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AKHENATON AND THE EGYPTOLOGISTS

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EGYPT'S GOLDEN AGE OF ART ' ... He was fascinated by Egypt and Akhenaton. ... His four published books about Egypt are: Stranger in the Valley of the Kings ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: AKHENATON AND THE EGYPTOLOGISTS


1
AKHENATON AND THE EGYPTOLOGISTS

2
What is an Egyptologist?
  • An Egyptologist is any archaeologist, historian,
    linguist, or art historian who specializes in
    Egyptology, the scientific study of Ancient Egypt
    and its antiquities. Demotists are Egyptologists
    who specialize in the study of the Demotic
    language and field of Demotic Studies. A
    practitioner of the disciplined study of Ancient
    Egypt and Egyptian antiquities is an
    "Egyptologist", the field of Egyptology is not
    exclusive to such practitioners.

3
Opinions of EgyptologistsOn Akhenaton and
Religion
  • Opinions of Akhenaton vary widely. He has been
    referred to as a heretic, a madman, the first
    monotheist, the source for the Oedipus legend and
    even Moses. It is not difficult to find a point
    of view that you can support.
  • Akhenaten has been called "the first individual
    in history", as well as the first monotheist,
    first scientist, and first romantic.
  • 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.

4
Opinions of EgyptologistsOn Akhenaton and
Religion
  • There are other points of view There is, of
    course, no evidence linking the cult of Aten to
    today's monotheistic beliefs, and no
    archaeological evidence of Hebrew tribes appears
    until two centuries after the pharaoh's death.
    Nor do scholars agree on what accounted for
    Akhenaton's beliefs. "As a result," says
    Egyptologist Betsy Bryan at Johns Hopkins
    University, "people tend to allow their fantasies
    to run wild.

5
Pharaohs of the Sun The Religious Controversy
  • Akhenaten, Nefertiti, and the boy pharaoh
    Tutankhamunperhaps Akhenaten's son born to a
    secondary wifehave been called the Pharaohs of
    the Sun. Their reign was brief. Akhenaten ruled
    just 17 years, and within a few years after his
    death in 1336 B.C., the old orthodoxy was
    restored. Akhenaten's enemies soon smashed his
    statues, dismantled his temples, and set out to
    expunge all memory of him and Nefertiti from
    Egypt's historical record.  But the
    controversy the couple created lives on.
    Egyptologists still struggle to piece together
    the story of this renegade pair. Swept up in
    religious passion, they brought the vast and
    powerful Egyptian empire to the brink of
    collapse.  

6
Pharaohs of the Sun The Religious Controversy
  • Barry Kemp, an archaeologist at Cambridge
    University, is even more pessimistic "The minute
    you begin to write about those people you begin
    to write fiction.
  • "You could compare him to a cult leader,"
    says Rita Freed, an Egyptologist from the Boston
    Museum of Fine Arts. Experts continue to argue
    whether he was the world's first monotheist. He
    insisted on one supreme godan all-powerful
    creator who manifested himself in the sunlight.
    But he perceived himself and Nefertiti as
    extensions of that godalso deserving of worship.

7
Pharaohs of the SunThe Religious Controversy
  • His was a strange new vision," says Robert
    Vergnieux of the University of Bordeaux in
    France. "Since the Egyptians' god was now the
    sunlight, they didn't need statues in dark inner
    sanctums. So they built temples without roofs and
    performed their rituals directly under the sun."
  • "For a short time the Egyptians believed the sun
    god had come back to Earth in the form of the
    royal family," says Ray Johnson. "There was a
    collective excitement that becomes tangible in
    the art and architecture. The whole country was
    in jubilee. It's one of the most astonishing
    periods in world history."  

8
Pharaohs of the Sun The Religious Controversy
  • Did he really have popular support? Not
    everyone agrees. From Rolf Krauss, "He was a
    horrible tyrant who happened to have very good
    taste in art," says Krauss.
  • Was he trying to continue his fathers reforms?
    During the latter part of Amenhotep IIIs reign,
    the solar deities became increasingly important.
    But it was Akhenaton who completed the
    transformation of the solar god into not only the
    most important deity, but the only deity.
  •  

9
Pharaohs of the Sun The Religious Controversy
  • In fact, Erik Hornung tells us in his
    Conceptions of God in ancient Egypt that the real
    revolution involved 
  • "...the implied transformation of thought
    patterns, in which all the traditional forms were
    bathed in the glare of a new light which the
    Egyptians came to find intolerable. Beginning
    with the change in the king's birth name, from
    which the name of the (state god) Amun was
    removed, there was a step-by-step process of
    elimination. Amun was replaced by Aten, mythical
    statement by rational statement, many-valued
    logic by two-valued logic, the gods by God. All
    this was accomplished according to a
    well-conceived plan.

10
EGYPTS GOLDEN AGE OF ART
  • "You're never going to find two Egyptologists
    who agree on this period," said Nicholas Reeves,
    a British Egyptologist.
  • "See, she is as beautiful as ever," says Rolf
    Krauss, a curator, as we enter a room dedicated
    to a painted bust of Nefertiti recognizable the
    world over. Spotlights in the darkened room set
    the queen's long, graceful neck, flawlessly
    symmetrical face, and tall blue crown aglow.

11
EGYPTS GOLDEN AGE OF ART
  •  Krauss and others debate whether Nefertiti
    actually looked like this bustsome think that it
    served mainly as a model for artists making other
    statues of the queen. But Nefertiti seldom looks
    the same in any of the numerous portraits of her.
    Krauss shows me one statue of her as an older
    woman. The face is lined, and the breasts sag.
    "We call this the 'tired Nefertiti,' " he says.
  • In the Egyptian Museum in Cairo are colossal
    statuestroubling and mesmerizingof Akhenaten.
    His face is elongated and angular with a long
    chin. His eyes are mystical and brooding. His
    lips are huge and fleshy. Although he wears a
    pharaoh's headdress and holds the traditional
    symbols of kingship, the crook and flail, across
    his chest, the chest is spindly, and the torso
    flows into a voluptuous belly and enormous
    feminine hips.  

12
ART THE LEGACY
  • Because of the strangeness of these and so
    many other images of Akhenaten, scholars
    speculated for decades that the pharaoh had a
    deforming disease. But now many believe that the
    seeming bisexuality of the colossi might be
    rooted in Akhenaten's new religion, for Aten had
    both male and female aspects. They also point out
    that in the early years of his reign, when
    Akhenaten was a young radical fighting an
    established religion, he had reasons for the
    exaggeration. He wanted to break down more than a
    thousand years of artistic tradition, so he
    instructed his artists to portray the world as it
    really was.  Instead of the standard static
    depictions of physically perfect pharaohs smiting
    enemies or making offerings to the gods, artists
    gave the new king a much more realistic
    appearance. "Akhenaten probably didn't have the
    greatest physique by American standards," says
    James Allen, a specialist on the period at the
    Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. "He had
    the easy life in the palace. 

13
ART THE LEGACY
  • For the first time, artists routinely portrayed
    the pharaoh in informal situationsbeing
    affectionate with Nefertiti or playing with his
    children. They also painted scenes of life and
    naturewheat rippling in the wind, farmers
    plowing, birds taking flight. In truth, Akhenaten
    unleashed a creative furor that gave rise to
    perhaps the finest era of Egyptian art.
  • The Wilbour Plaque (Pl. I) is named for the
    American Egyptologist Charles Edwin Wilbour
    (1833-1896), who acquired it in 1881. As a
    scholar, Wilbour's greatest passion was for
    ancient inscriptions, although he also collected
    uninscribed objects, of which this plaque is the
    most famous.
  • A small fragment of limestone, the plaque bears
    two images in the characteristically Egyptian
    sculptural technique of stink relief, in which
    the figures are carved into the ground rather
    than raised above it. At the left is a king
    wearing the baglike headdress called a khat with
    the protective uraeus cobra on his brow. At the
    right, on a slightly smaller scale, is a queen
    wearing a cap crown also adorned with a
    uraeus.!!!

14
Image House Altar-Akhenaten Nefertiti And Three
Of Their Daughters.pngFrom Wikipedia, the free
encyclopedia
15
ART THE LEGACY
  • In the early years of Akhenaten's reign an
    angular and manneristic style developed , whereby
    Akhenaten and Nefertiti were depicted as
    virtually identical. Both were shown with
    receding foreheads, lined and haggard faces, long
    noses, large lips, and slanting eyes. Both had
    hollow cheeks, heavy jaws with drooping chins,
    long and thin necks, and pronounced collarbones.
    However, during the Amarna Period, the style of
    royal imagery became more curvilinear, organic,
    and sensuous, and Nefertiti was no longer shown
    as a near carbon copy of Akhenaten. The Wilbour
    Plaque is a splendid example of the late Amarna
    style.!!!

16
ART THE LEGACY
  • Nevertheless, beginning with Wilbour's
    observations and the first publication of the
    plaque in 1927, the general consensus has been
    that its subjects are Akhenaten and Nefertiti -
    an opinion maintained in the most recent
    publication of the plaque.
  • The earlier and more exaggerated images of
    Akhenaten have been considered as perhaps
    representing his actual appearance to some
    extent, but at the same time being "deliberately
    unrealistic" and not, as is often claimed, a
    reflection of a pathological condition. On the
    contrary, the earlier images have been considered
    to reflect a new concept of the kingship and,
    given the close resemblance of Nefertiti to
    Akhenaten, the queen ship as well, the
    implication being that the queen, like the king,
    had a close relationship to the god.!!!

17
Akhenaton and Moses
  • An even more thought provoking idea is from
    Sigmund Freud. He was fascinated by Egypt and
    Akhenaton. He wrote a book titled MOSES AND
    MONOTHEISM which argued the idea that Moses was
    at the court of Akhenaton, and not only a
    follower, but an Egyptian priest of the Aten
    religion. Freud also believed that Akhenaton
    was the source for the Oedipus complex.
  • This idea of a connection between Akhenaton and
    Moses was picked up by Ahmed Osman, a historian,
    lecturer, researcher and author. He is a British
    Egyptologist, born in Cairo believes that
    Akhenaton is the Biblical Moses. His concludes
    that the Moses in the Bulrushes story from the
    Bible is really about Amenhotep IVs persecution
    by the priests of Amun, and his mother, Queen
    Tiyes efforts to protect him.
  • His four published books about 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)

18
AKHENATONSUMMARY
  • During the years of Akhenaton, art developed
    into a naturalistic style. Up to this time, the
    pharaoh and his queen were portrayed as the
    perfection of form.
  • The ancient polytheistic religion, worshipped
    through the priests in dark temples of Egypt,
    dissolved into sun light, the all powerful
    creator.
  • Whether you perceive Akhenaton as a mystic with
    a vision, or a ruler with a political agenda,
    there is no doubt that his influence continues
    today in both religion and art.

19
AKHENATONSUMMARY

20

21
Sources
  • Definition of an Egyptologist from Wikipedia,
    the free encyclopedia.
  • http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Akhenaten
  • http//www.smithsonianmag.com/history-archaeol
    ogy/rebelliousson-200711.html
  • From Pharaohs of the Sun, National
    Geographic April 2001, article by Rick Gore.
  • http//www.ahmedosman.com
  • !!! The Wilbour Plaque at the Brooklyn Museum
  • MAGAZINE ANTIQUES,  Jan, 1997  by Richard A.
    Fazzini
  • http//touregypt.net/featurestories/amarnaperi
    od.htm
  • http//www.exn.ca/egypt/story.asp?stRulers
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