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Ay (pharaoh)

Ay was the penultimate pharaoh of ancient Egypt's 18th Dynasty. He held the throne of Egypt for a brief four-year period in the late 14th century BC. Prior to his rule, he was a close advisor to two, and perhaps three, other pharaohs of the dynasty. It is speculated that he was the power behind the throne during child ruler Tutankhamun's reign. His prenomen Kheperkheperure means "Everlasting are the Manifestations of Ra," while his nomen Ay it-netjer reads as "Ay, Father of the God."[1] Records and monuments that can be clearly attributed to Ay are rare, both because his reign was short and because his successor, Horemheb, instigated a campaign of damnatio memoriae against him and the other pharaohs associated with the unpopular Amarna Period.

Ay
Ay II, Aya[citation needed]
Pharaoh Ay performing the Opening of the Mouth ceremony on his predecessor Tutankhamen. He is wearing the Leopard skin worn by Egyptian High Priests and a Khepresh, a blue crown worn by Pharaohs.
Pharaoh
Reign1323–1319 BC or 1327–1323 BC (18th Dynasty)
PredecessorTutankhamun (Grandnephew & grandson-in-law?)
SuccessorHoremheb (Possible Son-in-law)
ConsortIuy (uncertain), Tey, Ankhesenamun (Granddaughter & grandniece-in-law?)
ChildrenNakhtmin?, Nefertiti?, Mutbenret/Mutnedjmet?
Died1319 or 1323 BC
BurialWV23
MonumentsAmarna Tomb

Origins and family

Ay is believed to have been from Akhmim. During his short reign, he built a rock-cut chapel in Akhmim and dedicated it to the local deity Min. He may have been the son of the courtier Yuya and his wife Thuya, making him a brother of Tiye and Anen.[2] This connection is based on the fact that both Yuya and Ay came from Akhmim and held the titles 'God's Father' and 'Master of Horses'. A strong physical resemblance has been noted between the mummy of Yuya and surviving statuary depictions of Ay.[2] The mummy of Ay has not been located, although fragmentary skeletal remains recovered from his tomb may represent it,[3] so a more thorough comparison with Yuya cannot be made. Therefore, the theory that he was the son of Yuya rests entirely on circumstantial evidence.

Ay's Great Royal Wife was Tey, who was known to be the wet-nurse to Nefertiti. It is often theorised that he was the father of Nefertiti as a way to explain his title 'God's Father' as it has been argued that the term designates a man whose daughter married the king. However, nowhere are Ay and Tey referred to as the parents of Nefertiti.[4]

Nakhtmin, Ay's chosen successor, was likely his son or grandson. His mother's name was Iuy, a priestess of Min and Isis in Akhmim.[4] She may have been Ay's first wife.

Amarna Period

 
A stone block shows Ay receiving the "Gold of Honor" award in his Amarna tomb from Akhenaten.

All that is known for certain was that by the time he was permitted to build a tomb for himself (Southern Tomb 25) at Amarna during the reign of Akhenaten, he had achieved the title of "Overseer of All the Horses of His Majesty", the highest rank in the elite charioteering division of the army, which was just below the rank of General.[5] Prior to this promotion he appears to have been first a Troop Commander and then a "regular" Overseer of Horses, titles which were found on a box thought to have been part of the original furnishings for his tomb.[6] Other titles listed in this tomb include Fan-bearer on the Right Side of the King, Acting Scribe of the King, beloved by him, and God's Father. The 'Fan-bearer on the Right Side of the King' was a very important position, and is viewed as showing that the bearer had the 'ear' of the ruler. The final God's Father title is the one most associated with Ay, and was later incorporated into his royal name when he became pharaoh.[6]

This title could mean that he was the father-in-law of the pharaoh, suggesting that he was the son of Yuya and Thuya, thus being a brother or half-brother of Tiye, brother-in-law to Amenhotep III and the maternal uncle of Akhenaten. Instead, the title may indicate that Ay was the tutor of Tutankhamun.[4] If Ay was the son of Yuya, who was a senior military officer during the reign of Amenhotep III, then he likely followed in his father's footsteps, finally inheriting his father's military functions upon his death. Alternatively, it could also mean that he may have had a daughter that married the pharaoh Akhenaten, possibly being the father of Akhenaten's chief wife Nefertiti. Ultimately there is no evidence to definitively prove either hypothesis.[7] The two theories are not mutually exclusive, but either relationship would explain the exalted status to which Ay rose during Akhenaten's Amarna interlude, when the royal family turned their backs on Egypt's traditional gods and experimented, for a dozen years or so, with an early form of monotheism; an experiment that, whether out of conviction or convenience, Ay appears to have followed under the reign of Akhenaten.

The Great Hymn to the Aten is also found in his Amarna tomb which was built during his service under Akhenaten. His wife Tey was born a commoner but was given the title Nurse of the Pharaoh's Great Wife.[7] If she were the mother of Nefertiti she would be expected to have the royal title Mother of the Pharaoh's Great Wife instead; had Ay been the father of Nefertiti, then Tey would have been her stepmother.[7] In several Amarna tomb chapels there is a woman whose name begins with "Mut" who had the title Sister of the Pharaoh's Great Wife. This could also be a daughter of Ay's by his wife Tey, and it is known that his successor Horemheb married a woman with the name Mutnodjimet.[8]

Tutankhamun

 
Ay performing the opening of the mouth ceremony for Tutankhamun, scene from Tutankhamun's tomb.

Ay's reign was preceded by that of Tutankhamun, who ascended to the throne at the age of eight or nine, at a time of great tension between the new monotheism and the old polytheism. He was assisted in his kingly duties by his predecessor's two closest advisors: Grand Vizier Ay and General of the Armies Horemheb. Tutankhamun's nine-year reign, largely under Ay's direction, saw the return of the old gods – and, with that, the restoration of the power of the Amun priesthood, who had lost their influence over Egypt under Akhenaten.

Egyptologist Bob Brier suggested that Ay murdered Tutankhamun in order to usurp the throne, a claim which was based on X-ray examinations of the body done in 1968. He also alleged that Ankhesenamun and the Hittite prince she was about to marry were also murdered at his orders.[9] This murder theory was not accepted by all scholars, and further analysis of the x-rays, along with CT scans taken in 2005, found no evidence to suggest that Tutankhamun died from a blow to the head as Brier had theorized.[10][11] In 2010, a team led by Zahi Hawass reported that the young king had died from a combination of a broken leg, malaria and Köhler disease[12] but another team from the Bernhard Nocht Institute for Tropical Medicine in Hamburg believes his death was caused by sickle cell disease.[13]

Ay buried his young predecessor, as depicted on the wall of Tutankhamun's burial chamber. The explicit depiction of a succeeding king conducting the "Opening of the Mouth" ceremony of another is unique; the depictions are usually more generic.[14]

Ay was buried in the tomb intended for Tutankhamun in the West Valley of the Kings (WV23), and Tutankhamun was interred in Ay's intended tomb in the East Valley of the Kings (KV62).[citation needed]

Rule as pharaoh

 
Faience plate with the complete royal titulary of Ay, Egyptian Museum.

Depending on the chronology followed, Ay served as pharaoh between 1323–1319 BC,[15] 1327–1323 BC, or 1310–1306 BC. Tutankhamun's death around the age of 18 or 19, together with the fact he had no living children, left a power vacuum that his Grand Vizier Ay was quick to fill: he is depicted conducting the funerary rites for the deceased monarch and assuming the role of heir. The grounds on which he based his successful claim to power are not entirely clear. The Commander of the Army, Horemheb, had actually been designated as the "idnw" or "Deputy of the Lord of the Two Lands" under Tutankhamun and was presumed to be the boy king's heir apparent and successor.[16] It appears that Horemheb was outmaneuvered to the throne by Ay, who legitimized his claim to the throne by burying Tutankhamun, as well as possibly marrying Ankhesenamun, Tutankhamun's widow.

 
Fragment of a cartouche of Ay in the Petrie Museum

Since Ay was already advanced in age upon his accession, he ruled Egypt in his own right for only four years. During this period, he consolidated the return to the old religious ways that he had initiated as senior advisor and constructed a mortuary temple at Medinet Habu for his own use. A stela of Nakhtmin (Berlin 2074), a military officer under Tutankhamun who was Ay's chosen successor—is dated to "Year 4, IV Akhet day 1" of Ay's reign.[17] Manetho's Epitome assigns a reign length of four years and one month to Horemheb, and this was usually assigned to him based on this Year 4 dated stela; however, it is now believed that figure should be raised by a decade to fourteen years and one month and attributed to Horemheb instead, as Manetho intended. Hence, Ay's precise reign length is unknown and he could have ruled for as long as seven to nine years, since most of his monuments and his funerary temple at Medinet Habu were either destroyed or usurped by his successor, Horemheb.[citation needed]

Royal succession

 
Reproduction of a Portrait of Ay, on display at Musée d'Art et d'Histoire of Geneva. Detail of a statue of the royal couple of king Ay and Queen Tey, the fragment depicting Tey being a reproduction of a piece now located at the Hermitage in Saint-Petersburg (inv 18477).

Prior to his death, Ay designated Nakhtmin to succeed him as pharaoh. However, his succession plan went awry, as Horemheb became the last king of Egypt's 18th Dynasty instead of Nakhtmin. The fact that Nakhtmin was Ay's intended heir is strongly implied by an inscription carved on a dyad funerary statue of Nakhtmin and his spouse which was presumably made during Ay's reign. Nakhtmin is clearly given the titles "Crown Prince" (jrj-pꜥt) and "King's Son" (zꜣ-nswt).[18] The only conclusion which can be drawn here is that Nakhtmin was either a son or an adopted son of Ay's, and that Ay was grooming Nakhtmin for the royal succession instead of Horemheb. Egyptologists Aidan Dodson and Dyan Hilton observe that the aforementioned statue:

... is broken after the signs for "King's Son of", and there has been considerable debate as to whether it continued to say "Kush", making Nakhtmin a Viceroy of Nubia, or "of his body", making him an actual royal son. Since there is no other evidence for Nakhtmin as a Viceroy—with another man [Paser I][19] attested in office at this period as well—the latter suggestion seems the most likely. As Nakhtmin donated items to the burial of Tutankhamun without such a title, it follows that he only became a King's Son subsequently, presumably under Ay. This theory is supported by the evidence of intentional damage to Nakhtmin's statue, since Ay was amongst the Amarna pharaohs whose memories were execrated under later rulers.[20]

Aftermath

 
The burial chamber of Ay's tomb in the Valley of the Kings

It appears that one of Horemheb's undertakings as Pharaoh was to eliminate all references to the monotheistic experiment, a process that included expunging the name of his immediate predecessors, especially Ay, from the historical record. Horemheb desecrated Ay's burial and had most of Ay's royal cartouches in his WV23 tomb erased while his sarcophagus was smashed into numerous fragments.[21] However, the intact sarcophagus lid was discovered in 1972 by Otto Schaden. The lid had been buried under debris in this king's tomb and still preserved Ay's cartouche.[22] Horemheb also usurped Ay's mortuary temple at Medinet Habu for his own use. Uvo Hölscher (1878–1963) who excavated the temple in the early 1930s provides these interesting details concerning the state of Ay-Horemheb's mortuary temple:

Wherever a cartouche has been preserved, the name of Eye [i.e., Ay] has been erased and replaced by that of his successor Harmhab. In all but a single instance had it been overlooked and no change made. Thus the temple, which Eye had begun and finished, at least in the rear rooms with their fine paintings, was usurped by his successor and was thenceforth known as the temple of Harmhab. Seals on stoppers of wine jars from the temple magazines read: "Wine from the temple of Harmhab".[23]

In fiction

  • Ay appears as a villain in the 17th book in Lucien de Gieter's Papyrus comic book series (Tutankhamun, The Assassinated Pharaoh).[citation needed]
  • Ay appears as a major character in Paul C. Doherty's trilogy of Ancient Egyptian novels, An Evil Spirit Out of the West, The Season of the Hyaena and The Year of the Cobra.[citation needed]
  • Kerry Greenwood's novel, Out of the Black Land, features him as a greedy villain whose sole goal was accruing wealth.[citation needed]
  • He is a character in Wolfgang Hohlbein's Die Prophezeihung (The Prophecy).[citation needed]
  • He is also a major character in Michelle Moran's bestselling novel Nefertiti.[citation needed]
  • Ay is the villain of Lucile Morrison's young adult novel The Lost Queen of Egypt (1937).[citation needed]
  • He is also a character in Mika Waltari's historical novel The Egyptian, again depicted as immoral and villainous.[citation needed]
  • Ay serves as a central character in Tut, portrayed by Ben Kingsley.
  • Ay is a minor character in the time travel to the 18th dynasty in Mr. Peabody & Sherman
  • Ay is a central character in Gwendolyn MacEwen's novel King of Egypt, King of Dreams, where he is portrayed as one of Akhenaten's closest confidants, spiritual antagonists, and supporters.[24] The novel also presents Ay as Tiye's brother and one time lover, and it is suggested that he, rather than Amenhotep III, may be Akhenaten's father. Much of the novel is told from Ay's perspective as he reluctantly attempts to navigate the changes of the Amarna period, and the second to last chapter is his memoir/confession near the end of his pharaonic reign, in which Ay admits to killing the ailing and blind Akhenaten at the dying pharaoh's request.

References

  1. ^ Peter Clayton, Chronicle of the Pharaohs, Thames & Hudson Ltd, 1994. p136
  2. ^ a b Aldred, Cyril (December 1957). "The End of the El-'Amarna Period". The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology. 43: 33. doi:10.2307/3855276. JSTOR 3855276.
  3. ^ Schaden, Otto J. (1984). "Clearance of the Tomb of King Ay (WV-23)". Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt. 21: 58. doi:10.2307/40000956. JSTOR 40000956.
  4. ^ a b c van Dijk, J. (1996). "Horemheb and the Struggle for the Throne of Tutankhamun" (PDF). Bulletin of the Australian Centre for Egyptology: 31–33. Retrieved 15 September 2019.
  5. ^ Hindley, Marshall. Featured Pharaoh: The God's Father Ay, Ancient Egypt, April/May 2006. p. 27–28.
  6. ^ a b Dodson, Aidan. Amarna Sunset: Nefertiti, Tutankhamun, Ay, Horemheb, and the Egyptian Counter-Reformation. p. 95 The American University in Cairo Press. 2009, ISBN 978-977-416-304-3
  7. ^ a b c Dodson, Aidan. Amarna Sunset: Nefertiti, Tutankhamun, Ay, Horemheb, and the Egyptian Counter-Reformation. p96 The American University in Cairo Press. 2009, ISBN 978-977-416-304-3
  8. ^ Dodson, Aidan.Amarna Sunset: Nefertiti, Tutankhamun, Ay, Horemheb, and the Egyptian Counter-Reformation. p. 98 The American University in Cairo Press. 2009, ISBN 978-977-416-304-3
  9. ^ Brier, Bob (1998). The murder of Tutankhamen : a true story (Hardcover ed.). Putnam. ISBN 0399143831.
  10. ^ Boyer, RS; Rodin, EA; Grey, TC; Connolly, RC (2003). "The skull and cervical spine radiographs of Tutankhamen: a critical appraisal" (PDF). American Journal of Neuroradiology. 24 (6): 1142–7. PMC 8149017. PMID 12812942. Retrieved 15 September 2019.
  11. ^ Hawass, Zahi; Saleem, Sahar N. (2016). Scanning the Pharaohs : CT Imaging of the New Kingdom Royal Mummies. The American University in Cairo. pp. 101–102. ISBN 978-977-416-673-0.
  12. ^ Hawass, Zahi (17 February 2010). "Ancestry and Pathology in King Tutankhamun's Family" (PDF). JAMA. 303 (7): 638–47. doi:10.1001/jama.2010.121. PMID 20159872. Retrieved 27 August 2019.
  13. ^ Timmann, Christian (23 June 2010). "King Tutankhamun's Family and Demise". JAMA. 303 (24): 2473, author reply 2473–5. doi:10.1001/jama.2010.822. PMID 20571010.
  14. ^ Dodson, Aidan (2018). Amarna sunset : Nefertiti, Tutankhamun, Ay, Horemheb, and the Egyptian counter-reformation (Revised ed.). New York: The American University in Cairo Press. p. 94. ISBN 978-977-416-859-8.
  15. ^ Erik Hornung, Rolf Krauss & David Warburton (editors), Ancient Egyptian Chronology (Handbook of Oriental Studies), Brill: 2006, p. 493
  16. ^ Peter J. Brand, The Monuments of Seti I: Epigraphic, Historical and Art Historical Analysis, Brill, NV Leiden, (2000), p. 311
  17. ^ Urk IV: 2110
  18. ^ Wolfgang Helck, Urkunden der 18. Dynastie: Texte der Hefte 20-21 (Berlin: Akademie-Verlag, 1984), pp. 1908–1910
  19. ^ [1][dead link]
  20. ^ Aidan Dodson & Dyan Hilton, The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt, Thames & Hudson, (2004), p. 151
  21. ^ Bertha Porter, Topographical Bibliography of Ancient Egyptian Hieroglyph Texts, Vol 1, Part 2, Oxford Clarendon Press, (1960), Tomb 23, pp. 550–551
  22. ^ Otto Schaden, Clearance of the Tomb of King Ay (WV 23), JARCE 21(1984) pp.39–64
  23. ^ Uvo Hölscher, Excavations at Ancient Thebes 1930/31, pp. 50–51
  24. ^ MacEwen, Gwendolyn (1971). King of Egypt, King of Dreams. Toronto: Macmillan.

Further reading

  • Jürgen von Beckerath, Chronologie des Pharaonischen Ägypten, MÄS 46 (Philip von Zabern, Mainz: 1997), pp. 201

pharaoh, this, article, about, 18th, dynasty, pharaoh, earlier, pharaoh, that, name, merneferre, penultimate, pharaoh, ancient, egypt, 18th, dynasty, held, throne, egypt, brief, four, year, period, late, 14th, century, prior, rule, close, advisor, perhaps, thr. This article is about 18th dynasty pharaoh For an earlier pharaoh of that name see Merneferre Ay Ay was the penultimate pharaoh of ancient Egypt s 18th Dynasty He held the throne of Egypt for a brief four year period in the late 14th century BC Prior to his rule he was a close advisor to two and perhaps three other pharaohs of the dynasty It is speculated that he was the power behind the throne during child ruler Tutankhamun s reign His prenomen Kheperkheperure means Everlasting are the Manifestations of Ra while his nomen Ay it netjer reads as Ay Father of the God 1 Records and monuments that can be clearly attributed to Ay are rare both because his reign was short and because his successor Horemheb instigated a campaign of damnatio memoriae against him and the other pharaohs associated with the unpopular Amarna Period AyAy II Aya citation needed Pharaoh Ay performing the Opening of the Mouth ceremony on his predecessor Tutankhamen He is wearing the Leopard skin worn by Egyptian High Priests and a Khepresh a blue crown worn by Pharaohs PharaohReign1323 1319 BC or 1327 1323 BC 18th Dynasty PredecessorTutankhamun Grandnephew amp grandson in law SuccessorHoremheb Possible Son in law Royal titularyConsortIuy uncertain Tey Ankhesenamun Granddaughter amp grandniece in law ChildrenNakhtmin Nefertiti Mutbenret Mutnedjmet Died1319 or 1323 BCBurialWV23MonumentsAmarna Tomb Contents 1 Origins and family 2 Amarna Period 3 Tutankhamun 4 Rule as pharaoh 5 Royal succession 6 Aftermath 7 In fiction 8 References 9 Further readingOrigins and family EditSee also Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt family tree Ay is believed to have been from Akhmim During his short reign he built a rock cut chapel in Akhmim and dedicated it to the local deity Min He may have been the son of the courtier Yuya and his wife Thuya making him a brother of Tiye and Anen 2 This connection is based on the fact that both Yuya and Ay came from Akhmim and held the titles God s Father and Master of Horses A strong physical resemblance has been noted between the mummy of Yuya and surviving statuary depictions of Ay 2 The mummy of Ay has not been located although fragmentary skeletal remains recovered from his tomb may represent it 3 so a more thorough comparison with Yuya cannot be made Therefore the theory that he was the son of Yuya rests entirely on circumstantial evidence Ay s Great Royal Wife was Tey who was known to be the wet nurse to Nefertiti It is often theorised that he was the father of Nefertiti as a way to explain his title God s Father as it has been argued that the term designates a man whose daughter married the king However nowhere are Ay and Tey referred to as the parents of Nefertiti 4 Nakhtmin Ay s chosen successor was likely his son or grandson His mother s name was Iuy a priestess of Min and Isis in Akhmim 4 She may have been Ay s first wife Amarna Period Edit A stone block shows Ay receiving the Gold of Honor award in his Amarna tomb from Akhenaten All that is known for certain was that by the time he was permitted to build a tomb for himself Southern Tomb 25 at Amarna during the reign of Akhenaten he had achieved the title of Overseer of All the Horses of His Majesty the highest rank in the elite charioteering division of the army which was just below the rank of General 5 Prior to this promotion he appears to have been first a Troop Commander and then a regular Overseer of Horses titles which were found on a box thought to have been part of the original furnishings for his tomb 6 Other titles listed in this tomb include Fan bearer on the Right Side of the King Acting Scribe of the King beloved by him and God s Father The Fan bearer on the Right Side of the King was a very important position and is viewed as showing that the bearer had the ear of the ruler The final God s Father title is the one most associated with Ay and was later incorporated into his royal name when he became pharaoh 6 This title could mean that he was the father in law of the pharaoh suggesting that he was the son of Yuya and Thuya thus being a brother or half brother of Tiye brother in law to Amenhotep III and the maternal uncle of Akhenaten Instead the title may indicate that Ay was the tutor of Tutankhamun 4 If Ay was the son of Yuya who was a senior military officer during the reign of Amenhotep III then he likely followed in his father s footsteps finally inheriting his father s military functions upon his death Alternatively it could also mean that he may have had a daughter that married the pharaoh Akhenaten possibly being the father of Akhenaten s chief wife Nefertiti Ultimately there is no evidence to definitively prove either hypothesis 7 The two theories are not mutually exclusive but either relationship would explain the exalted status to which Ay rose during Akhenaten s Amarna interlude when the royal family turned their backs on Egypt s traditional gods and experimented for a dozen years or so with an early form of monotheism an experiment that whether out of conviction or convenience Ay appears to have followed under the reign of Akhenaten The Great Hymn to the Aten is also found in his Amarna tomb which was built during his service under Akhenaten His wife Tey was born a commoner but was given the title Nurse of the Pharaoh s Great Wife 7 If she were the mother of Nefertiti she would be expected to have the royal title Mother of the Pharaoh s Great Wife instead had Ay been the father of Nefertiti then Tey would have been her stepmother 7 In several Amarna tomb chapels there is a woman whose name begins with Mut who had the title Sister of the Pharaoh s Great Wife This could also be a daughter of Ay s by his wife Tey and it is known that his successor Horemheb married a woman with the name Mutnodjimet 8 Tutankhamun EditMain article Tutankhamun Ay performing the opening of the mouth ceremony for Tutankhamun scene from Tutankhamun s tomb Ay s reign was preceded by that of Tutankhamun who ascended to the throne at the age of eight or nine at a time of great tension between the new monotheism and the old polytheism He was assisted in his kingly duties by his predecessor s two closest advisors Grand Vizier Ay and General of the Armies Horemheb Tutankhamun s nine year reign largely under Ay s direction saw the return of the old gods and with that the restoration of the power of the Amun priesthood who had lost their influence over Egypt under Akhenaten Egyptologist Bob Brier suggested that Ay murdered Tutankhamun in order to usurp the throne a claim which was based on X ray examinations of the body done in 1968 He also alleged that Ankhesenamun and the Hittite prince she was about to marry were also murdered at his orders 9 This murder theory was not accepted by all scholars and further analysis of the x rays along with CT scans taken in 2005 found no evidence to suggest that Tutankhamun died from a blow to the head as Brier had theorized 10 11 In 2010 a team led by Zahi Hawass reported that the young king had died from a combination of a broken leg malaria and Kohler disease 12 but another team from the Bernhard Nocht Institute for Tropical Medicine in Hamburg believes his death was caused by sickle cell disease 13 Ay buried his young predecessor as depicted on the wall of Tutankhamun s burial chamber The explicit depiction of a succeeding king conducting the Opening of the Mouth ceremony of another is unique the depictions are usually more generic 14 Ay was buried in the tomb intended for Tutankhamun in the West Valley of the Kings WV23 and Tutankhamun was interred in Ay s intended tomb in the East Valley of the Kings KV62 citation needed Rule as pharaoh Edit Faience plate with the complete royal titulary of Ay Egyptian Museum Depending on the chronology followed Ay served as pharaoh between 1323 1319 BC 15 1327 1323 BC or 1310 1306 BC Tutankhamun s death around the age of 18 or 19 together with the fact he had no living children left a power vacuum that his Grand Vizier Ay was quick to fill he is depicted conducting the funerary rites for the deceased monarch and assuming the role of heir The grounds on which he based his successful claim to power are not entirely clear The Commander of the Army Horemheb had actually been designated as the idnw or Deputy of the Lord of the Two Lands under Tutankhamun and was presumed to be the boy king s heir apparent and successor 16 It appears that Horemheb was outmaneuvered to the throne by Ay who legitimized his claim to the throne by burying Tutankhamun as well as possibly marrying Ankhesenamun Tutankhamun s widow Fragment of a cartouche of Ay in the Petrie Museum Since Ay was already advanced in age upon his accession he ruled Egypt in his own right for only four years During this period he consolidated the return to the old religious ways that he had initiated as senior advisor and constructed a mortuary temple at Medinet Habu for his own use A stela of Nakhtmin Berlin 2074 a military officer under Tutankhamun who was Ay s chosen successor is dated to Year 4 IV Akhet day 1 of Ay s reign 17 Manetho s Epitome assigns a reign length of four years and one month to Horemheb and this was usually assigned to him based on this Year 4 dated stela however it is now believed that figure should be raised by a decade to fourteen years and one month and attributed to Horemheb instead as Manetho intended Hence Ay s precise reign length is unknown and he could have ruled for as long as seven to nine years since most of his monuments and his funerary temple at Medinet Habu were either destroyed or usurped by his successor Horemheb citation needed Royal succession Edit Reproduction of a Portrait of Ay on display at Musee d Art et d Histoire of Geneva Detail of a statue of the royal couple of king Ay and Queen Tey the fragment depicting Tey being a reproduction of a piece now located at the Hermitage in Saint Petersburg inv 18477 Prior to his death Ay designated Nakhtmin to succeed him as pharaoh However his succession plan went awry as Horemheb became the last king of Egypt s 18th Dynasty instead of Nakhtmin The fact that Nakhtmin was Ay s intended heir is strongly implied by an inscription carved on a dyad funerary statue of Nakhtmin and his spouse which was presumably made during Ay s reign Nakhtmin is clearly given the titles Crown Prince jrj pꜥt and King s Son zꜣ nswt 18 The only conclusion which can be drawn here is that Nakhtmin was either a son or an adopted son of Ay s and that Ay was grooming Nakhtmin for the royal succession instead of Horemheb Egyptologists Aidan Dodson and Dyan Hilton observe that the aforementioned statue is broken after the signs for King s Son of and there has been considerable debate as to whether it continued to say Kush making Nakhtmin a Viceroy of Nubia or of his body making him an actual royal son Since there is no other evidence for Nakhtmin as a Viceroy with another man Paser I 19 attested in office at this period as well the latter suggestion seems the most likely As Nakhtmin donated items to the burial of Tutankhamun without such a title it follows that he only became a King s Son subsequently presumably under Ay This theory is supported by the evidence of intentional damage to Nakhtmin s statue since Ay was amongst the Amarna pharaohs whose memories were execrated under later rulers 20 Aftermath Edit The burial chamber of Ay s tomb in the Valley of the Kings It appears that one of Horemheb s undertakings as Pharaoh was to eliminate all references to the monotheistic experiment a process that included expunging the name of his immediate predecessors especially Ay from the historical record Horemheb desecrated Ay s burial and had most of Ay s royal cartouches in his WV23 tomb erased while his sarcophagus was smashed into numerous fragments 21 However the intact sarcophagus lid was discovered in 1972 by Otto Schaden The lid had been buried under debris in this king s tomb and still preserved Ay s cartouche 22 Horemheb also usurped Ay s mortuary temple at Medinet Habu for his own use Uvo Holscher 1878 1963 who excavated the temple in the early 1930s provides these interesting details concerning the state of Ay Horemheb s mortuary temple Wherever a cartouche has been preserved the name of Eye i e Ay has been erased and replaced by that of his successor Harmhab In all but a single instance had it been overlooked and no change made Thus the temple which Eye had begun and finished at least in the rear rooms with their fine paintings was usurped by his successor and was thenceforth known as the temple of Harmhab Seals on stoppers of wine jars from the temple magazines read Wine from the temple of Harmhab 23 In fiction EditAy appears as a villain in the 17th book in Lucien de Gieter s Papyrus comic book series Tutankhamun The Assassinated Pharaoh citation needed Ay appears as a major character in Paul C Doherty s trilogy of Ancient Egyptian novels An Evil Spirit Out of the West The Season of the Hyaena and The Year of the Cobra citation needed Kerry Greenwood s novel Out of the Black Land features him as a greedy villain whose sole goal was accruing wealth citation needed He is a character in Wolfgang Hohlbein s Die Prophezeihung The Prophecy citation needed He is also a major character in Michelle Moran s bestselling novel Nefertiti citation needed Ay is the villain of Lucile Morrison s young adult novel The Lost Queen of Egypt 1937 citation needed He is also a character in Mika Waltari s historical novel The Egyptian again depicted as immoral and villainous citation needed Ay serves as a central character in Tut portrayed by Ben Kingsley Ay is a minor character in the time travel to the 18th dynasty in Mr Peabody amp Sherman Ay is a central character in Gwendolyn MacEwen s novel King of Egypt King of Dreams where he is portrayed as one of Akhenaten s closest confidants spiritual antagonists and supporters 24 The novel also presents Ay as Tiye s brother and one time lover and it is suggested that he rather than Amenhotep III may be Akhenaten s father Much of the novel is told from Ay s perspective as he reluctantly attempts to navigate the changes of the Amarna period and the second to last chapter is his memoir confession near the end of his pharaonic reign in which Ay admits to killing the ailing and blind Akhenaten at the dying pharaoh s request References Edit Peter Clayton Chronicle of the Pharaohs Thames amp Hudson Ltd 1994 p136 a b Aldred Cyril December 1957 The End of the El Amarna Period The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 43 33 doi 10 2307 3855276 JSTOR 3855276 Schaden Otto J 1984 Clearance of the Tomb of King Ay WV 23 Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt 21 58 doi 10 2307 40000956 JSTOR 40000956 a b c van Dijk J 1996 Horemheb and the Struggle for the Throne of Tutankhamun PDF Bulletin of the Australian Centre for Egyptology 31 33 Retrieved 15 September 2019 Hindley Marshall Featured Pharaoh The God s Father Ay Ancient Egypt April May 2006 p 27 28 a b Dodson Aidan Amarna Sunset Nefertiti Tutankhamun Ay Horemheb and the Egyptian Counter Reformation p 95 The American University in Cairo Press 2009 ISBN 978 977 416 304 3 a b c Dodson Aidan Amarna Sunset Nefertiti Tutankhamun Ay Horemheb and the Egyptian Counter Reformation p96 The American University in Cairo Press 2009 ISBN 978 977 416 304 3 Dodson Aidan Amarna Sunset Nefertiti Tutankhamun Ay Horemheb and the Egyptian Counter Reformation p 98 The American University in Cairo Press 2009 ISBN 978 977 416 304 3 Brier Bob 1998 The murder of Tutankhamen a true story Hardcover ed Putnam ISBN 0399143831 Boyer RS Rodin EA Grey TC Connolly RC 2003 The skull and cervical spine radiographs of Tutankhamen a critical appraisal PDF American Journal of Neuroradiology 24 6 1142 7 PMC 8149017 PMID 12812942 Retrieved 15 September 2019 Hawass Zahi Saleem Sahar N 2016 Scanning the Pharaohs CT Imaging of the New Kingdom Royal Mummies The American University in Cairo pp 101 102 ISBN 978 977 416 673 0 Hawass Zahi 17 February 2010 Ancestry and Pathology in King Tutankhamun s Family PDF JAMA 303 7 638 47 doi 10 1001 jama 2010 121 PMID 20159872 Retrieved 27 August 2019 Timmann Christian 23 June 2010 King Tutankhamun s Family and Demise JAMA 303 24 2473 author reply 2473 5 doi 10 1001 jama 2010 822 PMID 20571010 Dodson Aidan 2018 Amarna sunset Nefertiti Tutankhamun Ay Horemheb and the Egyptian counter reformation Revised ed New York The American University in Cairo Press p 94 ISBN 978 977 416 859 8 Erik Hornung Rolf Krauss amp David Warburton editors Ancient Egyptian Chronology Handbook of Oriental Studies Brill 2006 p 493 Peter J Brand The Monuments of Seti I Epigraphic Historical and Art Historical Analysis Brill NV Leiden 2000 p 311 Urk IV 2110 Wolfgang Helck Urkunden der 18 Dynastie Texte der Hefte 20 21 Berlin Akademie Verlag 1984 pp 1908 1910 1 dead link Aidan Dodson amp Dyan Hilton The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt Thames amp Hudson 2004 p 151 Bertha Porter Topographical Bibliography of Ancient Egyptian Hieroglyph Texts Vol 1 Part 2 Oxford Clarendon Press 1960 Tomb 23 pp 550 551 Otto Schaden Clearance of the Tomb of King Ay WV 23 JARCE 21 1984 pp 39 64 Uvo Holscher Excavations at Ancient Thebes 1930 31 pp 50 51 MacEwen Gwendolyn 1971 King of Egypt King of Dreams Toronto Macmillan Further reading EditJurgen von Beckerath Chronologie des Pharaonischen Agypten MAS 46 Philip von Zabern Mainz 1997 pp 201 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ay pharaoh amp oldid 1136304207, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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