–30. Here the evidence is particularly impressive, since we have six parallels with Akhenaten's hymn... occurring in the identical order, with one exception.";

    Landes 2011, pp. 155, 178: "the hymn to Aten quoted as epigraph to this chapter—replicates the intense religiosity and even the language of the Hebrew Psalm 104. Indeed, most Egyptologists argue that this hymn inspired the psalm...", "...For some, the relationship to Hebraic monotheism seems extremely close, including the nearly verbatim passages in Psalm 104 and the "Hymn to Aten" found in one of the tombs at Akhetaten...";

    Shaw 2004, p. 19: "An intriguing direct literary (and perhaps religious) link between Egypt and the Bible is Psalm 104, which has strong similarities with a hymn to the Aten"

  245. ^ Redford 1987.
  246. ^ Levenson 1994, p. 60.
  247. ^ Hornung 2001, p. 14.
  248. ^ Redford, Shanks & Meinhardt 1997.
  249. ^ Ridley 2019, p. 87.
  250. ^ Aldred 1991.
  251. ^ Smith 1923, pp. 83–88.
  252. ^ Strachey 1939.
  253. ^ Hawass 2010.
  254. ^ Burridge 1995.
  255. ^ Lorenz 2010.
  256. ^ National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences 2017.
  257. ^ Schemm 2010.
  258. ^ Montserrat 2003, p. 139.
  259. ^ Montserrat 2003, p. 144.
  260. ^ Montserrat 2003, p. 154.
  261. ^ Montserrat 2003, pp. 163, 200–212.
  262. ^ Montserrat 2003, pp. 168, 170.
  263. ^ Montserrat 2003, pp. 175–176.
  264. ^ Davidson 2019.
  265. ^ Montserrat 2003, p. 176.
  266. ^ Glass, Philip (1987) Music by Philip Glass New York: Harper & Row. p.137-138. ISBN 0-06-015823-9
  267. ^ a b Marvel 2021.
  268. ^ Hotton 2018.

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Further reading

  • Aldred, Cyril (1973). Akhenaten and Nefertiti. London: Thames & Hudson.
  • Aldred, Cyril (1984). The Egyptians. London: Thames & Hudson.
  • Allen, James Peter (1994). "Nefertiti and Smenkh-ka-re". Göttinger Miszellen. Göttingen, Germany: Verlag der Göttinger Miszellen. 141: 7–17. ISSN 0344-385X.
  • Asante, Molefi Kete; Mazama, Ama (2009). Encyclopedia of African Religion. Thousand Oaks, California: Sage Publications.
  • Ashrafian, Hutan (September 2012). "Familial epilepsy in the pharaohs of ancient Egypt's 18th Dynasty". Epilepsy & Behavior. 25 (1): 23–31. doi:10.1016/j.yebeh.2012.06.014. PMID 22980077. S2CID 20771815.
  • Bilolo, Mubabinge (2004) [1988]. "Sect. I, vol. 2". Le Créateur et la Création dans la pensée memphite et amarnienne. Approche synoptique du Document Philosophique de Memphis et du Grand Hymne Théologique d'Echnaton (in French) (new ed.). Munich-Paris: Academy of African Thought.
  • Čavka, Mislav; Kelava, Kelava; Čavka, Vlatka; Bušić, Željko; Olujić, Boris; Brkljačić, Boris (March 2010). "Homocystinuria, a possible solution of the Akhenaten's mystery". Collegium Antropologicum. Croatian Anthropological Society. 34 (Suppl. 1): 255–258. ISSN 0350-6134. PMID 20402329.
  • El Mahdy, Christine (1999). Tutankhamen: The Life and Death of a Boy King. Headline.
  • Choi B, Pak A (2001). "Lessons for surveillance in the 21st century: a historical perspective from the past five millennia". Soz Praventivmed. 46 (6): 361–368. doi:10.1007/BF01321662. hdl:10.1007/BF01321662. PMID 11851070. S2CID 12263035.
  • Locker, Melissa (September 12, 2013). "Did King Tutankhamen Die From Epilepsy?". Time.
  • Málek, Jaromír (1996). "The "Coregency relief" of Akhenaten and Smenkhare from Memphis". In Der Manuelian, Peter; Freed, Rita E. (eds.). Studies in Honor of William Kelly Simpson (PDF). Vol. 2. Boston: Museum of Fine Arts. ISBN 0-87846-390-9. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved June 1, 2020.
  • Miller, Jared L. (2007). "Amarna Age Chronology and the Identity of Nibh ̆ururiyain the Light of a Newly Reconstructed Hittite Text" (PDF). Altorientalische Forschungen. De Gruyter. 34 (2): 252–293. (PDF) from the original on February 12, 2020. Retrieved June 9, 2020.
  • Rita E. Freed; Yvonne J. Markowitz (1999). Sue H. D'Auria (ed.). Pharaohs of the Sun: Akhenaten – Nefertiti – Tutankhamen. Bulfinch Press.
  • Gestoso Singer, Graciela (2008). El Intercambio de Bienes entre Egipto y Asia Anterior. Desde el reinado de Tuthmosis III hasta el de Akhenaton Free Access (in Spanish) Ancient Near East Monographs, Volume 2. Buenos Aires, Society of Biblical Literature – CEHAO.
  • Holland, Tom (1998). The Sleeper in the Sands (novel), Abacus – a fictionalised adventure story based closely on the mysteries of Akhenaten's reign
  • Kozloff, Arielle (2006). "Bubonic Plague in the Reign of Amenhotep III?". KMT. 17 (3).
  • McAvoy, S. (2007). "Mummy 61074: a Strange Case of Mistaken Identity". Antiguo Oriente. 5: 183–194.
  • Najovits, Simson. Egypt, Trunk of the Tree, Volume I, The Contexts, Volume II, The Consequences, Algora Publishing, New York, 2003 and 2004. On Akhenaten: Vol. II, Chapter 11, pp. 117–73 and Chapter 12, pp. 205–13
  • Redford, Donald B. (1984). Akhenaten: The Heretic King. Princeton University Press
  • Shortridge K (1992). "Pandemic influenza: a zoonosis?". Semin Respir Infect. 7 (1): 11–25. PMID 1609163.
  • Stevens, Anna (2012). Akhenaten's workers : the Amarna Stone village survey, 2005–2009. Volume I, The survey, excavations and architecture. Egypt Exploration Society.
  • Van Dyke, John Charles (1887). Principles of Art: Pt. 1. Art in History; Pt. 2. Art in Theory. New York, New York: Fords, Howard, & Hulbert. Retrieved June 19, 2020.
  • Wolf, Walther (1951). Die Stellung der ägyptischen Kunst zur antiken und abendländischen und Das Problem des Künstlers in der ägyptischen Kunst (in German). Hildesheim, Germany: Gerstenberg.

External links

  • Akhenaten on In Our Time at the BBC
  • The City of Akhetaten
  • The Great Hymn to the Aten
  • M.A. Mansoor Amarna Collection
  • Grim secrets of Pharaoh's city BBC
  • Ancestry and Pathology in King Tutankhamun's Family Hawass
  • The Long Coregency Revisited: the Tomb of Kheruef June 13, 2011, at the Wayback Machine by Peter Dorman, University of Chicago
  • Royal Relations, Tut's father is very likely Akhenaten. National Geographic 09. 2010 August 9, 2011, at the Wayback Machine

akhenaten, other, uses, disambiguation, pronounced, ɑː, also, spelled, akhenaton, echnaton, ancient, egyptian, ꜣḫ, ʾŪḫə, yātəy, pronounced, ˈʔuːχəʔ, ˈjaːtəj, meaning, effective, aten, ancient, egyptian, pharaoh, reigning, 1353, 1336, 1351, 1334, tenth, ruler, . For other uses see Akhenaten disambiguation Akhenaten pronounced ˌ ae k e ˈ n ɑː t en 8 also spelled Akhenaton 3 9 10 or Echnaton 11 Ancient Egyptian ꜣḫ n jtn ʾuḫe ne yatey pronounced ˈʔuːxeʔ ne ˈjaːtej 12 13 meaning Effective for the Aten was an ancient Egyptian pharaoh reigning c 1353 1336 3 or 1351 1334 BC 4 the tenth ruler of the Eighteenth Dynasty Before the fifth year of his reign he was known as Amenhotep IV Ancient Egyptian jmn ḥtp meaning Amun is satisfied Hellenized as Amenophis IV Akhenaten Amenhotep IVAmenophis IV Naphurureya Ikhnaton 1 2 Statue of Akhenaten at the Egyptian MuseumPharaohReign1353 1336 BC 3 1351 1334 BC 4 PredecessorAmenhotep IIISuccessorSmenkhkareRoyal titularyConsortsNefertiti Kiya An unidentified sister wife most likely Tadukhipa Unidentified daughters of Satiya and Burna Buriash IIChildrenSmenkhkare Meritaten Meketaten Ankhesenamun Neferneferuaten Tasherit Neferneferure Setepenre Tutankhamun most likely Ankhesenpaaten Tasherit Meritaten Tasherit FatherAmenhotep IIIMotherTiyeDied1336 or 1334 BCBurialRoyal Tomb of Akhenaten Amarna original tomb KV55 disputed 6 7 MonumentsAkhetaten GempaatenReligionAncient Egyptian religion AtenismDynasty18th Dynasty of EgyptAs a pharaoh Akhenaten is noted for abandoning Egypt s traditional polytheism and introducing Atenism or worship centered around Aten The views of Egyptologists differ as to whether the religious policy was absolutely monotheistic or whether it was monolatristic syncretistic or henotheistic 14 15 This culture shift away from traditional religion was reversed after his death Akhenaten s monuments were dismantled and hidden his statues were destroyed and his name excluded from lists of rulers compiled by later pharaohs 16 Traditional religious practice was gradually restored notably under his close successor Tutankhamun who changed his name from Tutankhaten early in his reign 17 When some dozen years later rulers without clear rights of succession from the Eighteenth Dynasty founded a new dynasty they discredited Akhenaten and his immediate successors and referred to Akhenaten as the enemy or that criminal in archival records 18 19 Akhenaten was all but lost to history until the late 19th century discovery of Amarna or Akhetaten the new capital city he built for the worship of Aten 20 Furthermore in 1907 a mummy that could be Akhenaten s was unearthed from the tomb KV55 in the Valley of the Kings by Edward R Ayrton Genetic testing has determined that the man buried in KV55 was Tutankhamun s father 21 but its identification as Akhenaten has since been questioned 6 7 22 23 24 Akhenaten s rediscovery and Flinders Petrie s early excavations at Amarna sparked great public interest in the pharaoh and his queen Nefertiti He has been described as enigmatic mysterious revolutionary the greatest idealist of the world and the first individual in history but also as a heretic fanatic possibly insane and mad 14 25 26 27 28 Public and scholarly fascination with Akhenaten comes from his connection with Tutankhamun the unique style and high quality of the pictorial arts he patronized and the religion he attempted to establish foreshadowing monotheism Contents 1 Family 2 Early life 3 Reign 3 1 Coregency with Amenhotep III 3 2 Early reign as Amenhotep lV 3 3 Name change 3 4 Founding Amarna 3 5 International relations 3 6 Later years 3 7 Coregency with Smenkhkare or Nefertiti 3 8 Death and burial 3 9 Legacy 4 Atenism 4 1 Implementation and development 4 2 Atenism and other gods 4 3 After Akhenaten 5 Artistic depictions 6 Speculative theories 6 1 Akhenaten and monotheism in Abrahamic religions 6 2 Possible illness 7 Cultural depictions 8 Ancestry 9 See also 10 Notes and references 10 1 Notes 10 2 Bibliography 10 3 Further reading 11 External linksFamily nbsp Akhenaten Nefertiti and their childrenSee also Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt family tree The future Akhenaten was born Amenhotep a younger son of pharaoh Amenhotep III and his principal wife Tiye Akhenaten had an elder brother crown prince Thutmose who was recognized as Amenhotep III s heir Akhenaten also had four or five sisters Sitamun Henuttaneb Iset Nebetah and possibly Beketaten 29 Thutmose s early death perhaps around Amenhotep III s thirtieth regnal year meant that Akhenaten was next in line for Egypt s throne 30 Akhenaten was married to Nefertiti his Great Royal Wife The exact timing of their marriage is unknown but inscriptions from the pharaoh s building projects suggest that they married either shortly before or after Akhenaten took the throne 10 For example Egyptologist Dimitri Laboury suggests that the marriage took place in Akhenaten s fourth regnal year 31 A secondary wife of Akhenaten named Kiya is also known from inscriptions Some Egyptologists theorize that she gained her importance as the mother of Tutankhamun 32 William Murnane proposes that Kiya is the colloquial name of the Mitanni princess Tadukhipa daughter of the Mitanni king Tushratta who had married Amenhotep III before becoming the wife of Akhenaten 33 34 Akhenaten s other attested consorts are the daughter of the Enisasi ruler Satiya and another daughter of the Babylonian king Burna Buriash II 35 nbsp This limestone relief of a royal couple in the Amarna style has variously been attributed as Akhenaten and Nefertiti Smenkhkare and Meritaten or Tutankhamun and Ankhesenamun Akhenaten could have had seven or eight children based on inscriptions Egyptologists are fairly certain about his six daughters who are well attested in contemporary depictions 36 Among his six daughters Meritaten was born in regnal year one or five Meketaten in year four or six Ankhesenpaaten later queen of Tutankhamun before year five or eight Neferneferuaten Tasherit in year eight or nine Neferneferure in year nine or ten and Setepenre in year ten or eleven 37 38 39 40 Tutankhamun born Tutankhaten was most likely Akhenaten s son with Nefertiti or another wife 41 42 There is less certainty around Akhenaten s relationship with Smenkhkare Akhenaten s coregent or successor 43 and husband to his daughter Meritaten he could have been Akhenaten s eldest son with an unknown wife or Akhenaten s younger brother 44 45 Some historians such as Edward Wente and James Allen have proposed that Akhenaten took some of his daughters as wives or sexual consorts to father a male heir 46 47 While this is debated some historical parallels exist Akhenaten s father Amenhotep III married his daughter Sitamun while Ramesses II married two or more of his daughters even though their marriages might simply have been ceremonial 48 49 In Akhenaten s case his oldest daughter Meritaten is recorded as Great Royal Wife to Smenkhkare but is also listed on a box from Tutankhamun s tomb alongside pharaohs Akhenaten and Neferneferuaten as Great Royal Wife Additionally letters written to Akhenaten from foreign rulers make reference to Meritaten as mistress of the house Egyptologists in the early 20th century also believed that Akhenaten could have fathered a child with his second oldest daughter Meketaten Meketaten s death at perhaps age ten to twelve is recorded in the royal tombs at Akhetaten from around regnal years thirteen or fourteen Early Egyptologists attribute her death to childbirth because of the depiction of an infant in her tomb Because no husband is known for Meketaten the assumption had been that Akhenaten was the father Aidan Dodson believes this to be unlikely as no Egyptian tomb has been found that mentions or alludes to the cause of death of the tomb owner Further Jacobus van Dijk proposes that the child is a portrayal of Meketaten s soul 50 Finally various monuments originally for Kiya were reinscribed for Akhenaten s daughters Meritaten and Ankhesenpaaten The revised inscriptions list a Meritaten tasherit junior and an Ankhesenpaaten tasherit According to some this indicates that Akhenaten fathered his own grandchildren Others hold that since these grandchildren are not attested to elsewhere they are fictions invented to fill the space originally portraying Kiya s child 46 51 Early life nbsp Akhenaten s elder brother Thutmose shown in his role as High Priest of Ptah Akhenaten became heir to the throne after Thutmose died during their father s reign Egyptologists know very little about Akhenaten s life as prince Amenhotep Donald B Redford dates his birth before his father Amenhotep III s 25th regnal year c 1363 1361 BC based on the birth of Akhenaten s first daughter who was likely born fairly early in his own reign 4 52 The only mention of his name as the King s Son Amenhotep was found on a wine docket at Amenhotep III s Malkata palace where some historians suggested Akhenaten was born Others contend that he was born at Memphis where growing up he was influenced by the worship of the sun god Ra practiced at nearby Heliopolis 53 Redford and James K Hoffmeier state however that Ra s cult was so widespread and established throughout Egypt that Akhenaten could have been influenced by solar worship even if he did not grow up around Heliopolis 54 55 Some historians have tried to determine who was Akhenaten s tutor during his youth and have proposed scribes Heqareshu or Meryre II the royal tutor Amenemotep or the vizier Aperel 56 The only person we know for certain served the prince was Parennefer whose tomb mentions this fact 57 Egyptologist Cyril Aldred suggests that prince Amenhotep might have been a High Priest of Ptah in Memphis although no evidence supporting this had been found 58 It is known that Amenhotep s brother crown prince Thutmose served in this role before he died If Amenhotep inherited all his brother s roles in preparation for his accession to the throne he might have become a high priest in Thutmose s stead Aldred proposes that Akhenaten s unusual artistic inclinations might have been formed during his time serving Ptah the patron god of craftsmen whose high priest were sometimes referred to as The Greatest of the Directors of Craftsmanship 59 ReignCoregency with Amenhotep III There is much controversy around whether Amenhotep IV ascended to Egypt s throne on the death of his father Amenhotep III or whether there was a coregency lasting perhaps as long as 12 years Eric Cline Nicholas Reeves Peter Dorman and other scholars argue strongly against the establishment of a long coregency between the two rulers and in favor of either no coregency or one lasting at most two years 60 Donald B Redford William J Murnane Alan Gardiner and Lawrence Berman contest the view of any coregency whatsoever between Akhenaten and his father 61 62 Most recently in 2014 archaeologists found both pharaohs names inscribed on the wall of the Luxor tomb of vizier Amenhotep Huy The Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities called this conclusive evidence that Akhenaten shared power with his father for at least eight years based on the dating of the tomb 63 However this conclusion has since been called into question by other Egyptologists according to whom the inscription only means that construction on Amenhotep Huy s tomb started during Amenhotep III s reign and ended under Akhenaten s and Amenhotep Huy thus simply wanted to pay his respects to both rulers 64 Early reign as Amenhotep lV nbsp Wooden standing statue of Akhenaten Currently in the Egyptian Museum of BerlinAkhenaten took Egypt s throne as Amenhotep IV most likely in 1353 65 or 1351 BC 4 It is unknown how old Amenhotep IV was when he did this estimates range from 10 to 23 66 He was most likely crowned in Thebes or less likely at Memphis or Armant 66 The beginning of Amenhotep IV s reign followed established pharaonic traditions He did not immediately start redirecting worship toward the Aten and distancing himself from other gods Egyptologist Donald B Redford believes this implied that Amenhotep IV s eventual religious policies were not conceived of before his reign and he did not follow a pre established plan or program Redford points to three pieces of evidence to support this First surviving inscriptions show Amenhotep IV worshipping several different gods including Atum Osiris Anubis Nekhbet Hathor 67 and the Eye of Ra and texts from this era refer to the gods and every god and every goddess The High Priest of Amun was also still active in the fourth year of Amenhotep IV s reign 68 Second even though he later moved his capital from Thebes to Akhetaten his initial royal titulary honored Thebes his nomen was Amenhotep god ruler of Thebes and recognizing its importance he called the city Southern Heliopolis the first great seat of Re or the Disc Third Amenhotep IV did not yet destroy temples to the other gods and he even continued his father s construction projects at Karnak s Precinct of Amun Re 69 He decorated the walls of the precinct s Third Pylon with images of himself worshipping Ra Horakhty portrayed in the god s traditional form of a falcon headed man 70 Artistic depictions continued unchanged early in Amenhotep IV s reign Tombs built or completed in the first few years after he took the throne such as those of Kheruef Ramose and Parennefer show the pharaoh in the traditional artistic style 71 In Ramose s tomb Amenhotep IV appears on the west wall seated on a throne with Ramose appearing before the pharaoh On the other side of the doorway Amenhotep IV and Nefertiti are shown in the window of appearances with the Aten depicted as the sun disc In Parennefer s tomb Amenhotep IV and Nefertiti are seated on a throne with the sun disc depicted over the pharaoh and his queen 71 While continuing the worship of other gods Amenhotep IV s initial building program sought to build new places of worship to the Aten He ordered the construction of temples or shrines to the Aten in several cities across the country such as Bubastis Tell el Borg Heliopolis Memphis Nekhen Kawa and Kerma 72 He also ordered the construction of a large temple complex dedicated to the Aten at Karnak in Thebes northeast of the parts of the Karnak complex dedicated to Amun The Aten temple complex collectively known as the Per Aten House of the Aten consisted of several temples whose names survive the Gempaaten The Aten is found in the estate of the Aten the Hwt Benben House or Temple of the Benben the Rud Menu Enduring of monuments for Aten forever the Teni Menu Exalted are the monuments of the Aten forever and the Sekhen Aten booth of Aten 73 Around regnal year two or three Amenhotep IV organized a Sed festival Sed festivals were ritual rejuvenations of an aging pharaoh which usually took place for the first time around the thirtieth year of a pharaoh s reign and every three or so years thereafter Egyptologists only speculate as to why Amenhotep IV organized a Sed festival when he was likely still in his early twenties Some historians see it as evidence for Amenhotep III and Amenhotep IV s coregency and believed that Amenhotep IV s Sed festival coincided with one of his father s celebrations Others speculate that Amenhotep IV chose to hold his festival three years after his father s death aiming to proclaim his rule a continuation of his father s reign Yet others believe that the festival was held to honor the Aten on whose behalf the pharaoh ruled Egypt or as Amenhotep III was considered to have become one with the Aten following his death the Sed festival honored both the pharaoh and the god at the same time It is also possible that the purpose of the ceremony was to figuratively fill Amenhotep IV with strength before his great enterprise the introduction of the Aten cult and the founding of the new capital Akhetaten Regardless of the celebration s aim Egyptologists believe that during the festivities Amenhotep IV only made offerings to the Aten rather than the many gods and goddesses as was customary 59 74 75 Name change Among the last documents that refer to Akhenaten as Amenhotep IV are two copies of a letter to the pharaoh from Ipy the high steward of Memphis These letters found in Gurob and informing the pharaoh that the royal estates in Memphis are in good order and the temple of Ptah is prosperous and flourishing are dated to regnal year five day nineteen of the growing season s third month About a month later day thirteen of the growing season s fourth month one of the boundary stela at Akhetaten already had the name Akhenaten carved on it implying that the pharaoh changed his name between the two inscriptions 76 77 78 79 Amenhotep IV changed his royal titulary to show his devotion to the Aten No longer would he be known as Amenhotep IV and be associated with the god Amun but rather he would completely shift his focus to the Aten Egyptologists debate the exact meaning of Akhenaten his new personal name The word akh Ancient Egyptian ꜣḫ could have different translations such as satisfied effective spirit or serviceable to and thus Akhenaten s name could be translated to mean Aten is satisfied Effective spirit of the Aten or Serviceable to the Aten respectively 80 Gertie Englund and Florence Friedman arrive at the translation Effective for the Aten by analyzing contemporary texts and inscriptions in which Akhenaten often described himself as being effective for the sun disc Englund and Friedman conclude that the frequency with which Akhenaten used this term likely means that his own name meant Effective for the Aten 80 Some historians such as William F Albright Edel Elmar and Gerhard Fecht propose that Akhenaten s name is misspelled and mispronounced These historians believe Aten should rather be Jati thus rendering the pharaoh s name Akhenjati or Aḫanjati pronounced ˌ ae k e ˈ n j ɑː t ɪ as it could have been pronounced in Ancient Egypt 81 82 83 Amenhotep IV AkhenatenHorus name Kanakht qai Shuti Strong Bull of the Double Plumes Meryaten Beloved of Aten Nebty name Wer nesut em Ipet swt Great of Kingship in Karnak Wer nesut em Akhetaten Great of Kingship in Akhet Aten Golden Horus name Wetjes khau em Iunu Shemay Crowned in Heliopolis of the South Thebes Wetjes ren en Aten Exalter of the Name of Aten Prenomen Neferkheperure waenre Beautiful are the Forms of Re the Unique one of Re Nomen Amenhotep Netjer Heqa Waset Amun is Satisfied Divine Lord of Thebes Akhenaten Effective for the Aten Founding Amarna nbsp One of the stele marking the boundary of the new capital AkhetatenMain article Amarna Around the same time he changed his royal titulary on the thirteenth day of the growing season s fourth month Akhenaten decreed that a new capital city be built Akhetaten Ancient Egyptian ꜣḫt jtn meaning Horizon of the Aten better known today as Amarna The events Egyptologists know the most about during Akhenaten s life are connected with founding Akhetaten as several so called boundary stelae were found around the city to mark its boundary 84 The pharaoh chose a site about halfway between Thebes the capital at the time and Memphis on the east bank of the Nile where a wadi and a natural dip in the surrounding cliffs form a silhouette similar to the horizon hieroglyph Additionally the site had previously been uninhabited According to inscriptions on one boundary stela the site was appropriate for Aten s city for not being the property of a god nor being the property of a goddess nor being the property of a ruler nor being the property of a female ruler nor being the property of any people able to lay claim to it 85 Historians do not know for certain why Akhenaten established a new capital and left Thebes the old capital The boundary stelae detailing Akhetaten s founding is damaged where it likely explained the pharaoh s motives for the move Surviving parts claim what happened to Akhenaten was worse than those that I heard previously in his reign and worse than those heard by any kings who assumed the White Crown and alludes to offensive speech against the Aten Egyptologists believe that Akhenaten could be referring to conflict with the priesthood and followers of Amun the patron god of Thebes The great temples of Amun such as Karnak were all located in Thebes and the priests there achieved significant power earlier in the Eighteenth Dynasty especially under Hatshepsut and Thutmose III thanks to pharaohs offering large amounts of Egypt s growing wealth to the cult of Amun historians such as Donald B Redford therefore posited that by moving to a new capital Akhenaten may have been trying to break with Amun s priests and the god 86 87 88 nbsp Talatat blocks from Akhenaten s Aten temple in KarnakAkhetaten was a planned city with the Great Temple of the Aten Small Aten Temple royal residences records office and government buildings in the city center Some of these buildings such as the Aten temples were ordered to be built by Akhenaten on the boundary stela decreeing the city s founding 87 89 90 The city was built quickly thanks to a new construction method that used substantially smaller building blocks than under previous pharaohs These blocks called talatats measured 1 2 by 1 2 by 1 ancient Egyptian cubits c 27 by 27 by 54 cm and because of the smaller weight and standardized size using them during constructions was more efficient than using heavy building blocks of varying sizes 91 92 By regnal year eight Akhetaten reached a state where it could be occupied by the royal family Only his most loyal subjects followed Akhenaten and his family to the new city While the city continued to be built in years five through eight construction work began to stop in Thebes The Theban Aten temples that had begun were abandoned and a village of those working on Valley of the Kings tombs was relocated to the workers village at Akhetaten However construction work continued in the rest of the country as larger cult centers such as Heliopolis and Memphis also had temples built for Aten 93 94 International relations nbsp Amarna letter EA 362 titled A Commissioner Murdered In this letter Rib Hadda of Byblos informs the pharaoh of the death of Pawura an Egyptian commissioner nbsp Painted limestone miniature stela It shows Akhenaten standing before 2 incense stands Aten disc above From Amarna Egypt 18th Dynasty The Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology London nbsp Head of AkhenatenFurther information Amarna letters The Amarna letters have provided important evidence about Akhenaten s reign and foreign policy The letters are a cache of 382 diplomatic texts and literary and educational materials discovered between 1887 and 1979 95 and named after Amarna the modern name for Akhenaten s capital Akhetaten The diplomatic correspondence comprises clay tablet messages between Amenhotep III Akhenaten and Tutankhamun various subjects through Egyptian military outposts rulers of vassal states and the foreign rulers of Babylonia Assyria Syria Canaan Alashiya Arzawa Mitanni and the Hittites 96 The Amarna letters portray the international situation in the Eastern Mediterranean that Akhenaten inherited from his predecessors In the 200 years preceding Akhenaten s reign following the expulsion of the Hyksos from Lower Egypt at the end of the Second Intermediate Period the kingdom s influence and military might increased greatly Egypt s power reached new heights under Thutmose III who ruled approximately 100 years before Akhenaten and led several successful military campaigns into Nubia and Syria Egypt s expansion led to confrontation with the Mitanni but this rivalry ended with the two nations becoming allies Slowly however Egypt s power started to wane Amenhotep III aimed to maintain the balance of power through marriages such as his marriage to Tadukhipa daughter of the Mitanni king Tushratta and vassal states Under Amenhotep III and Akhenaten Egypt was unable or unwilling to oppose the rise of the Hittites around Syria The pharaohs seemed to eschew military confrontation at a time when the balance of power between Egypt s neighbors and rivals was shifting and the Hittites a confrontational state overtook the Mitanni in influence 97 98 99 100 Early in his reign Akhenaten was evidently concerned about the expanding power of the Hittite Empire under Suppiluliuma I A successful Hittite attack on Mitanni and its ruler Tushratta would have disrupted the entire international balance of power in the Ancient Middle East at a time when Egypt had made peace with Mitanni this would cause some of Egypt s vassals to switch their allegiances to the Hittites as time would prove A group of Egypt s allies who attempted to rebel against the Hittites were captured and wrote letters begging Akhenaten for troops but he did not respond to most of their pleas Evidence suggests that the troubles on the northern frontier led to difficulties in Canaan particularly in a struggle for power between Labaya of Shechem and Abdi Heba of Jerusalem which required the pharaoh to intervene in the area by dispatching Medjay troops northwards Akhenaten pointedly refused to save his vassal Rib Hadda of Byblos whose kingdom was being besieged by the expanding state of Amurru under Abdi Ashirta and later Aziru son of Abdi Ashirta despite Rib Hadda s numerous pleas for help from the pharaoh Rib Hadda wrote a total of 60 letters to Akhenaten pleading for aid from the pharaoh Akhenaten wearied of Rib Hadda s constant correspondences and once told Rib Hadda You are the one that writes to me more than all the other mayors or Egyptian vassals in EA 124 101 What Rib Hadda did not comprehend was that the Egyptian king would not organize and dispatch an entire army north just to preserve the political status quo of several minor city states on the fringes of Egypt s Asiatic Empire 102 Rib Hadda would pay the ultimate price his exile from Byblos due to a coup led by his brother Ilirabih is mentioned in one letter When Rib Hadda appealed in vain for aid from Akhenaten and then turned to Aziru his sworn enemy to place him back on the throne of his city Aziru promptly had him dispatched to the king of Sidon where Rib Hadda was almost certainly executed 103 In a view discounted by the 21st century 104 several Egyptologists in the late 19th and 20th centuries interpreted the Amarna letters to mean that Akhenaten was a pacifist who neglected foreign policy and Egypt s foreign territories in favor of his internal reforms For example Henry Hall believed Akhenaten succeeded by his obstinate doctrinaire love of peace in causing far more misery in his world than half a dozen elderly militarists could have done 105 while James Henry Breasted said Akhenaten was not fit to cope with a situation demanding an aggressive man of affairs and a skilled military leader 106 Others noted that the Amarna letters counter the conventional view that Akhenaten neglected Egypt s foreign territories in favour of his internal reforms For instance Norman de Garis Davies praised Akhenaten s emphasis on diplomacy over war while James Baikie said that the fact that there is no evidence of revolt within the borders of Egypt itself during the whole reign is surely ample proof that there was no such abandonment of his royal duties on the part of Akhenaten as has been assumed 107 108 Indeed several letters from Egyptian vassals notified the pharaoh that they have followed his instructions implying that the pharaoh sent such instructions 109 The Amarna letters also show that vassal states were told repeatedly to expect the arrival of the Egyptian military on their lands and provide evidence that these troops were dispatched and arrived at their destination Dozens of letters detail that Akhenaten and Amenhotep III sent Egyptian and Nubian troops armies archers chariots horses and ships 110 Only one military campaign is known for certain under Akhenaten s reign In his second or twelfth year 111 Akhenaten ordered his Viceroy of Kush Tuthmose to lead a military expedition to quell a rebellion and raids on settlements on the Nile by Nubian nomadic tribes The victory was commemorated on two stelae one discovered at Amada and another at Buhen Egyptologists differ on the size of the campaign Wolfgang Helck considered it a small scale police operation while Alan Schulman considered it a war of major proportions 112 113 114 Other Egyptologists suggested that Akhenaten could have waged war in Syria or the Levant possibly against the Hittites Cyril Aldred based on Amarna letters describing Egyptian troop movements proposed that Akhenaten launched an unsuccessful war around the city of Gezer while Marc Gabolde argued for an unsuccessful campaign around Kadesh Either of these could be the campaign referred to on Tutankhamun s Restoration Stela if an army was sent to Djahy southern Canaan and Syria to broaden the boundaries of Egypt no success of their cause came to pass 115 116 117 John Coleman Darnell and Colleen Manassa also argued that Akhenaten fought with the Hittites for control of Kadesh but was unsuccessful the city was not recaptured until 60 70 years later under Seti I 118 Overall archeological evidence suggests that Akhenaten paid close attention to the affairs of Egyptian vassals in Canaan and Syria though primarily not through letters such as those found at Amarna but through reports from government officials and agents Akhenaten managed to preserve Egypt s control over the core of its Near Eastern Empire which consisted of present day Israel as well as the Phoenician coast while avoiding conflict with the increasingly powerful and aggressive Hittite Empire of Suppiluliuma I which overtook the Mitanni as the dominant power in the northern part of the region Only the Egyptian border province of Amurru in Syria around the Orontes River was lost to the Hittites when its ruler Aziru defected to the Hittites ordered by Akhenaten to come to Egypt Aziru was released after promising to stay loyal to the pharaoh nonetheless turning to the Hittites soon after his release 119 Later years nbsp In regnal year twelve Akhenaten received tributes and offerings from allied countries and vassal states at Akhetaten as depicted in the tomb of Meryra II Egyptologists know little about the last five years of Akhenaten s reign beginning in c 1341 3 or 1339 BC 4 These years are poorly attested and only a few pieces of contemporary evidence survive the lack of clarity makes reconstructing the latter part of the pharaoh s reign a daunting task and a controversial and contested topic of discussion among Egyptologists 120 Among the newest pieces of evidence is an inscription discovered in 2012 at a limestone quarry in Deir el Bersha just north of Akhetaten from the pharaoh s sixteenth regnal year The text refers to a building project in Amarna and establishes that Akhenaten and Nefertiti were still a royal couple just a year before Akhenaten s death 121 122 123 The inscription is dated to Year 16 month 3 of Akhet day 15 of the reign of Akhenaten 121 Before the 2012 discovery of the Deir el Bersha inscription the last known fixed date event in Akhenaten s reign was a royal reception in regnal year twelve in which the pharaoh and the royal family received tributes and offerings from allied countries and vassal states at Akhetaten Inscriptions show tributes from Nubia the Land of Punt Syria the Kingdom of Hattusa the islands in the Mediterranean Sea and Libya Egyptologists such as Aidan Dodson consider this year twelve celebration to be the zenith of Akhenaten s reign 124 Thanks to reliefs in the tomb of courtier Meryre II historians know that the royal family Akhenaten Nefertiti and their six daughters were present at the royal reception in full 124 However historians are uncertain about the reasons for the reception Possibilities include the celebration of the marriage of future pharaoh Ay to Tey celebration of Akhenaten s twelve years on the throne the summons of king Aziru of Amurru to Egypt a military victory at Sumur in the Levant a successful military campaign in Nubia 125 Nefertiti s ascendancy to the throne as coregent or the completion of the new capital city Akhetaten 126 Following year twelve Donald B Redford and other Egyptologists proposed that Egypt was struck by an epidemic most likely a plague 127 Contemporary evidence suggests that a plague ravaged through the Middle East around this time 128 and ambassadors and delegations arriving to Akhenaten s year twelve reception might have brought the disease to Egypt 129 Alternatively letters from the Hattians might suggest that the epidemic originated in Egypt and was carried throughout the Middle East by Egyptian prisoners of war 130 Regardless of its origin the epidemic might account for several deaths in the royal family that occurred in the last five years of Akhenaten s reign including those of his daughters Meketaten Neferneferure and Setepenre 131 132 Coregency with Smenkhkare or Nefertiti Akhenaten could have ruled together with Smenkhkare and Nefertiti for several years before his death 133 134 Based on depictions and artifacts from the tombs of Meryre II and Tutankhamun Smenkhkare could have been Akhenaten s coregent by regnal year thirteen or fourteen but died a year or two later Nefertiti might not have assumed the role of coregent until after year sixteen when a stela still mentions her as Akhenaten s Great Royal Wife While Nefertiti s familial relationship with Akhenaten is known whether Akhenaten and Smenkhkare were related by blood is unclear Smenkhkare could have been Akhenaten s son or brother as the son of Amenhotep III with Tiye or Sitamun 135 Archaeological evidence makes it clear however that Smenkhkare was married to Meritaten Akhenaten s eldest daughter 136 For another the so called Coregency Stela found in a tomb at Akhetaten might show queen Nefertiti as Akhenaten s coregent but this is uncertain as the stela was recarved to show the names of Ankhesenpaaten and Neferneferuaten 137 Egyptologist Aidan Dodson proposed that both Smenkhkare and Neferiti were Akhenaten s coregents to ensure the Amarna family s continued rule when Egypt was confronted with an epidemic Dodson suggested that the two were chosen to rule as Tutankhaten s coregent in case Akhenaten died and Tutankhaten took the throne at a young age or rule in Tutankhaten s stead if the prince also died in the epidemic 43 Death and burial Further information Amarna succession and KV55 nbsp Akhenaten s sarcophagus reconstituted from pieces discovered in his original tomb in Amarna now in the Egyptian Museum Cairo nbsp The desecrated royal coffin found in Tomb KV55Akhenaten died after seventeen years of rule and was initially buried in a tomb in the Royal Wadi east of Akhetaten The order to construct the tomb and to bury the pharaoh there was commemorated on one of the boundary stela delineating the capital s borders Let a tomb be made for me in the eastern mountain of Akhetaten Let my burial be made in it in the millions of jubilees which the Aten my father decreed for me 138 In the years following the burial Akhenaten s sarcophagus was destroyed and left in the Akhetaten necropolis reconstructed in the 20th century it is in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo as of 2019 139 Despite leaving the sarcophagus behind Akhenaten s mummy was removed from the royal tombs after Tutankhamun abandoned Akhetaten and returned to Thebes It was most likely moved to tomb KV55 in Valley of the Kings near Thebes 140 141 This tomb was later desecrated likely during the Ramesside period 142 143 Whether Smenkhkare also enjoyed a brief independent reign after Akhenaten is unclear 144 If Smenkhkare outlived Akhenaten and became sole pharaoh he likely ruled Egypt for less than a year The next successor was Nefertiti 145 or Meritaten 146 ruling as Neferneferuaten reigning in Egypt for about two years 147 She was in turn probably succeeded by Tutankhaten with the country being administered by the vizier and future pharaoh Ay 148 nbsp Profile view of the skull thought to be Akhenaten recovered from KV55While Akhenaten along with Smenkhkare was most likely reburied in tomb KV55 149 the identification of the mummy found in that tomb as Akhenaten remains controversial to this day The mummy has repeatedly been examined since its discovery in 1907 Most recently Egyptologist Zahi Hawass led a team of researchers to examine the mummy using medical and DNA analysis with the results published in 2010 In releasing their test results Hawass s team identified the mummy as the father of Tutankhamun and thus most probably Akhenaten 150 However the study s validity has since been called into question 6 7 151 152 153 For instance the discussion of the study results does not discuss that Tutankhamun s father and the father s siblings would share some genetic markers if Tutankhamun s father was Akhenaten the DNA results could indicate that the mummy is a brother of Akhenaten possibly Smenkhkare 153 154 Legacy With Akhenaten s death the Aten cult he had founded fell out of favor at first gradually and then with decisive finality Tutankhaten changed his name to Tutankhamun in Year 2 of his reign c 1332 BC and abandoned the city of Akhetaten 155 Their successors then attempted to erase Akhenaten and his family from the historical record During the reign of Horemheb the last pharaoh of the Eighteenth Dynasty and the first pharaoh after Akhenaten who was not related to Akhenaten s family Egyptians started to destroy temples to the Aten and reuse the building blocks in new construction projects including in temples for the newly restored god Amun Horemheb s successor continued in this effort Seti I restored monuments to Amun and had the god s name re carved on inscriptions where it was removed by Akhenaten Seti I also ordered that Akhenaten Smenkhkare Neferneferuaten Tutankhamun and Ay be excised from official lists of pharaohs to make it appear that Amenhotep III was immediately succeeded by Horemheb Under the Ramessides who succeeded Seti I Akhetaten was gradually destroyed and the building material reused across the country such as in constructions at Hermopolis The negative attitudes toward Akhenaten were illustrated by for example inscriptions in the tomb of scribe Mose or Mes where Akhenaten s reign is referred to as the time of the enemy of Akhet Aten 156 157 158 Some Egyptologists such as Jacobus van Dijk and Jan Assmann believe that Akhenaten s reign and the Amarna period started a gradual decline in the Egyptian government s power and the pharaoh s standing in Egyptian s society and religious life 159 160 Akhenaten s religious reforms subverted the relationship ordinary Egyptians had with their gods and their pharaoh as well as the role the pharaoh played in the relationship between the people and the gods Before the Amarna period the pharaoh was the representative of the gods on Earth the son of the god Ra and the living incarnation of the god Horus and maintained the divine order through rituals and offerings and by sustaining the temples of the gods 161 Additionally even though the pharaoh oversaw all religious activity Egyptians could access their gods through regular public holidays festivals and processions This led to a seemingly close connection between people and the gods especially the patron deity of their respective towns and cities 162 Akhenaten however banned the worship of gods beside the Aten including through festivals He also declared himself to be the only one who could worship the Aten and required that all religious devotion previously exhibited toward the gods be directed toward himself After the Amarna period during the Nineteenth and Twentieth Dynasties c 270 years following Akhenaten s death the relationship between the people the pharaoh and the gods did not simply revert to pre Amarna practices and beliefs The worship of all gods returned but the relationship between the gods and the worshipers became more direct and personal 163 circumventing the pharaoh Rather than acting through the pharaoh Egyptians started to believe that the gods intervened directly in their lives protecting the pious and punishing criminals 164 The gods replaced the pharaoh as their own representatives on Earth The god Amun once again became king among all gods 165 According to van Dijk the king was no longer a god but god himself had become king Once Amun had been recognized as the true king the political power of the earthly rulers could be reduced to a minimum 166 Consequently the influence and power of the Amun priesthood continued to grow until the Twenty first Dynasty c 1077 BC by which time the High Priests of Amun effectively became rulers over parts of Egypt 160 167 168 Akhenaten s reforms also had a longer term impact on Ancient Egyptian language and hastened the spread of the spoken Late Egyptian language in official writings and speeches Spoken and written Egyptian diverged early on in Egyptian history and stayed different over time 169 During the Amarna period however royal and religious texts and inscriptions including the boundary stelae at Akhetaten or the Amarna letters started to regularly include more vernacular linguistic elements such as the definite article or a new possessive form Even though they continued to diverge these changes brought the spoken and written language closer to one another more systematically than under previous pharaohs of the New Kingdom While Akhenaten s successors attempted to erase his religious artistic and even linguistic changes from history the new linguistic elements remained a more common part of official texts following the Amarna years starting with the Nineteenth Dynasty 170 171 172 Akhenaten is also recognized as a Prophet in the Druze faith 173 174 AtenismFurther information Atenism and Aten nbsp Relief fragment showing a royal head probably Akhenaten and early Aten cartouches Aten extends Ankh sign of life to the figure Reign of Akhenaten From Amarna Egypt The Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology London nbsp Pharaoh Akhenaten center and his family worshiping the Aten with characteristic rays seen emanating from the solar disk Later such imagery was prohibited Egyptians worshipped a sun god under several names and solar worship had been growing in popularity even before Akhenaten especially during the Eighteenth Dynasty and the reign of Amenhotep III Akhenaten s father 175 During the New Kingdom the pharaoh started to be associated with the sun disc for example one inscription called the pharaoh Hatshepsut the female Re shining like the Disc while Amenhotep III was described as he who rises over every foreign land Nebmare the dazzling disc 176 During the Eighteenth Dynasty a religious hymn to the sun also appeared and became popular among Egyptians 177 However Egyptologists question whether there is a causal relationship between the cult of the sun disc before Akhenaten and Akhenaten s religious policies 177 Implementation and development The implementation of Atenism can be traced through gradual changes in the Aten s iconography and Egyptologist Donald B Redford divided its development into three stages earliest intermediate and final in his studies of Akhenaten and Atenism The earliest stage was associated with a growing number of depictions of the sun disc though the disc is still seen resting on the head of the falcon headed sun god Ra Horakhty as the god was traditionally represented 178 The god was only unique but not exclusive 179 The intermediate stage was marked by the elevation of the Aten above other gods and the appearance of cartouches around his inscribed name cartouches traditionally indicating that the enclosed text is a royal name The final stage had the Aten represented as a sun disc with sunrays like long arms terminating in human hands and the introduction of a new epithet for the god the great living Disc which is in jubilee lord of heaven and earth 180 In the early years of his reign Amenhotep IV lived at Thebes the old capital city and permitted worship of Egypt s traditional deities to continue However some signs already pointed to the growing importance of the Aten For example inscriptions in the Theban tomb of Parennefer from the early rule of Amenhotep IV state that one measures the payments to every other god with a level measure but for the Aten one measures so that it overflows indicating a more favorable attitude to the cult of Aten than the other gods 179 Additionally near the Temple of Karnak Amun Ra s great cult center Amenhotep IV erected several massive buildings including temples to the Aten The new Aten temples had no roof and the god was thus worshipped in the sunlight under the open sky rather than in dark temple enclosures as had been the previous custom 181 182 The Theban buildings were later dismantled by his successors and used as infill for new constructions in the Temple of Karnak when they were later dismantled by archaeologists some 36 000 decorated blocks from the original Aten building here were revealed that preserve many elements of the original relief scenes and inscriptions 183 One of the most important turning points in the early reign of Amenhotep IV is a speech given by the pharaoh at the beginning of his second regnal year A copy of the speech survives on one of the pylons at the Karnak Temple Complex near Thebes Speaking to the royal court scribes or the people Amenhotep IV said that the gods were ineffective and had ceased their movements and that their temples had collapsed The pharaoh contrasted this with the only remaining god the sun disc Aten who continued to move and exist forever Some Egyptologists such as Donald B Redford compared this speech to a proclamation or manifesto which foreshadowed and explained the pharaoh s later religious reforms centered around the Aten 184 185 186 In his speech Akhenaten said The temples of the gods fallen to ruin their bodies do not endure Since the time of the ancestors it is the wise man that knows these things Behold I the king am speaking so that I might inform you concerning the appearances of the gods I know their temples and I am versed in the writings specifically the inventory of their primeval bodies And I have watched as they the gods have ceased their appearances one after the other All of them have stopped except the god who gave birth to himself And no one knows the mystery of how he performs his tasks This god goes where he pleases and no one else knows his going I approach him the things which he has made How exalted they are 187 nbsp Akhenaten depicted as a sphinx at Amarna In Year Five of his reign Amenhotep IV took decisive steps to establish the Aten as the sole god of Egypt The pharaoh disbanded the priesthoods of all the other gods and diverted the income from these other cults to support the Aten To emphasize his complete allegiance to the Aten the king officially changed his name from Amenhotep IV to Akhenaten Ancient Egyptian ꜣḫ n jtn meaning Effective for the Aten 183 Meanwhile the Aten was becoming a king itself Artists started to depict him with the trappings of pharaohs placing his name in cartouches a rare but not unique occurrence as the names of Ra Horakhty and Amun Ra had also been found enclosed in cartouches and wearing a uraeus a symbol of kingship 188 The Aten may also have been the subject of Akhenaten s royal Sed festival early in the pharaoh s reign 189 With Aten becoming a sole deity Akhenaten started to proclaim himself as the only intermediary between Aten and his people and the subject of their personal worship and attention 190 a feature not unheard of in Egyptian history with Fifth Dynasty pharaohs such as Nyuserre Ini proclaiming to be sole intermediaries between the people and the gods Osiris and Ra 191 nbsp Inscribed limestone fragment showing early Aten cartouches the Living Ra Horakhty Reign of Akhenaten From Amarna Egypt The Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology London nbsp Fragment of a stela showing parts of 3 late cartouches of Aten There is a rare intermediate form of god s name Reign of Akhenaten From Amarna Egypt The Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology LondonBy Year Nine of his reign Akhenaten declared that Aten was not merely the supreme god but the only worshipable god He ordered the defacing of Amun s temples throughout Egypt and in a number of instances inscriptions of the plural gods were also removed 192 193 This emphasized the changes encouraged by the new regime which included a ban on images with the exception of a rayed solar disc in which the rays appear to represent the unseen spirit of Aten who by then was evidently considered not merely a sun god but rather a universal deity All life on Earth depended on the Aten and the visible sunlight 194 195 Representations of the Aten were always accompanied with a sort of hieroglyphic footnote stating that the representation of the sun as all encompassing creator was to be taken as just that a representation of something that by its very nature as something transcending creation cannot be fully or adequately represented by any one part of that creation 196 Aten s name was also written differently starting as early as Year Eight or as late as Year Fourteen according to some historians 197 From Living Re Horakhty who rejoices in the horizon in his name Shu Re who is in Aten the god s name changed to Living Re ruler of the horizon who rejoices in his name of Re the father who has returned as Aten removing the Aten s connection to Re Horakhty and Shu two other solar deities 198 The Aten thus became an amalgamation that incorporated the attributes and beliefs around Re Horakhty universal sun god and Shu god of the sky and manifestation of the sunlight 199 nbsp Siliceous limestone fragment of a statue There are late Aten cartouches on the draped right shoulder Reign of Akhenaten From Amarna Egypt The Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology LondonAkhenaten s Atenist beliefs are best distilled in the Great Hymn to the Aten 200 The hymn was discovered in the tomb of Ay one of Akhenaten s successors though Egyptologists believe that it could have been composed by Akhenaten himself 201 202 The hymn celebrates the sun and daylight and recounts the dangers that abound when the sun sets It tells of the Aten as a sole god and the creator of all life who recreates life every day at sunrise and on whom everything on Earth depends including the natural world people s lives and even trade and commerce 203 In one passage the hymn declares O Sole God beside whom there is none You made the earth as you wished you alone 204 The hymn also states that Akhenaten is the only intermediary between the god and Egyptians and the only one who can understand the Aten You are in my heart and there is none who knows you except your son 205 Atenism and other gods Some debate has focused on the extent to which Akhenaten forced his religious reforms on his people 206 Certainly as time drew on he revised the names of the Aten and other religious language to increasingly exclude references to other gods at some point also he embarked on the wide scale erasure of traditional gods names especially those of Amun 207 Some of his court changed their names to remove them from the patronage of other gods and place them under that of Aten or Ra with whom Akhenaten equated the Aten Yet even at Amarna itself some courtiers kept such names as Ahmose child of the moon god the owner of tomb 3 and the sculptor s workshop where the famous Nefertiti Bust and other works of royal portraiture were found is associated with an artist known to have been called Thutmose child of Thoth An overwhelmingly large number of faience amulets at Amarna also show that talismans of the household and childbirth gods Bes and Taweret the eye of Horus and amulets of other traditional deities were openly worn by its citizens Indeed a cache of royal jewelry found buried near the Amarna royal tombs now in the National Museum of Scotland includes a finger ring referring to Mut the wife of Amun Such evidence suggests that though Akhenaten shifted funding away from traditional temples his policies were fairly tolerant until some point perhaps a particular event as yet unknown toward the end of the reign 208 Archaeological discoveries at Akhetaten show that many ordinary residents of this city chose to gouge or chisel out all references to the god Amun on even minor personal items that they owned such as commemorative scarabs or make up pots perhaps for fear of being accused of having Amunist sympathies References to Amenhotep III Akhenaten s father were partly erased since they contained the traditional Amun form of his name Nebmaatre Amunhotep 209 After Akhenaten Following Akhenaten s death Egypt gradually returned to its traditional polytheistic religion partly because of how closely associated the Aten became with Akhenaten 210 Atenism likely stayed dominant through the reigns of Akhenaten s immediate successors Smenkhkare and Neferneferuaten as well as early in the reign of Tutankhaten 211 For some years the worship of Aten and a resurgent worship of Amun coexisted 212 213 Over time however Akhenaten s successors starting with Tutankhaten took steps to distance themselves from Atenism Tutankhaten and his wife Ankhesenpaaten dropped the Aten from their names and changed them to Tutankhamun and Ankhesenamun respectively Amun was restored as the supreme deity Tutankhamun reestablished the temples of the other gods as the pharaoh propagated on his Restoration Stela He reorganized this land restoring its customs to those of the time of Re He renewed the gods mansions and fashioned all their images He raised up their temples and created their statues When he had sought out the gods precincts which were in ruins in this land he refounded them just as they had been since the time of the first primeval age 214 Additionally Tutankhamun s building projects at Thebes and Karnak used talatat s from Akhenaten s buildings which implies that Tutankhamun might have started to demolish temples dedicated to the Aten Aten temples continued to be torn down under Ay and Horemheb Tutankhamun s successors and the last pharaohs of the Eighteenth Dynasty Horemheb might also have ordered the demolition of Akhetaten Akhenaten s capital city 215 Further underlining the break with Aten worship Horemheb claimed to have been chosen to rule by the god Horus Finally Seti I the second pharaoh of the Nineteenth Dynasty ordered the name of Amun to be restored on inscriptions where it had been removed or replaced by Aten 216 Artistic depictionsFurther information Amarna art nbsp Akhenaten in the typical Amarna period style nbsp Statue of Akhenaten in the collection of the Egyptian Museum Cairo Styles of art that flourished during the reigns of Akhenaten and his immediate successors known as Amarna art are markedly different from the traditional art of ancient Egypt Representations are more realistic expressionistic and naturalistic 217 218 especially in depictions of animals plants and people and convey more action and movement for both non royal and royal individuals than the traditionally static representations In traditional art a pharaoh s divine nature was expressed by repose even immobility 219 220 221 The portrayals of Akhenaten himself greatly differ from the depictions of other pharaohs Traditionally the portrayal of pharaohs and the Egyptian ruling class was idealized and they were shown in stereotypically beautiful fashion as youthful and athletic 222 However Akhenaten s portrayals are unconventional and unflattering with a sagging stomach broad hips thin legs thick thighs large almost feminine breasts a thin exaggeratedly long face and thick lips 223 Based on Akhenaten s and his family s unusual artistic representations including potential depictions of gynecomastia and androgyny some have argued that the pharaoh and his family have either had aromatase excess syndrome and sagittal craniosynostosis syndrome or Antley Bixler syndrome 224 In 2010 results published from genetic studies on Akhenaten s purported mummy did not find signs of gynecomastia or Antley Bixler syndrome 21 although these results have since been questioned 225 Arguing instead for a symbolic interpretation Dominic Montserrat in Akhenaten History Fantasy and Ancient Egypt states that there is now a broad consensus among Egyptologists that the exaggerated forms of Akhenaten s physical portrayal are not to be read literally 209 226 Because the god Aten was referred to as the mother and father of all humankind Montserrat and others suggest that Akhenaten was made to look androgynous in artwork as a symbol of the androgyny of the Aten 227 This required a symbolic gathering of all the attributes of the creator god into the physical body of the king himself which will display on earth the Aten s multiple life giving functions 226 Akhenaten claimed the title The Unique One of Re and he may have directed his artists to contrast him with the common people through a radical departure from the idealized traditional pharaoh image 226 Depictions of other members of the court especially members of the royal family are also exaggerated stylized and overall different from traditional art 219 Significantly and for the only time in the history of Egyptian royal art the pharaoh s family life is depicted the royal family is shown mid action in relaxed casual and intimate situations taking part in decidedly naturalistic activities showing affection for each other such as holding hands and kissing 228 229 230 231 nbsp Small statue of Akhenaten wearing the Egyptian Blue Crown of WarNefertiti also appears both beside the king and alone or with her daughters in actions usually reserved for a pharaoh such as smiting the enemy a traditional depiction of male pharaohs 232 This suggests that she enjoyed unusual status for a queen Early artistic representations of her tend to be indistinguishable from her husband s except by her regalia but soon after the move to the new capital Nefertiti begins to be depicted with features specific to her Questions remain whether the beauty of Nefertiti is portraiture or idealism 233 Speculative theories nbsp Sculptor s trial piece of Akhenaten Akhenaten s status as a religious revolutionary has led to much speculation ranging from scholarly hypotheses to non academic fringe theories Although some believe the religion he introduced was mostly monotheistic many others see Akhenaten as a practitioner of an Aten monolatry 234 as he did not actively deny the existence of other gods he simply refrained from worshiping any but the Aten Akhenaten and monotheism in Abrahamic religions The idea that Akhenaten was the pioneer of a monotheistic religion that later became Judaism has been considered by various scholars 235 236 237 238 239 One of the first to mention this was Sigmund Freud the founder of psychoanalysis in his book Moses and Monotheism 235 Basing his arguments on his belief that the Exodus story was historical Freud argued that Moses had been an Atenist priest who was forced to leave Egypt with his followers after Akhenaten s death Freud argued that Akhenaten was striving to promote monotheism something that the biblical Moses was able to achieve 235 Following the publication of his book the concept entered popular consciousness and serious research 240 241 Freud commented on the connection between Adonai the Egyptian Aten and the Syrian divine name of Adonis as stemming from a common root 235 in this he was following the argument of Egyptologist Arthur Weigall Jan Assmann s opinion is that Aten and Adonai are not linguistically related 242 There are strong similarities between Akhenaten s Great Hymn to the Aten and the Biblical Psalm 104 but there is debate as to relationship implied by this similarity 243 244 Others have likened some aspects of Akhenaten s relationship with the Aten to the relationship in Christian tradition between Jesus Christ and God particularly interpretations that emphasize a more monotheistic interpretation of Atenism than a henotheistic one Donald B Redford has noted that some have viewed Akhenaten as a harbinger of Jesus After all Akhenaten did call himself the son of the sole god Thine only son that came forth from thy body 245 James Henry Breasted likened him to Jesus 246 Arthur Weigall saw him as a failed precursor of Christ and Thomas Mann saw him as right on the way and yet not the right one for the way 247 Although scholars like Brian Fagan 2015 and Robert Alter 2018 have re opened the debate in 1997 Redford concluded Before much of the archaeological evidence from Thebes and from Tell el Amarna became available wishful thinking sometimes turned Akhenaten into a humane teacher of the true God a mentor of Moses a christlike figure a philosopher before his time But these imaginary creatures are now fading away as the historical reality gradually emerges There is little or no evidence to support the notion that Akhenaten was a progenitor of the full blown monotheism that we find in the Bible The monotheism of the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament had its own separate development one that began more than half a millennium after the pharaoh s death 248 Possible illness nbsp Hieratic inscription on a pottery fragment It records year 17 of Akhenaten s reign and references wine of the house of Aten From Amarna Egypt The Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology London nbsp Limestone trial piece of a king probably Akhenaten and a smaller head of uncertain gender From Amarna Egypt 18th Dynasty The Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology LondonThe unconventional portrayals of Akhenaten different from the traditional athletic norm in the portrayal of pharaohs have led Egyptologists in the 19th and 20th centuries to suppose that Akhenaten had some kind of genetic abnormality 223 Various illnesses have been put forward with Frolich s syndrome or Marfan syndrome being mentioned most commonly 249 Cyril Aldred 250 following up earlier arguments of Grafton Elliot Smith 251 and James Strachey 252 suggested that Akhenaten may have had Frolich s syndrome on the basis of his long jaw and his feminine appearance However this is unlikely because this disorder results in sterility and Akhenaten is known to have fathered numerous children His children are repeatedly portrayed through years of archaeological and iconographic evidence 253 Burridge 254 suggested that Akhenaten may have had Marfan syndrome which unlike Frolich s does not result in mental impairment or sterility People with Marfan syndrome tend towards tallness with a long thin face elongated skull overgrown ribs a funnel or pigeon chest a high curved or slightly cleft palate and larger pelvis with enlarged thighs and spindly calves symptoms that appear in some depictions of Akhenaten 255 Marfan syndrome is a dominant characteristic which means those affected have a 50 chance of passing it on to their children 256 However DNA tests on Tutankhamun in 2010 proved negative for Marfan syndrome 257 By the early 21st century most Egyptologists argued that Akhenaten s portrayals are not the results of a genetic or medical condition but rather should be interpreted as stylized portrayals influenced by Atenism 209 226 Akhenaten was made to look androgynous in artwork as a symbol of the androgyny of the Aten 226 Cultural depictionsAkhenaten s life accomplishments and legacy have been preserved and depicted in many ways and he has figured in works of both high and popular culture since his rediscovery in the 19th century AD Akhenaten alongside Cleopatra and Alexander the Great is among the most often popularized and fictionalized ancient historical figures 258 On page Amarna novels most often take one of two forms They are either a Bildungsroman focusing on Akhenaten s psychological and moral growth as it relates to establishing Atenism and Akhetaten as well as his struggles against the Theban Amun cult Alternatively his literary depictions focus on the aftermath of his reign and religion 259 A dividing line also exists between depictions of Akhenaten from before the 1920s and since when more and more archeological discoveries started to provide artists with material evidence about his life and times Thus before the 1920s Akhenaten had appeared as a ghost a spectral figure in art while since he has become realistic material and tangible 260 Examples of the former include the romance novels In the Tombs of the Kings 1910 by Lilian Bagnall the first appearance by Akhenaten and his wife Nefertiti in fiction and A Wife Out of Egypt 1913 and There Was a King in Egypt 1918 by Norma Lorimer Examples of the latter include Akhnaton King of Egypt 1924 by Dmitry Merezhkovsky Joseph and His Brothers 1933 1943 by Thomas Mann Akhnaton 1973 by Agatha Christie and Akhenaten Dweller in Truth 1985 by Naguib Mahfouz Akhenaten also appears in The Egyptian 1945 by Mika Waltari which was adapted into the movie The Egyptian 1953 In this movie Akhenaten portrayed by Michael Wilding appears to represent Jesus Christ and his followers proto Christians 261 A sexualized image of Akhenaten building on early Western interest in the pharaoh s androgynous depictions perceived potential homosexuality and identification with Oedipal storytelling also influenced modern works of art 262 The two most notable portrayals are Akenaten 1975 an unfilmed screenplay by Derek Jarman and Akhnaten 1984 an opera by Philip Glass 263 264 Both were influenced by the unproven and scientifically unsupported theories of Immanuel Velikovsky who equated Oedipus with Akhenaten 265 although Glass specifically denies his personal belief in Velikovsky s Oedpius theory or caring about its historical validity instead being drawn to its potential theatricality 266 In the 21st century Akhenaten appeared as an antagonist in comic books and video games For example he is the major antagonist in limited comic book series Marvel The End 2003 In this series Akhenaten is abducted by an alien order in the 14th century BC and reappears on modern Earth seeking to restore his kingdom He is opposed by essentially all of the other superheroes and supervillains in the Marvel comic book universe and is eventually defeated by Thanos 267 Additionally Akhenaten appears as the enemy in the Assassin s Creed Origins The Curse of the Pharaohs downloadable content 2017 and must be defeated to remove his curse on Thebes 267 His afterlife takes the form of Aten a location that draws heavily on the architecture of the city of Amarna 268 American death metal band Nile depicted Akhenaten s judgement punishment and erasure from history at the hands of the pantheon that he replaced with Aten in the song Cast Down the Heretic from their 2005 album Annihilation of the Wicked He was also featured on the cover artwork of their 2009 album Those Whom the Gods Detest Ancestry16 Thutmose III8 Amenhotep II17 Merytre Hatshepsut4 Thutmose IV9 Tiaa2 Amenhotep III5 Mutemwiya1 Akhenaten6 Yuya3 Tiye7 TjuyuSee alsoPharaoh of the Exodus OsarsephNotes and referencesNotes Cohen amp Westbrook 2002 p 6 Rogers 1912 p 252 a b c d Britannica com 2012 a b c d e von Beckerath 1997 p 190 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Leprohon 2013 pp 104 105 a b c Strouhal 2010 pp 97 112 a b c Duhig 2010 p 114 Dictionary com 2008 Kitchen 2003 p 486 a b Tyldesley 2005 Montserrat 2003 pp 105 111 Loprieno Antonio 1995 Ancient Egyptian A Linguistic Introduction Cambridge Cambridge University Press Loprieno Antonio 2001 From Ancient Egyptian to Coptic in Haspelmath Martin et al eds Language Typology and Language Universals a b Ridley 2019 pp 13 15 Hart 2000 p 44 Manniche 2010 p ix Zaki 2008 p 19 Gardiner 1905 p 11 Trigger et al 2001 pp 186 187 Hornung 1992 pp 43 44 a b Hawass et al 2010 Marchant 2011 pp 404 06 Lorenzen amp Willerslev 2010 Bickerstaffe 2010 Spence 2011 Sooke 2014 Hessler 2017 Silverman Wegner amp Wegner 2006 pp 185 188 Ridley 2019 pp 37 39 Dodson 2018 p 6 Laboury 2010 pp 62 224 Ridley 2019 pp 220 Tyldesley 2006 p 124 Murnane 1995 pp 9 90 93 210 211 Grajetzki 2005 Dodson 2012 p 1 Ridley 2019 p 78 Laboury 2010 pp 314 322 Dodson 2009 pp 41 42 University College London 2001 Ridley 2019 p 262 Dodson 2018 pp 174 175 a b Dodson 2018 pp 38 39 Dodson 2009 pp 84 87 Ridley 2019 pp 263 265 a b Harris amp Wente 1980 pp 137 140 Allen 2009 pp 15 18 Ridley 2019 p 257 Robins 1993 pp 21 27 Dodson 2018 pp 19 21 Dodson amp Hilton 2004 p 154 Redford 2013 p 13 Ridley 2019 pp 40 41 Redford 1984 pp 57 58 Hoffmeier 2015 p 65 Laboury 2010 p 81 Murnane 1995 p 78 Hoffmeier 2015 p 64 a b Aldred 1991 p 259 Reeves 2019 p 77 Berman 2004 p 23 Kitchen 2000 p 44 Martin Valentin amp Bedman 2014 Brand 2020 pp 63 64 Ridley 2019 p 45 a b Ridley 2019 p 46 Ridley 2019 p 48 Aldred 1991 pp 259 268 Redford 2013 pp 13 14 Dodson 2014 pp 156 160 a b Nims 1973 pp 186 187 Redford 2013 p 19 Hoffmeier 2015 pp 98 101 105 106 Desroches Noblecourt 1963 pp 144 145 Gohary 1992 pp 29 39 167 169 Murnane 1995 pp 50 51 Ridley 2019 pp 83 85 Hoffmeier 2015 p 166 Murnane amp Van Siclen III 2011 p 150 a b Ridley 2019 pp 85 87 Fecht 1960 p 89 Hornung 2001 p 50 Elmar 1948 Ridley 2019 p 85 Dodson 2014 pp 180 185 Dodson 2014 pp 186 188 a b Ridley 2019 pp 85 90 Redford 2013 pp 9 10 24 26 Aldred 1991 pp 269 270 Breasted 2001 pp 390 400 Arnold 2003 p 238 Shaw 2003 p 274 Aldred 1991 pp 269 273 Shaw 2003 pp 293 297 Moran 1992 pp xiii xv Moran 1992 p xvi Aldred 1991 chpt 11 Moran 1992 pp 87 89 Drioton amp Vandier 1952 pp 411 414 Ridley 2019 pp 297 314 Moran 1992 p 203 Ross 1999 pp 30 35 Bryce 1998 p 186 Cohen amp Westbrook 2002 pp 102 248 Hall 1921 pp 42 43 Breasted 1909 p 355 Davies 1903 1908 part II p 42 Baikie 1926 p 269 Moran 1992 pp 368 369 Ridley 2019 pp 316 317 Murnane 1995 pp 55 56 Darnell amp Manassa 2007 pp 118 119 Ridley 2019 pp 323 324 Schulman 1982 Murnane 1995 p 99 Aldred 1968 p 241 Gabolde 1998 pp 195 205 Darnell amp Manassa 2007 pp 172 178 Ridley 2019 pp 235 236 244 247 Ridley 2019 p 346 a b Van der Perre 2012 pp 195 197 Van der Perre 2014 pp 67 108 Ridley 2019 pp 346 364 a b Dodson 2009 pp 39 41 Darnell amp Manassa 2007 p 127 Ridley 2019 p 141 Redford 1984 pp 185 192 Braverman Redford amp Mackowiak 2009 p 557 Dodson 2009 p 49 Laroche 1971 p 378 Gabolde 2011 Ridley 2019 pp 354 376 Dodson 2014 p 144 Tyldesley 1998 pp 160 175 Ridley 2019 pp 337 345 Ridley 2019 p 252 Allen 1988 pp 117 126 Kemp 2015 p 11 Ridley 2019 pp 365 371 Dodson 2014 p 244 Aldred 1968 pp 140 162 Ridley 2019 pp 411 412 Dodson 2009 pp 144 145 Allen 2009 pp 1 4 Ridley 2019 p 251 Tyldesley 2006 pp 136 137 Hornung Krauss amp Warburton 2006 pp 207 493 Ridley 2019 Dodson 2018 pp 75 76 Hawass et al 2010 p 644 Marchant 2011 pp 404 406 Dodson 2018 pp 16 17 a b Ridley 2019 pp 409 411 Dodson 2018 pp 17 41 Dodson 2014 pp 245 249 Hoffmeier 2015 pp 241 243 Ridley 2019 p 415 Mark 2014 van Dijk 2003 p 303 a b Assmann 2005 p 44 Wilkinson 2003 p 55 Reeves 2019 pp 139 181 Breasted 1972 pp 344 370 Ockinga 2001 pp 44 46 Wilkinson 2003 p 94 van Dijk 2003 p 307 van Dijk 2003 pp 303 307 Kitchen 1986 p 531 Baines 2007 p 156 Goldwasser 1992 pp 448 450 Gardiner 2015 O Connor amp Silverman 1995 pp 77 79 Druze druze de Retrieved January 18 2022 Dana L P ed 2010 Entrepreneurship and Religion Edward Elgar Pub ISBN 978 1 84980 632 9 OCLC 741355693 Hornung 2001 p 19 Sethe 1906 1909 pp 19 332 1569 a b Redford 2013 p 11 Hornung 2001 pp 33 35 a b Hornung 2001 p 48 Redford 1976 pp 53 56 Hornung 2001 pp 72 73 Ridley 2019 p 43 a b David 1998 p 125 Aldred 1991 pp 261 262 Hoffmeier 2015 pp 160 161 Redford 2013 p 14 Perry 2019 03 59 Hornung 2001 pp 34 36 54 Hornung 2001 pp 39 42 54 Hornung 2001 pp 55 57 Barta amp Dulikova 2015 pp 41 43 Ridley 2019 p 188 Hart 2000 pp 42 46 Hornung 2001 pp 55 84 Najovits 2004 p 125 Ridley 2019 pp 211 213 Ridley 2019 pp 28 173 174 Dodson 2009 p 38 Najovits 2004 pp 123 124 Najovits 2004 p 128 Hornung 2001 p 52 Ridley 2019 pp 129 133 Ridley 2019 p 128 Najovits 2004 p 131 Ridley 2019 pp 128 129 Hornung 1992 p 47 Allen 2005 pp 217 221 Ridley 2019 pp 187 194 a b c Reeves 2019 pp 154 155 Hornung 2001 p 56 Dodson 2018 pp 47 50 Redford 1984 p 207 Silverman Wegner amp Wegner 2006 pp 165 166 Hoffmeier 2015 pp 197 239 242 van Dijk 2003 p 284 Hoffmeier 2015 pp 239 242 Hornung 2001 pp 43 44 Najovits 2004 p 144 a b Baptista Santamarina amp Conant 2017 Arnold 1996 p viii Hornung 2001 pp 42 47 Sooke 2016 a b Takacs amp Cline 2015 pp 5 6 Braverman Redford amp Mackowiak 2009 Braverman amp Mackowiak 2010 a b c d e Montserrat 2003 Najovits 2004 p 145 Aldred 1985 p 174 Arnold 1996 p 114 Hornung 2001 p 44 Najovits 2004 pp 146 147 Arnold 1996 p 85 Arnold 1996 pp 85 86 Montserrat 2003 p 36 a b c d Freud 1939 Stent 2002 pp 34 38 Assmann 1997 Shupak 1995 Albright 1973 Chaney 2006a pp 62 69 Chaney 2006b Assmann 1997 pp 23 24 Hoffmeier 2015 pp 246 256 it seems best to conclude for the present that the parallels between Amarna hymns to Aten and Psalm 104 should be attributed to the common theology and the general pattern Hoffmeier 2005 p 239 There has been some debate whether the similarities direct or indirect borrowing it is unlikely that the Israelite who composed Psalm 104 borrowed directly from the sublime Egyptian Hymn to the Aten as Stager has recently claimed Alter 2018 p 54 I think there may be some likelihood however unprovable that our psalmist was familiar with at least an intermediate version of Akhenaton s hymn and adopted some elements from it Brown 2014 p 61 73 the question of the relationship between Egyptian hymns and the Psalms remains open Assmann 2020 pp 40 43 Verses 20 30 cannot be understood as anything other than a loose and abridged translation of the Great Hymn Day 2014 pp 22 23 a significant part of the rest Of Psalm 104 esp vv 20 30 is dependent on Akhenaten s Hymn to the Sun god Aten these parallels almost all come in the same order Day 2013 pp 223 224 this dependence is confined to vv 20 30 Here the evidence is particularly impressive since we have six parallels with Akhenaten s hymn occurring in the identical order with one exception Landes 2011 pp 155 178 the hymn to Aten quoted as epigraph to this chapter replicates the intense religiosity and even the language of the Hebrew Psalm 104 Indeed most Egyptologists argue that this hymn inspired the psalm For some the relationship to Hebraic monotheism seems extremely close including the nearly verbatim passages in Psalm 104 and the Hymn to Aten found in one of the tombs at Akhetaten Shaw 2004 p 19 An intriguing direct literary and perhaps religious link between Egypt and the Bible is Psalm 104 which has strong similarities with a hymn to the Aten Redford 1987 Levenson 1994 p 60 Hornung 2001 p 14 Redford Shanks amp Meinhardt 1997 Ridley 2019 p 87 Aldred 1991 Smith 1923 pp 83 88 Strachey 1939 Hawass 2010 Burridge 1995 Lorenz 2010 National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences 2017 Schemm 2010 Montserrat 2003 p 139 Montserrat 2003 p 144 Montserrat 2003 p 154 Montserrat 2003 pp 163 200 212 Montserrat 2003 pp 168 170 Montserrat 2003 pp 175 176 Davidson 2019 Montserrat 2003 p 176 Glass Philip 1987 Music by Philip Glass New York Harper amp Row p 137 138 ISBN 0 06 015823 9 a b Marvel 2021 Hotton 2018 Bibliography Akhenaten Dictionary com Archived from the original on October 14 2008 Retrieved October 2 2008 Dorman Peter F Akhenaton King of Egypt Britannica com Retrieved August 25 2012 Albright William F 1973 From the Patriarchs to Moses II Moses out of Egypt The Biblical Archaeologist 36 2 48 76 doi 10 2307 3211050 JSTOR 3211050 S2CID 135099403 Aldred Cyril 1968 Akhenaten Pharaoh of Egypt A New Study New Aspects of Antiquity 1st ed London Thames and Hudson ISBN 978 0500390047 Aldred Cyril 1985 1980 Egyptian art in the Days of the Pharaohs 3100 32 BC World of Art London New York Thames amp Hudson ISBN 0 500 20180 3 LCCN 84 51309 Aldred Cyril 1991 1988 Akhenaten King of Egypt London Thames and Hudson ISBN 0500276218 Allen James Peter 1988 Two Altered Inscriptions of the Late Amarna Period Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt San Antonio Texas American 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Maurizio Corrado Adriana eds Sites of Exchange European Crossroads and Faultlines Internationale Forschungen Zur Allgemeinen Und Vergleichenden Literaturwissenschaft Vol 103 Amsterdam Rodopi pp 39 69 ISBN 978 9042020153 Clayton Peter 2006 Chronicle of the Pharaohs Thames and Hudson Cohen Raymond Westbrook Raymond eds 2002 2000 Amarna Diplomacy The Beginnings of International Relations Paperback ed Baltimore London The Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 0 8018 7103 4 Darnell John Coleman Manassa Colleen 2007 Tutankhamun s Armies Battle and Conquest during Ancient Egypt s Late 18th Dynasty Hoboken New Jersey John Wiley amp Sons Inc ISBN 978 0 471 74358 3 OCLC 70265584 David Rosalie 1998 Handbook to Life in Ancient Egypt Facts on File Inc Davidson Justin November 11 2019 Gleaming and Self Aware Philip Glass s Akhnaten Is Borne to the Met Vulture Vox Media Archived from the original on October 21 2020 Retrieved April 4 2021 Davies Norman de Garis 1903 1908 The Rock Tombs of El Amarna Memoir Archaeological Survey of Egypt Vol 13 14 London Egypt Exploration Fund OCLC 11263615 Day John 2013 Psalm 104 and Akhenaten s Hymn to the Sun In Gillingham Susan ed Jewish and Christian Approaches to the Psalms Conflict and Convergence Oxford University Press pp 211 228 ISBN 978 0 19 969954 4 Day John 2014 From Creation to Babel Studies in Genesis 1 11 Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 0 567 37030 3 Desroches Noblecourt Christiane 1963 Tutankhamen Life and Death of a Pharaoh Illustrated by F L Kenett 1st ed New York New York Graphic Society ISBN 978 0821201510 van Dijk Jacobus 2003 2000 The Amarna Period and the Later New Kingdom c 1352 1069 BC PDF In Shaw Ian ed The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt New ed Oxford New York Oxford University Press pp 265 307 ISBN 978 0 19 280458 7 Archived PDF from the original on June 19 2018 Retrieved June 21 2020 Dodson Aidan 2012 Akhenaten Amenhotep IV In Bagnall Roger S Brodersen Kai Champion Craige B Erskine Andrew Huebner Sabine R eds The 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Comments on Biological age of the skeletonised mummy from Tomb KV55 at Thebes Egypt by Eugen Strouhal Anthropologie Moravian Museum 48 2 113 115 JSTOR 26292899 It is essential that whether the KV55 skeleton is that of Smenkhkare or some previously unknown prince the assumption that the KV55 bones are those of Akhenaten be rejected before it becomes received wisdom Elmar Edel 1948 Neue Keilschriftliche Umschreibungen Agyptischer Namen aus den Boǧazkoytexten Journal of Near Eastern Studies in German The University of Chicago Press 7 1 11 24 doi 10 1086 370848 ISSN 0022 2968 JSTOR 542570 Fecht Gerhard 1960 Amarna Probleme 1 2 Zeitschrift fur Agyptische Sprache und Altertumskunde in German De Gruyter 85 83 118 doi 10 1524 zaes 1960 85 1 99 ISSN 0044 216X S2CID 192846780 Freud Sigmund 1939 Moses and Monotheism New York A A Knopf OCLC 624780 Gabolde Marc 1998 D Akhenaton a Toutankhamon Collection de l Institut d Archeologie et d Histoire de l Antiquite in French Vol 3 Lyon Universite Lumiere Lyon 2 ISBN 978 2911971020 ISSN 1275 269X Gabolde Marc February 17 2011 The End of the Amarna Period BBC co uk BBC Retrieved June 12 2020 Gardiner Alan H 1905 The Inscriptions of Mes A Contribution to the Study of Egyptian Judicial Procedure Untersuchungen zur Geschichte und Altertumskunde Agyptens Vol IV Book 3 J C Hinrichs publishers Retrieved July 24 2020 Gardiner Shayna 2015 Taking Possession of the Constant Rate Hypothesis Variation and Change in Ancient Egyptian Possessive Constructions University of Pennsylvania Working Papers in Linguistics 21 2 69 78 Gohary Jocelyn Olive 1992 Akhenaten s Sed festival at Karnak Studies in Egyptology 1st ed London New York Kegan Paul International ISBN 978 0710303806 ISSN 1754 601X OCLC 22309806 Goldwasser Orly 1992 Literary Late Egyptian as a Polysystem Poetics Today Duke University Press 13 3 447 462 doi 10 2307 1772871 ISSN 0333 5372 JSTOR 1772871 Grajetzki Wolfram 2005 Ancient Egyptian Queens A Hieroglyphic Dictionary London Golden House 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vorerst letzte dokumentierte Erwahnung In Kampp Seyfried Friederike ed Im Licht von Amarna 100 Jahre Fund der Nofretete Exhibition catalogue in German Petersberg Hesse Imhof Verlag ISBN 978 3865688422 Van der Perre Athena 2014 The Year 16 graffito of Akhenaten in Dayr Abu Ḥinnis A Contribution to the Study of the Later Years of Nefertiti Journal of Egyptian History Brill 7 1 67 108 doi 10 1163 18741665 12340014 ISSN 1874 1657 Perry Dominic May 15 2019 The Aten Appears Episode 110 The History of Egypt Podcast Podcast Event occurs at 03 59 Retrieved May 23 2020 O Connor David Silverman David P eds 1995 Ancient Egyptian Kingship Probleme der Agyptologie Vol 9 Leiden New York Koln Brill ISBN 90 04 10041 5 Ockinga Boyo 2001 Piety In Redford Donald ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt Vol 3 Oxford University Press pp 44 47 ISBN 0 19 510234 7 Redford Donald B 1976 The Sun disc in Akhenaten s Program Its Worship and Antecedents I Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt San 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00108868 Rogers Robert William ed 1912 Cuneiform Parallels to the Old Testament London Toronto Melbourne and Bombay Oxford University Press The royal family at Amarna University College London 2001 Retrieved June 10 2020 Ridley Ronald Thomas 2019 Akhenaten A Historian s View The AUC History of Ancient Egypt Cairo New York The American University in Cairo Press ISBN 978 9774167935 Robins G 1993 Women in Ancient Egypt Harvard University Press Ross Barbara November December 1999 Akhenaten and Rib Hadda from Byblos Saudi Aramco World 50 6 30 35 Archived from the original on January 13 2010 Retrieved August 8 2013 Schemm Paul February 16 2010 A Frail King Tut Died From Malaria Broken Leg USA Today Associated Press Schulman Alan R 1982 The Nubian War of Akhenaten L Egyptologie en 1979 Axes prioritaires de recherches Colloques internationaux du Centre national de la recherche scientifique Vol 2 Paris Editions du Centre national de la recherche scientifique pp 299 316 ISBN 978 2222029298 Sethe Kurt ed 1906 1909 Urkunden der 18 Dynastie Documents of the 18th Dynasty PDF Urkunden des Agyptischen Altertums in German Vol 4 Leipzig Germany J C Hinrichs sche Buchhandlung Archived PDF from the original on June 6 2020 Retrieved June 12 2020 Shaw Ian ed 2003 2000 The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt New ed Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 280458 7 Shaw Ian 2004 Ancient Egypt A Very Short Introduction Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 157840 3 Shupak Nili 1995 The Monotheism of Moses and the Monotheism of Akhenaten The Bible as a Meeting Point of Cultures through the Ages Sevivoth pp 18 27 Silverman David P Wegner Josef W Wegner Jennifer Houser 2006 Akhenaten and Tutankhamun Revolution and Restoration 1st ed Philadelphia Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archeology and Anthropology ISBN 978 1931707909 Smith Elliot ed 1923 Tutankhamen and the discovery of his tomb by the late Earl of Canarvon and Mr Howard Carter London Routledge Sooke Alastair January 9 2014 Akhenaten mad bad or brilliant The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on January 11 2022 Retrieved May 10 2020 Sooke Alastair February 4 2016 How ancient Egypt shaped our idea of beauty Culture British Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved May 25 2020 Spence Kate February 17 2011 Akhenaten and the Amarna Period BBC co uk BBC Retrieved May 10 2020 Stent Gunther Siegmund 2002 Paradoxes of Free Will Transactions of the American Philosophical Society Vol 92 Philadelphia Pennsylvania American Philosophical Society ISBN 0 87169 926 5 OCLC 50773277 Strachey James 1939 Preliminary Notes Upon the Problem of Akhenaten International Journal of Psycho Analysis 20 33 42 ISSN 0020 7578 Retrieved June 12 2020 Strouhal Eugen 2010 Biological age of skeletonized mummy from Tomb KV 55 at Thebes Anthropologie Brno Czech Republic Moravian Museum 48 2 97 112 JSTOR 26292898 Takacs Sarolta Anna Cline Eric H eds 2015 2007 Akhenaten also Akhenaton r ca 1353 1335 B C E The Ancient World Vol 1 5 London New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 7656 8082 2 LCCN 2006101384 Trigger Bruce Graham Kemp Barry O Connor David Bourke Lloyd Alan Brian 2001 1983 Ancient Egypt A Social History Cambridge New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521284279 LCCN 82 22196 Tyldesley Joyce Ann 1998 Nefertiti Egypt s Sun Queen London Viking ISBN 978 0670869985 OCLC 1153684328 Tyldesley Joyce A 2005 Egypt How a Lost Civilisation was Rediscovered Berkeley California University of California Press ISBN 978 0520250208 Tyldesley Joyce A 2006 Chronicle of the Queens of Egypt From Early Dynastic Times to the Death of Cleopatra New York Thames amp Hudson ISBN 0 500 05145 3 OCLC 61189103 Wilkinson Richard H 2003 The Complete Gods and Goddesses of Ancient Egypt London Thames amp Hudson ISBN 0 500 05120 8 Zaki Mey 2008 The Legacy of Tutankhamun Art and History Photographs by Farid Atiya Giza Egypt Farid Atiya Press ISBN 978 977 17 4930 1 Further reading Aldred Cyril 1973 Akhenaten and Nefertiti London Thames amp Hudson Aldred Cyril 1984 The Egyptians London Thames amp Hudson Allen James Peter 1994 Nefertiti and Smenkh ka re Gottinger Miszellen Gottingen Germany Verlag der Gottinger Miszellen 141 7 17 ISSN 0344 385X Asante Molefi Kete Mazama Ama 2009 Encyclopedia of African Religion Thousand Oaks California Sage Publications Ashrafian Hutan September 2012 Familial epilepsy in the pharaohs of ancient Egypt s 18th Dynasty Epilepsy amp Behavior 25 1 23 31 doi 10 1016 j yebeh 2012 06 014 PMID 22980077 S2CID 20771815 Bilolo Mubabinge 2004 1988 Sect I vol 2 Le Createur et la Creation dans la pensee memphite et amarnienne Approche synoptique du Document Philosophique de Memphis et du Grand Hymne Theologique d Echnaton in French new ed Munich Paris Academy of African Thought Cavka Mislav Kelava Kelava Cavka Vlatka Busic Zeljko Olujic Boris Brkljacic Boris March 2010 Homocystinuria a possible solution of the Akhenaten s mystery Collegium Antropologicum Croatian Anthropological Society 34 Suppl 1 255 258 ISSN 0350 6134 PMID 20402329 El Mahdy Christine 1999 Tutankhamen The Life and Death of a Boy King Headline Choi B Pak A 2001 Lessons for surveillance in the 21st century a historical perspective from the past five millennia Soz Praventivmed 46 6 361 368 doi 10 1007 BF01321662 hdl 10 1007 BF01321662 PMID 11851070 S2CID 12263035 Locker Melissa September 12 2013 Did King Tutankhamen Die From Epilepsy Time Malek Jaromir 1996 The Coregency relief of Akhenaten and Smenkhare from Memphis In Der Manuelian Peter Freed Rita E eds Studies in Honor of William Kelly Simpson PDF Vol 2 Boston Museum of Fine Arts ISBN 0 87846 390 9 Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved June 1 2020 Miller Jared L 2007 Amarna Age Chronology and the Identity of Nibh ururiyain the Light of a Newly Reconstructed Hittite Text PDF Altorientalische Forschungen De Gruyter 34 2 252 293 Archived PDF from the original on February 12 2020 Retrieved June 9 2020 Rita E Freed Yvonne J Markowitz 1999 Sue H D Auria ed Pharaohs of the Sun Akhenaten Nefertiti Tutankhamen Bulfinch Press Gestoso Singer Graciela 2008 El Intercambio de Bienes entre Egipto y Asia Anterior Desde el reinado de Tuthmosis III hasta el de Akhenaton Free Access in Spanish Ancient Near East Monographs Volume 2 Buenos Aires Society of Biblical Literature CEHAO Holland Tom 1998 The Sleeper in the Sands novel Abacus a fictionalised adventure story based closely on the mysteries of Akhenaten s reign Kozloff Arielle 2006 Bubonic Plague in the Reign of Amenhotep III KMT 17 3 McAvoy S 2007 Mummy 61074 a Strange Case of Mistaken Identity Antiguo Oriente 5 183 194 Najovits Simson Egypt Trunk of the Tree Volume I The Contexts Volume II The Consequences Algora Publishing New York 2003 and 2004 On Akhenaten Vol II Chapter 11 pp 117 73 and Chapter 12 pp 205 13 Redford Donald B 1984 Akhenaten The Heretic King Princeton University Press Shortridge K 1992 Pandemic influenza a zoonosis Semin Respir Infect 7 1 11 25 PMID 1609163 Stevens Anna 2012 Akhenaten s workers the Amarna Stone village survey 2005 2009 Volume I The survey excavations and architecture Egypt Exploration Society Van Dyke John Charles 1887 Principles of Art Pt 1 Art in History Pt 2 Art in Theory New York New York Fords Howard amp Hulbert Retrieved June 19 2020 Wolf Walther 1951 Die Stellung der agyptischen Kunst zur antiken und abendlandischen und Das Problem des Kunstlers in der agyptischen Kunst in German Hildesheim Germany Gerstenberg External linksAkhenaten at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Data from Wikidata Akhenaten on In Our Time at the BBC The City of Akhetaten The Great Hymn to the Aten M A Mansoor Amarna Collection Grim secrets of Pharaoh s city BBC Ancestry and Pathology in King Tutankhamun s Family Hawass The Long Coregency Revisited the Tomb of Kheruef Archived June 13 2011 at the Wayback Machine by Peter Dorman University of Chicago Royal Relations Tut s father is very likely Akhenaten National Geographic 09 2010 Archived August 9 2011 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Akhenaten amp oldid 1188674662, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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