THE
MYSTERY OF AKHENATEN'S EMPTY TOMB
Archaeologists
have never given up the hope of one day finding the burial place
of Pharaoh Akhenaten, who disappeared in mysterious circumstances
after 17 years on the throne, and was succeeded by his son Tutankhamun.
Some archaeologists are even looking for the king's tomb far away
from the Nile Valley, in the desert of Sinai and western Arabia.
Although the king had prepared a tomb for himself in his city of
Amarna, his body was not found in it; neither did it show any evidence
of the king ever being buried there.
The
Royal tomb of Akhenaten was desecrated, originally, in the wave
of anti-Amarna feeling that followed the king's disappearance from
the scene and the subsequent brief reigns of Tutankhamun and Aye.
Later, it was further plundered by local inhabitants before it was
first discovered officially by the Italian archaeologist Alessandro
Barsanti in December 1891. John Pendlebury, the British archaeologist
who excavated the royal tomb in 1931, confirmed the absence of evidence
that Akhenaten had ever been buried in his tomb:
"
. . . there were found parts of Akhenaten's magnificent alabaster
canopic chest, with protecting vultures at the corners, together
with pieces of the lids capped with the king's head. The head gives
evidence of never having been used, for it is quite unstained by
the black resinous substance seen in those of Amenhotep II and Tutankhamun."
Akhenaten
is the most mysterious and most interesting of all ancient Egyptian
pharaohs because of the revolution in religion and art he created,
which resulted in the introduction of the first monotheistic form
of worship known in history. Sigmund Freud, in his last book Moses
and Monotheism, published in 1939, argued that biblical Moses was
an official in the court of Akhenaten, who was an adherent of the
Aten religion. After the death of the king, Freud's theory goes,
Moses selected the Israelite tribe living east of the Nile Delta
to be his chosen people, took them out of Egypt at the time of the
Exodus and passed on to them the tenets of Akhenaten's religion.
The son of Amenhotep III and Queen Tiye, daughter of his minister
Yuya, Akhenaten married his half sister Nefertiti to gain the right
to the throne when his father made him his co-regent as Amenhotep
IV.
The
religion of ancient Egypt was static and traditional, urging that
the gods had given a good order and that it was necessary for man
to hold firmly to that order. Since the Egyptian state had always
been theocratic, ruled by the gods, according to traditional beliefs,
the 18th dynasty kings who controlled the country for about 200
years before Akhenaten (1378-1361) were interlocked with the priesthood.
In return for wealth and power, the pharaoh had relinquished his
religious authority to the priests. The richest and most powerful
of the gods, such as Amun of Thebes or Re of Heliopolis, it was
held, dictated the purpose of the state. The king had to apply to
the gods for oracles directing his major activities.
Within
his first few years as pharaoh, Amenhotep IV had to break away sharply
from old traditions. In his fifth year he changed his name to Akhenaten,
then moved out of Thebes and built his new capital at Tell el-Amarna
200 miles to the north. Here in their new home, Akhenaten, his Queen
Nefertiti, and their six daughters lived with their nobles and officials
worshiping a new God called Aten. Aten was never represented in
human or animal form, his symbol being rays of light extending out
of a circle ending in hands that gave life to man and all other
creatures. Aten had no image in the hidden sanctuary of a temple
but was worshiped out in the open. The king conceived of a single
controlling intelligence behind and above all beings including the
gods. Following the death of his father after 11 years of co-regency,
Akhenaten set about systematically to abolish the worship of all
cults but that of Aten. He and his wife Nefertiti also fostered
a naturalistic school of art and literature. The Amarna art was
a striking departure from the conventional, symbolic ancient Egyptian
form.
Nevertheless,
his attempt to force his new religion on his people met with complete
failure as the army, on whose support the king relied in his confrontation
with the priesthood, became restless and there was a danger of mutiny.
It was then that Akhenaten disappeared mysteriously from the scene,
assumed dead, at the end of his reign in his 17th year, and young
Tutankhamun followed him on the throne. Yet, there are some indications
that Akhenaten was forced to abdicate the throne, and was still
alive during Tutankhamen's reign, living in exile in Sinai.
Ahmed
Osman
Historian,
lecturer, researcher and author, Ahmed Osman is a British Egyptologist
born in Cairo
His
four in-depth books clarifying the history of the Bible and Egypt
are: Stranger
in the Valley of the Kings (1987) - Moses: Pharaoh of Egypt (1990)
- The House of the Messiah (1992) - Out of Egypt (1998)
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