'Akhenaten' (or rarely : 'Ikhnaton')
[1] meaning ''Effective spirit of
Aten'', first known as 'Amenhotep IV' (sometimes read as ''Amenophis IV'' and meaning ''
Amun is Satisfied'') before his first year, was a
Pharaoh of the
Eighteenth dynasty of Egypt, especially notable for attempting to compel the Egyptian population to monotheistically worship the
Aten. Although there are doubts as to how successful he was at this, it was the first known attempt at
monotheism the world had seen. He was born to
Amenhotep III and his Chief Queen
Tiye and was their younger son. Akhenaten was not originally designated as the successor to the throne until the untimely death of his older brother,
Thutmose.
Amenhotep IV succeeded his father after Amenhotep III's death at the end of his 38-year reign, possibly after a
coregency lasting between either 1 to 2 or 12 years. Suggested dates for Akhenaten's reign (subject to the debates surrounding
Egyptian chronology) are from
1353 BC-
1336 BC or
1351 BC–
1334 BC. Akhenaten's chief wife was
Nefertiti, who has been made famous by her exquisitely painted
bust in the
Altes Museum of
Berlin.
Atenist revolution
A political and religious revolutionary, Amenhotep IV introduced
Atenism in the fourth year of his reign, raising the previously obscure god
Aten (sometimes spelled Aton) to the position of supreme deity, and attacking the power of the Amen-Ra priestly establishment. The early stage of Atenism appears to be a kind of
henotheism (the exaltation of one god above all others) familiar in
Egyptian religion, but the later form suggests a
monotheism (belief in the existence of only one deity or god). Aten was the name for the sun-disk itself; hence the fact that it is often referred to in English in the impersonal form "the Aten". The Aten was by this point in Egyptian history considered to be an aspect of the composite deity 'Ra-Amun-Horus'. These previously separate deities had been merged with each other.

Pharaoh Akhenaten and his family adoring the Aten
Amun was identified with
Ra, who was also identified with
Horus. Akhenaten simplified this
syncretism by proclaiming the visible sun itself to be the sole deity, thus introducing a type of
monotheism. Some commentators interpret this as a proto-
scientific naturalism, based on the observation that the sun's energy is the ultimate source of all life. Others consider it to be a way of cutting through the previously
ritualistic emphasis of Egyptian religion to allow for a new "personal relationship" with god; this interpretation is hampered by the fact that only the Royal family was able to interact with and perform rituals pertaining to the Aten. Others interpret it as a pragmatic political move designed to further centralise power by crushing the independent authority of the traditional Amun priesthood who controlled Egypt's wealth and produce. However, Akhenaten did not formally break with the Amun priests and still used his old Amun inspired royal name--Amenhotep IV--until Fourth Year when the latter defied his authority, according to the text on one of his Amarna border stela.
This religious reformation appears to have begun with his decision to celebrate a
Sed festival in his third regnal year — a highly unusual step, since a Sed-festival, a sort of royal jubilee intended to reinforce the Pharaoh's divine powers of kingship, was traditionally held in the thirtieth year of a Pharaoh's reign.
His Year 5 marked the beginning of his construction of a new capital,
Akhetaten ('Horizon of Aten'), at the site known today as
Amarna. In the same year, Amenhotep IV officially changed his name to Akhenaten ('Effective Spirit of Aten') as evidence of his new worship. Very soon afterward he centralized Egyptian religious practices in Akhetaten, though construction of the city seems to have continued for several more years. In honor of Aten, Akhenaten also oversaw the construction of some of the most massive temple complexes in ancient Egypt, including one at
Karnak, close to the old temple of
Amun. In these new temples, Aten was worshipped in the open sunlight, rather than in dark temple enclosures, as had been the previous custom. Akhenaten is also believed to have composed the
Great Hymn to the Aten.
Initially, Akhenaten presented Aten as a variant of the familiar supreme deity 'Amun-Ra' (itself the result of an earlier rise to prominence of the cult of
Amun, resulting in Amun becoming merged with the sun god
Ra), in an attempt to put his ideas in a familiar Egyptian religious context. However, by Year 9 of his reign Akhenaten declared that Aten was not merely the supreme god, but the only god, and that he, Akhenaten, was the only intermediary between Aten and his people. He ordered the defacing of Amun's temples throughout Egypt, and in a number of instances inscriptions of the plural 'gods' were also removed.
Aten's name is also written differently after Year 9, to emphasise the radicalism of the new regime, which included a ban on
idols, with the exception of a rayed solar disc, in which the rays (commonly depicted ending in hands) appear to represent the unseen spirit of Aten, who by then was evidently considered not merely a sun god, but rather a universal deity. It is important to note, however, that 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.
Akhenaten's international relations
Important evidence about Akhenaten's reign and foreign policy has been provided by the discovery of the
Amarna Letters, a cache of diplomatic correspondence discovered in modern times at
el-Amarna, the modern designation of the Akhetaten site. This correspondence comprises a priceless collection of incoming messages on clay tablets, sent to Akhetaten from various subject ruler through Egyptian military outposts, and from the foreign rulers (recognized as "Great Kings") of Mitanni, Babylon, Assyria and Hatti. The governors and kings of Egypt's subject domains also wrote frequently to plead for
gold from Pharaoh, and also complained of being snubbed and cheated by him.
Early on in his reign, Akhenaten fell out with the king of
Mitanni,
Tushratta, who had been courting favor with his father against the Hittites. Tushratta complains in numerous letters that Akhenaten had sent him gold plated statues rather than statues made of solid gold; the statues formed part of the dowry which Tushratta received for letting his daughter
Tadukhepa be married to Amenhotep III and then Akhenaten. Amarna letter EA 27 preserves a complaint by Tushratta to Akhenaten about the situation
''I...asked your father, Mimmureya, for statues of solid cast gold, one of myself and a second statue, a statue of Tadu-Heba (Tadukhepa), my daughter, and your father said, "Don't talk of giving statues just of solid cast gold. I will give you ones made also of lapis lazuli. I will give you, too, along with the statues, much additional gold and (other) goods beyond measure." Every one of my messengers that were staying in Egypt saw the gold for the statues with their own eyes. Your father himself recast the statues [i]n the presence of my messengers, and he made them entirely of pure gold....He showed much additional gold, which was beyond measure and which he was sending to me. He said to my messengers, "See with your own eyes, here the statues, there much gold and goods beyond measure, which I am sending to my brother." And my messengers did see with their own eyes! But my brother (ie: Akhenaten) has not sent the solid (gold) statues that your father was going to send. You have sent plated ones of wood. Nor have you sent me the goods that your father was going to send me, but you have reduced (them) greatly. Yet there is nothing I know of in which I have failed my brother. Any day that I hear the greetings of my brother, that day I make a festive occasion...May my brother send me much gold. [At] the kim[ru fe]ast...[...with] many goods [may my] brother honor me. In my brother's country gold is as plentiful as dust. May my brother cause me no distress. May he send me much gold in order that my brother [with the gold and m]any [good]s, may honor me.''(EA 27)[2]
While Akhenaten was certainly not a close friend of Tushratta, he was evidently concerned at the expanding power of the
Hittite Empire under its powerful ruler 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 especially 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.
[3] 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.
[4] 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.
[5] When Rib-Hadda appealed in vain for aid to 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.
[6]
The Amarna corpus of 380+ letters counters the conventional view that Akhenaten neglected Egypt's foreign territories in favour of his internal reforms notes
William L. Moran.
[7] There are several letters from Egyptian vassals notifying Pharaoh that the king's instructions have been followed:
To the king, my lord, my god, my Sun, the Sun from the sky: Message of Yapahu, the ruler of Gazru, your servant, the dirt at your feet. I indeed prostrate myself at the feet of the king, my lord, my god, my Sun...7 times and 7 times, on the stomach and on the back. I am indeed guarding the place of the king, my lord, the Sun of the sky, where I am, and all the things the king, my lord, has written me, I am indeed carrying out--everything! Who am I, a dog, and what is my house...and what is anything I have, that the orders of the king, my lord, the Sun from the sky, should not obey constantly?'' (EA 378)[8]
When the loyal but unfortunate Rib-Hadda was killed at the instigation of
Aziru[6], Akhenaten sent an angry letter to Aziru containing a barely veiled accusation of outright treachery on the latter's part.
[10] Akhenaten wrote:
''Say to Aziru, ruler of Amurru: Thus the king, your lord (ie: Akhenaten), saying: The ruler of Gubla (ie: Byblos), whose brother had cast him away at the gate, said to you, "Take me and get me into the city. There is much silver, and I will give it to you. Indeed there is an abundance of everything, but not with me [here]." Thus did the ruler (Rib-Hadda) speak to you. Did you not write to the king, my lord saying, "I am your servant like all the previous mayors (ie: vassals) in his city"? Yet you acted delinquently by taking the mayor whose brother had cast him away at the gate, from his city.''
''He (Rib-Hadda) was residing in Sidon and, following your own judgment, you gave him to (some) mayors. Were you ignorant of the treacherousness of the men? If you really are the king's servant, why did you not denounce him before the king, your lord, saying, "This mayor has written to me saying, 'Take me to yourself and get me into my city'"? And if you did act loyally, still all the things you wrote were not true. In fact, the king has reflected on them as follows, "'Everything you have said is not friendly'."''
''Now the king has heard as follows, "You are at peace with the ruler of Qidsa. (Kadesh) The two of you take food and strong drink together." And it is true. Why do you act so? Why are you at peace with a ruler whom the king is fighting? And even if you did act loyally, you considered your own judgment, and his judgment did not count. You have paid no attention to the things that you did earlier. What happened to you among them that you are not on the side of the king, your lord? Consider the people that are training you for their own advantage. They want to throw you into the fire....If for any reason whatsoever you prefer to do evil, and if you plot evil, treacherous things, then you, together with your entire family, shall die by the axe of the king. So perform your service for the king, your lord, and you will live. You yourself know that the king does not fail when he rages against all of Canaan. And when you wrote saying, 'May the king, my Lord, give me leave this year, and then I will go next year to the king, my Lord. (ie: to Egypt) If this is impossible, I will send my son in my place'--the king, your Lord, let you off this year in accordance with what you said. Come yourself, or send your son [now], and you will see the king at whose sight all lands live.'' (EA 162)[11]
This letter shows that Akhenaten paid close attention to the affairs of his vassals in Canaan and Syria. Akhenaten commanded Aziru to come to Egypt and proceeded to detain him there for at least one year.
[12] In the end, Akhenaten was forced to release Aziru back to his homeland when the Hittites advanced southwards into
Amki thereby threatening Egypt's series of Asiatic vassal states including Amurru.
[12] Sometime after his return to Amurru, Aziru defected to the Hittite side with his kingdom.
[14] While it is known from an Amarna letter by Rib-Hadda that the Hittites "'seized all the countries that were vassals of the king of Mitanni'",
[15] Akhenaten managed to preserve Egypt's control over the core of her Near Eastern Empire which consisted of present day Palestine as well as the Phoenician coast while avoiding conflict with the increasingly powerful Hittite Empire of
Suppiluliuma I. Only the Egyptian border province of Amurru in Syria around the Orontes river was permanently lost to the Hittites when its ruler Aziru defected to the Hittites. Finally, contrary to the conventional view of a ruler who neglected Egypt's international relations, Akhenaten is known to have initiated at least one campaign into Nubia in his regnal Year 12.
[16]
Plague and pandemic
This
Amarna period is also associated with a serious outbreak of a pandemic, possibly the
plague, or
polio, or perhaps the world's first recorded outbreak of
influenza, which came from Egypt and spread throughout the Middle East, killing
Suppiluliuma I, the
Hittite King. Influenza is a disease associated with the close proximity of water fowl, pigs and humans, and its origin as a pandemic disease may be due to the development of agricultural systems that allow the mixing of these animals and their wastes.
[17] Some of the first archaeological evidence for this agricultural system is during the
Amarna period of
Ancient Egypt, and the
pandemic that followed this period throughout the
Ancient Near East may have been the earliest recorded outbreak of influenza.
[18] However, the precise nature of this Egyptian plague remains unknown and Asia has also been suggested as a possible site of origin of pandemic influenza in humans.
[19][20][21]The prevalence of disease may help explain the rapidity with which the site of Akhetaten was subsequently abandoned. It may also explain why later generations considered the gods to have turned against the Amarna monarchs. The black plague has also been suggested by
Zahi Hawass due to the fact that at Amarna the traces of the plague have been found.
[22]
Pharaoh and family depictions
.jpg)
A portrait of Akhenaten or
Smenkhkare in the naturalistic style of the late-Amarna period, associated with the sculptor
Thutmose
Styles of art that flourished during this short period are markedly different from other Egyptian art, bearing a variety of affectations, from elongated heads to protruding stomachs, exaggerated ugliness and the beauty of Nefertiti. Significantly, and for the only time in the history of Egyptian royal art, Akhenaten's family was depicted in a decidedly naturalistic manner, and they are clearly shown displaying affection for each other. Nefertiti also appears beside the king in actions usually reserved for a Pharaoh, suggesting that she attained unusual power for a queen. Artistic representations of Akhenaten give him a strikingly bizarre appearance, with an elongated face, slender limbs, a protruding belly, wide hips, and an overall pear-shaped body. It has been suggested that the pharaoh had himself depicted in this way for religious reasons. Until Akhenaten's mummy is located and identified, proposals of actual physical abnormalities are likely to remain speculative.
Following Akenaten's death, a comprehensive political, religious and artistic reformation returned Egyptian life to the norms it had followed previously during his father's reign. Much of the art and building infrastructure that was created during Akhenaten's reign was defaced or destroyed in the period immediately following his death. Stone building blocks from his construction projects were later used as foundation stones for subsequent rulers temples and tombs.
Family and relations

Akhenaten, Nefertiti and their children
: ''See also'':
Eighteenth dynasty of Egypt Family Tree
Amenhotep IV was married to Nefertiti at the very beginning of his reign, and the couple had six known daughters and possibly two sons (the sons with his other wife
Kiya). This is a list with suggested years of birth:
★
Smenkhkare?– year 35 or 36 of Amenhotep III's reign (though not of Nefertiti)
★
Meritaten – year 1.
★
Meketaten – year 3, possibly earlier.
★
Ankhesenpaaten, later Queen of
Tutankhamun – year 4.
★
Neferneferuaten Tasherit – year 8.
★
Neferneferure – year 9.
★
Setepenre – year 9.
★
Tutankhaten–year 8 or 9 – renamed himself
Tutankhamun later.
His known consorts were:
★
Nefertiti, his
Great Royal Wife early in his reign.
★
Kiya, a lesser Royal Wife.
Also suggested as his consorts were his daughters:
★
Meritaten, recorded as Great Royal Wife late in his reign, though it is more likely that she got this title due to her marriage to
Smenkhkare, Akhenaten's co-regent;
★
Meketaten, Akhenaten's second daughter. The reason for this assumption is Meketaten's death due to childbirth in the fourteenth year of Akhenaten's reign.
★
Ankhesenpaaten, his third daughter. After his death, Ankhesenpaaten married Akhenaten's successor
Tutankhamun.
Both Meritaten and Ankhesenpaaten apparently had children –
Meritaten-ta-sherit and
Ankhesenpaaten-ta-sherit, respectively –, but there are doubts not only regarding their parentage but their existence as well. Both appear only in texts which had belonged to Kiya, and were usurped by the princesses later, and it was suggested that they might have been the daughters of Kiya, or were fictional, replacing Kiya's daughter in those scenes.
[23]
Two other lovers have been suggested, but are not widely accepted:
★
Smenkhkare, Akhenaten's successor and/or co-ruler for the last years of his reign. Rather than a lover, however, Smenkhkare is likely to have been a half-brother or a son to Akhenaten. Some have even suggested that Smenkhkare was actually an alias of Nefertiti or Kiya, and therefore one of Akhenaten's wives.
★
Tiye, his mother. Twelve years after the death of Amenhotep III, she is still mentioned in inscriptions as Queen and beloved of the King. It has been suggested that Akhenaten and his mother acted as consorts to each other until her death. This would have been considered
incest at the time. Supporters of this theory (notably
Immanuel Velikovsky) consider Akhenaten to be the historical model of legendary King
Oedipus of
Thebes,
Greece and Tiye the model for his mother/wife
Jocasta.
Burial and succession
Akhenaten planned to relocate Egyptian burials on the East side of the Nile (sunrise) rather than on the West side (sunset), in the
Royal Wadi in
Akhetaten. His body was probably removed after the court returned to
Thebes, and reburied somewhere in the Valley of the Kings. His sarcophagus was destroyed but has since been reconstructed and now sits outside in the
Cairo Museum. He was buried In 1336 B.C., in a pink granite sarcophagus.
There is much controversy around whether Amenhotep IV succeeded to the throne on the death of his father,
Amenhotep III, or whether there was a coregency (lasting as long as 12 years according to some
Egyptologists). Current literature by Eric Cline, Nicholas Reeves,
Peter Dorman and other scholars comes out strongly against the establishment of a long coregency between the 2 rulers and in favour of either no coregency or a brief one lasting 1 to 2 years, at the most.
[24] Other literature by
Donald Redford, William Murnane,
Alan Gardiner and more recently by Lawrence Berman in 1998 contests the view of any coregency whatsoever between Akhenaten and his father.
[25]
Similarly, although it is accepted that Akhenaten himself died in Year 17 of his reign, the question of whether Smenkhkare became co-regent perhaps 2 or 3 years earlier or enjoyed a brief independent reign is unclear. If Smenkhkare outlived Akhenaten, and became sole Pharaoh, he likely ruled Egypt for less than a year. The next successor was certainly
Tutankhaten (later, Tutankhamun), at the age of 9, with the country perhaps being run by the chief
vizier (and next Pharaoh),
Ay. Tutankhamun is believed to be a younger brother of Smenkhkare and a son of Akhenaten, and possibly
Kiya although one scholar has suggested that Tutankhamun may have been a son of Smenkhkare instead. It has also been suggested that after the death of Akhenaten,
Nefertiti reigned with the name of Neferneferuaten.
[26]
With Akhenaten's death, the Aten cult he had founded gradually fell out of favor. Tutankhaten changed his name to Tutankhamun in Year 2 of his reign (
1332 BC) and abandoned the city of Akhetaten, which eventually fell into ruin. His successors
Ay and
Horemheb disassembled temples Akhenaten had built, including the temple at Thebes, using them as a source of easily available building materials and decorations for their own temples.
Finally, Akhenaten, Smenkhkare, Tutankhamun, and Ay were excised from the official lists of Pharaohs, which instead reported that
Amenhotep III was immediately succeeded by
Horemheb. This is thought to be part of an attempt by Horemheb to delete all trace of Atenism and the pharaohs associated with it from the historical record. Akhenaten's name never appeared on any of the king lists compiled by later Pharaohs and it was not until the late
19th century that his identity was re-discovered and the surviving traces of his reign were unearthed by archaeologists.
Speculative theories
Akhenaten's status as a religious revolutionary has led to much speculation, ranging from the mainstream to
New Age esotericism.
First "individual"
Akhenaten has been called "the first individual in history", as well as the first monotheist, first scientist, and first romantic.
[27] As early as 1899
Flinders Petrie declared that,
: ''If this were a new religion, invented to satisfy our modern scientific conceptions, we could not find a flaw in the correctness of this view of the energy of the solar system. How much Akhenaten understood, we cannot say, but he certainly bounded forward in his views and symbolism to a position which we cannot logically improve upon at the present day. Not a rag of superstition or of falsity can be found clinging to this new worship evolved out of the old Aton of Heliopolis, the sole Lord of the universe.''
[28]
H.R. Hall even claimed that the pharaoh was the "first example of the scientific mind".
[29]
Moses and Akhenaten
The idea of Akhenaten as the pioneer of a
monotheistic religion that later became Judaism has been considered by some scholars.
[30][31][32][33][34][35][36] One of the first to mention this was
Sigmund Freud, the founder of
psychoanalysis, in his book ''
Moses and Monotheism''.
[37] Freud argued that Moses had been an Atenist priest forced to leave Egypt with his followers after Akhenaten's death. Following his book, the concept entered popular consciousness and serious research. Recently,
Ahmed Osman has claimed that
Moses and Akhenaten were the same individual.
While these alternative views have gained acceptance in various quarters
[38][39] most scholars do not take them seriously. An example of such skepticism has been stated by
Savitri Devi, who insisted in her book ''
The Lightning and the Sun'' that Akenaten's god bore no resemblance to,
"...the jealous tribal god Jehovah, created in the image of the Jews, — but the equivalent of the immanent, impersonal Tat — That — of the Chandogya Upanishad, no less than of das Gott (as opposed to “der Gott”) of the ancient Germans, and the one conception of Divinity that modern science, far from disproving, on the contrary, suggests.[40]
Other scholars and mainstream Egyptologists point out that there are direct connections between early Judaism and other
Semitic religious traditions.
[41] They also state that two of the three principal Judaic terms for God,
Yahweh and
Elohim, have no connection to Aten.
Akhenaten does seem to appear, according to the
conventional Egyptian chronology, in history almost two-centuries before the first archaeological and written evidence for Judaism and Israelite culture is found in the Levant. There is reportedly abundant visual imagery of the Aten disk was central to Atenism, which celebrated the natural world, while such imagery is not a feature of early Israelite culture
[42]. Osman also claimed that Akhenaten's maternal grandfather
Yuya was the same person as the Biblical Joseph. Egyptologists reject this view because Yuya had strong connections to the city of
Akhmin in Upper Egypt, which is indicated in his title "Overseer of the Cattle of Min at Akhmin.
[43] Hence, he most likely belonged to the regional nobility of Akhmim. This makes it very unlikely that he was an
Israelite, as most Asiatic settlers tended to cloister around the
Nile delta region of
Lower Egypt [Montete, Pierre (1964), "Eternal Egypt" (New American Press)][44]. Some Egyptologists, however, give him a Mitannian origin. It is widely accepted that there are strong similarities between Akhenaten's Great Hymn to the Aten and the
Biblical Psalm 104, though this form is found widespread in ancient Near Eastern
hymnology both before and after the period and whether this implies a direct influence or a common literary convention remains in dispute.
Oedipus theory
Another claim was made by
Immanuel Velikovsky.
[45] Velikovsky argued that Moses was neither Akhenaten, nor one of his followers. Instead, Velikovsky identifies Akhenaten as the history behind
Oedipus and moved the setting from the Greek Thebes to the Egyptian Thebes. His theory also includes that Akhenaten had an incestuous relationship with his mother,
Tiye. Velikovsky also posited that Akhenaten had
elephantiasis, producing enlarged legs –
Oedipus being Greek for "swollen feet." As part of his argument, Velikovsky uses the fact that Akhenaten viciously carried out a campaign to erase the name of his father, which he argues could have developed into Oedipus killing his father. This point seems to be disproved, however, in that Akhenaten in fact mummified and buried his father in the honorable traditional Egyptian fashion prior to beginning his monotheistic revolution.
Akhenaton's genetic make-up
The rather strange and eccentric portrayals of Akhenaten, with a sagging stomach, thick thighs, larger breasts, and long, thin face - so different from the athletic norm in the portrayal of Pharaohs - has led certain Egyptologists to suppose that Akhenaten suffered some kind of genetic abnormality. Various illnesses have been put forward.
Cyril Aldred [46], on the basis of his longer jaw and his feminine appearance suggested he may be suffering from
Froelich's Syndrome. However, this is unlikely because this disorder results in
sterility and Akhenaten is believed to have fathered numerous children.
Another suggestion by Burridge
[47] is that Akhenaten may have suffered from Marfan's Syndrome.
Marfan's syndrome, unlike Froelich's does not result in any lack of intelligence or sterility. It is associated with a sunken chest, long curved spider-like fingers (
arachnodactyly), occasional congenital heart difficuties, a high curved or slightly cleft palate, and a highly curved cornea or dislocated lens of the eye, with the requirement for bright light to see well. Marfan's sufferers tend towards being taller than average, with a long, thin face, and elongated skull, overgrown ribs, a funnel or pigeon chest, and larger pelvis, with enlarged thighs and spindly calves are all occasional symptoms
[48]. Marfan's syndrome is a dominant characteristic, and sufferers have a 50% chance of passing it on to their children
[49]. All of these symptoms appear in depictions of Akhenaten and of his children. It is interesting that the recently reported CT scans of Tutankamun report a
cleft palate and a longer head than normal.
A third alternative
[50] relates to some form of religious symbolism. Because the god Aten was referred to as "The mother and father of all human kind," it has been suggested that Akhenaten was made to look
androgynous in artwork as a symbol of the androgyny of the god. Akhenaten did refer to himself as "The Unique One of Re," and it maybe that he used his control of the artistic expression to distance himself from the populace and the common people.
In the arts
★
Thomas Mann, in his fictional biblical tetralogy ''
Joseph and His Brothers'' (1933-1943), makes Akhenaten the "dreaming pharaoh" of
Joseph's story.
★
Savitri Devi:
play '' (Philosophical Publishing House [London], 1948)
★
Anthony Holmes:
historical novel ''
Tutankhamun-Speak my Name'' published in 2005 portrays Akhenaten as the Aten obssessed, but loving father of Tutankhamun. He fakes his death to join the Israelite monotheists and becomes Aaron, the brother of his real life sibling Thutmoses who had modified his name to Moses.
★
Tom Holland:
historical novel ''
The Sleeper in the Sands'' (Little, Brown & Company, 1998, ISBN 0-316-64480-3)
★
Mika Waltari:
historical novel ''
The Egyptian'', first published in Finnish (''Sinuhe egyptiläinen'') in 1945, translated by
Naomi Walford (
G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 1949, ISBN 0-399-10234-5;
Chicago Review Press, 2002, paperback, ISBN 1-55652-441-2)
★
Edgar P. Jacobs:
comic book, '' (1950), adventure story in which the mystery of Akhenaten provides much of the background.
★ ''
The Egyptian'',
motion picture (1954, directed by
Michael Curtiz, Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation), based on the novel by
Mika Waltari.
★
Gwendolyn MacEwen: historical novel ''
King of Egypt, King of Dreams'' (1971, ISBN 1-894663-60-8)
★
Agatha Christie:
play, '' (
Dodd, Mead [New York], 1973, ISBN 0-396-06822-7;
Collins [London], 1973, ISBN 0-00-211038-5)
★
''Nefertiti: The Musical'' is a stage musical based on the Amarna period in the life of Akhenaten. Book by
Christopher Gore and
Rick Gore, Music by
David Spangler.
★
Allen Drury, historical novels, ''
A God Against the Gods'' (Doubleday, 1976) and ''
Return to Thebes'' (Doubleday, 1976)
★
Naguib Mahfouz, novel, ''
Akhenaten, Dweller in Truth'' (1985) العائش فى الحقيقة
★
Philip Glass:
opera, ''
Akhnaten: An Opera in Three Acts'' (1983; CBS Records, 1987)
★
Andree Chedid, novel, " Akhenaten and Nefertiti's dream"
★
Wolfgang Hohlbein,
German novel, ''Die Prophezeihung'' (''The Prophecy''), in which Echnaton is killed by
Ay and curses him into eternal life until a prophecy is fulfilled.
★
Moyra Caldecott:
novel '' (1989; eBook, 2000, ISBN 1-899142-86-X; 2003, ISBN 1-899142-25-8)
★
The Akhenaten Adventure P.B. Kerr:
fiction Akhenaten is said to be the holder of 70 lost
Djinn
★
Pauline Gedge, ''The Twelfth Transforming'': (1984)
fiction, An historical novel set in the reign of Akhenaten, details the construction of Akhetaten and fictionalized accounts of his sexual relationships with
Nefertiti,
Tiye and successor
Smenkhare.
★
Dorothy Porter,
verse novel, ''Akhenaten'' (1991)
★
Julian Cope, track on 1992 album
Jehovahkill
★
Judith Tarr, historical
fantasy, ''
Pillar of Fire'' (1995)
★
Carol Thurston, fiction, ''
The Eye of Horus'' (William Morrow & Co., 2000), posits the "Akhenaten was Moses" theory.
★
Moyra Caldecott:
novel ''
The Ghost of Akhenaten'' (eBook, 2001, ISBN 1-899142-89-4; 2003, ISBN 1-84319-024-9)
★
Lynda Robinson, historical
mystery, ''
Drinker of Blood'' (2001, ISBN 0-446-67751-5)
★ Spelled 'Akenhaten', he appears as a major character in the first of a trilogy of historical novels by
P.C. Doherty, "An Evil Spirit out of the West".
★ The song 'Cast Down the Heretic' by the
death metal band
Nile on the album ''
Annihilation of the Wicked.''
★ The song 'Son Of The Sun' by Swedish Symphonic Metal band
Therion on the album
Sirius B.
Notes
1. In English, , or approximately "AHK-en-AHT-en";[1] his royal name Amenhotep in English is , or approximately "AH-mun-HOE-tep"[2]
2. William L. Moran, The Amarna Letters, Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992., pp.87-89
3. Moran, op. cit., pp.203
4. [3]
5. Trevor Bryce, The ''Kingdom of the Hittites'', Clarendon Press, 1998. p.186
6. Bryce, op. cit., p.186
7. Moran, op. cit., p.xxvi
8. Moran, op. cit., pp.368-69
9. Bryce, op. cit., p.186
10. Moran, op. cit., pp.248-250
11. Moran, op. cit., pp.248-249
12. Bryce, op. cit., p.188
13. Bryce, op. cit., p.188
14. Bryce, op. cit., p.189
15. Moran, op. cit., EA 75, p.145
16. A.R. Schulman, "The Nubian War of Akhenaten" in L'Egyptologie en 1979: Axes prioritaires de recherchs II (Paris: 1982), pp.299-316 Akhenaten's Year 12 campaign is mentioned in Amada stela CG 41806 and on a separate companion stela at Buhen.
17. Fish farming and influenza pandemics, Scholtissek C, Naylor E, , , Nature, 1988
18. Ancient Egypt Online Akhenaten Accessed 21 Feb 2007
19. Lessons for surveillance in the 21st century: a historical perspective from the past five millennia, Choi B, Pak A, , , Soz Praventivmed, 2001
20. Emergence of influenza A viruses, Webby R, Webster R, , , Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci, 2001
21. Pandemic influenza: a zoonosis?, Shortridge K, , , Semin Respir Infect, 1992
22. Arielle Kozloff, in "Bubonic Plague in the Reign of Amenhotep III?" (''KMT'', 17, 3 (Fall 2006), pp. 36-46) discusses the evidence, arguing that the epidemic was caused by Bubonic plague over polio. However, her argument that "polio is only fractionally as virulent as some other diseases" ignores the evidence that diseases become less virulent the longer they are present in the human population, as demonstrated with syphilis and tuberculosis.
23. Aidan Dodson & Dyan Hilton, The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt, Thames & Hudson (2004), p.154
24. Nicholas Reeves, Akhenaten: Egypt's False Prophet, Thames & Hudson, 2000. p.77
25. Lawrence M. Berman, 'Overview of Amenhotep III and His Reign,' in Amenhotep III: Perspectives on his Reign, ed: David O'Connor & Eric Cline, op. cit, p.23
26. ''Pocket Guides: Egypt History'', p.37, Dorling Kindersley, London 1996.''(the Neferneferuaten part is taken from Wikipedia Nefertiti entry)''
27. Discussions of such Akenatenolatry can be found on Akhenaten, Deep Thought
28. Sir Flinders Petrie, ''History of Egypt'' (edit. 1899), Vol. II, p. 214.
29. H. R. Hall, ''Ancient History of the Near East'', p. 599.
30. Freud, S. (1939). Moses and Monotheism: Three Essays.
31. A. Osman, ''Moses and Akhenaten: The Secret History of Egypt at the Time of the Exodus''. Bear & Company, 2002.
32. Gunther Siegmund Stent, ''Paradoxes of Free Will''. American Philosophical Society, DIANE, 2002. 284 pages. Pages 34 - 38. ISBN 0871699265
33. Jan Assmann, ''Moses the Egyptian: The Memory of Egypt in Western Monotheism''. Harvard University Press, 1997. 288 pages. ISBN 067458739
34. N. Shupak, ''The Monotheism of Moses and the Monotheism of Akhenaten''. Sevivot, 1995.
35. Dominic Montserrat, ''Akhenaten: History, Fantasy, and Ancient Egypt''. Routledge, 2000. 219 pages. ISBN 0415301866
36. William F. Albright, ''From the Patriarchs to Moses II. Moses out of Egypt''. The Biblical Archaeologist, Vol. 36, No. 2 (May, 1973), pp. 48-76. doi 10.2307/3211050
37. S. Freud, ''The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud, Volume XXIII (1937-1939)'', "Moses and monotheism". London: Hogarth Press, 1964.
38. Laurence Gardner, ''Bloodline of the Holy Grail'', ''Lost Secrets of the Sacred Ark'',
39. Gary Greenberg, ''The Moses Mystery: The African Origins of the Jewish People
40. Savitri Devi, ''The Lightening and the Sun'', p. 142
41. Curtis, Samuel (2005), "Primitive Semitic Religion Today" (Kessinger Publications)
42. The first commandment prohibits the making of images of God. Judaism is an aniconic religion.
43. [4]
44. Redford, Donald B. (1993), "Egypt, Canaan, and Israel in Ancient Times" (Princeton University Press)
45. Immanuel Velikovsky, ''Oedipus and Akhnaton, Myth and History'', Doubleday, 1960
46. Aldred, C. (1988). "Akhenaten, King of Egypt". (Thames and Hudson, Ltd.,)
47. Burridge, A., (1995) "Did Akhenaten Suffer From Marfan's Syndrome?" (Akhenaten Temple Project Newsletter No. 3, Sept. 1995)
48. Lorenz, Maegara "The Mystery of Akhenaton: Genetics or Aesthetics" [5]
49. "Did Akhenaton Suffer from Marfan's Syndrome" [6]
50. Reeves, Nicholas (2005) "Akhenaten: Egypt's False Prophet" (Thames and Hudson)
Further reading
★
Akhenaten: King of Egypt, , Cyril, Aldred, Thames & Hudson, 1991,
★
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, , Mubabinge, Bilolo, Academy of African Thought, 2004,
★
Pharaohs of the Sun: Akhenaten - Nefertiti - Tutankhamen, Rita E. Freed, Yvonne J. Markowitz, and Sue H. D'Auria (ed.), , , Bulfinch Press, 1999,
★
Devi, Savitri, ''A Son of God'' (
full text) (Philosophical Publishing House [London], 1946); subsequent editions published as ''Son of the Sun: The Life and Philosophy of Akhnaton, King of Egypt'' (Supreme Grand Lodge of
A.M.O.R.C., 1956); part III of ''
The Lightning and the Sun'' is focused on Akhnaten.
★
Holland, Tom, ''The Sleeper in the Sands'' (
novel), (Abacus,
1998, ISBN 0-349-11223-1), a fictionalised adventure story based closely on the mysteries of Akhenaten's reign
★
Hornung, Erik, ''Akhenaten and the Religion of Light'', translated by David Lorton (
Cornell University Press, 1999, ISBN 0-8014-3658-3)
★
Akhenaten: History, Fantasy and ancient Egypt, , Dominic, Montserrat, Routledge, 2000,
★
Amenhotep III: Perspectives on His Reign, , David, O'Connor, University of Michigan Press, 1998,
★
Phillips, Graham, ''Act of God: Moses, Tutankhamun and the Myth of Atlantis'', (London: Sidgwick & Jackson, 1998, ISBN 0-283-06314-9); republished as ''Atlantis and the Ten Plagues of Egypt: The Secret History Hidden in the Valley of the Kings'' (Bear & Co., 2003, paperback, ISBN 1-59143-009-7)
★
Redford, Donald B., ''Akhenaten: The Heretic King'' (Princeton University Press, 1984, ISBN 0-691-03567-9)
★
Akhenaten: Egypt's False Prophet, , Nicholas, Reeves, Thames and Hudson, 2001,
★
Oedipus and Akhnaton: Myth and History, , Immanuel, Velikovsky, Doubleday, 1960,
External links
★
Akhenaten and the Hymn to the Aten
★
The City of Akhetaten
★
A profile discussing his familial relations
★
The Great Hymn to the Aten
★
A Re-examination of the Long Coregency from the Tomb of Kheruef by Peter Dorman
★
The Bible - Book of the Pharaohs
★
M.A. Mansoor Amarna Collection
★
Moses and Akhenaten: The Secret History of Egypt at the Time of the Exodus