Title: Akhnaton's Religion 1
1Akhnaton's Religion 1
- AMORC
- RCUI Online
- Mystery School Class
2Participants in the Group Project for the Ancient
Mystery Schools
- Tony Griggs FRC
- Larry Ford FRC
- Leah Larsen SRC
- Glenn Larsen FRC
3The Great Hymn to the Aten
- try to think about his hymn to Aten as answers to
some questions , may be if we found those
questions we could reach something , I will post
those questions due to my trial to understand
this man , and his belief
4Who are you ? who am I ? where is your seat ?
- Splendid you rise in heavens lightland,O living
Aten, creator of life!
5Are you the all ? are you in me ? are you there ?
- When you have dawned in eastern lightland, You
fill every land with your beauty. You are
beauteous, great, radiant, High over every
landYour rays embrace the lands,To the limit
of all that you made. Being Re, you reach their
limits,
6who really is your son ?
- You bend them for the son whom you love Though
you are far, your rays are on earth,Though one
sees you, your strides are unseen.
7chaos or less universal logic or less blessing ,
we have when you leave it ?
- When you set in western lightland, Earth is in
darkness as if in deathOne sleeps in chambers,
heads covered, One eye does not see another.
Were they robbed of their goods, That are under
their heads, People would not remark it. Every
lion comes from its den, All the serpents bite
8are you the light or the power behind the light
or the properties of light ? or all of them ?
- Darkness hovers, earth is silent, As their maker
rests in lightland.Earth brightens when you dawn
in lightland, When you shine as Aten of daytime
As you dispel the dark,As you cast your
rays,The Two Lands are in festivity. Awake they
stand on their feet, You have roused
themBodies cleansed, clothed,Their arms adore
your appearance. The entire land sets out to
work, All beasts browse on their herbs Trees,
herbs are sprouting,Birds fly from their
nests,Their wings greeting your ka.All flocks
frisk on their feet,All that fly up and
alight,They live when you dawn for them. Ships
fare north, fare south as well, Roads lie open
when you riseThe fish in the river dart before
you. Your rays are in the midst of the sea.
9( in this part of hymn I found akhenaten a deep
thinker , mediating the creation process trying
to understand it using his belief , his ideas)
10are you there in the mother's womb ?
- Who makes seed grow in women, Who creates people
from spermWho feeds the son in his mother's
womb, Who soothes him to still his tears.Nurse
in the womb,Giver of breath,
11are you there in the origin of every one , so in
the mother's womb ?
- To nourish all that he made.When he comes from
the womb to breathe, On the day of his
birth,You open wide his mouth,You supply his
needs.
12are you there in the egg ?
- When the chick in the egg speaks in the shell,
You give him breath within to sustain him When
you have made him complete,To break out from the
egg,He comes out from the egg,To announce his
completion,Walking on his legs he comes from it.
13the chaos , discipline , the system , rules , are
all one , by you ?
- How many are your deeds, Though hidden from
sight,O Sole God beside whom there is none!You
made the earth as you wished, you alone, All
peoples, herds, and flocks All upon earth that
walk on legs, All on high that fly on wings,
The lands of Khor and Kush, The land of
Egypt.You set every man in his place, You
supply their needsEveryone has his food,His
lifetime is counted.Their tongues differ in
speech, Their characters likewise Their skins
are distinct,For you distinguished the peoples.
14Some information on the Hymn To the Aten
- In the tomb of Ay, the chief minister of
Akhenaten (and later to become king after
Tutankhamun's death), occurs the longest and best
rendition of a composition known as the 'Hymn to
the Aten', said to have been written by Akhenaten
himself. Quite moving in itself as a piece of
poetry, its similarity to, and possible source of
the concept in, Psalm 104 has long been noted. - It sums up the whole ethos of the Aten cult and
especially the concept that only Akhenaten had
access to the god 'Thou arisest fair in the
horizon of Heaven, 0 Living Aten, Beginner of
Lifethere is none who knows thee save thy son
Akhenaten. Thou hast made him wise in thy plans
and thy power.' No longer did the dead call upon
Osiris to guide them through the after-world, for
only through their adherence to the king and his
intercession on their behalf could they hope to
live beyond the grave. - 2
15Perhaps all should look and see how the Hymn
Applies to them
16These are some added thoughts
- For one to truly understand Akhnaton and his
faith you need to understand him a little more.
Even though history tried to erase him and his
ideas they lived on and we must piece together
what we know of him.
17A Brief History
- Amenhotep IV-better known as Akhenaten, the
new name he took early on in his reign-ushered in
a revolutionary period in Egyptian history. The
Amarna Interlude, as it is often called, saw the
removal of the seat of government to a
short-lived new capital city, Akhetaten (modern
el-Amarna), the introduction of a new art style,
and the elevation of the cult of the sun disc,
the Aten, to pre-eminent status in Egyptian
religion. This last heresy in particular was to
bring down on Akhenaten and his immediate
successors the opprobrium of later kings. - The young prince was at least the second son
of Amenhotep III by his chief wife, Tiy an elder
brother, prince Tuthmosis, had died prematurely
(strangely, a whip bearing his name was found in
Tutankhamun's tomb). There is some controversy
over whether or not the old king took his son
into partnership on the throne in a co-regency
there are quite strong arguments both for and
against. A point in favor of a co-regency is the
appearance during the latter years of Amenhotep
III's reign of artistic styles that are
subsequently seen as part of the 'revolutionary'
Amarna art introduced by Akhenaten on the other
hand, both 'traditional' and 'revolutionary' Art
styles could easily have coexisted during the
early years of Akhenaten's reign. At any rate, if
there had been a co-regency, it would not have
been for longer than the short period before the
new king assumed his preferred name of Akhenaten
('Servant of the Aten') in Year 5. - The beginning of Akhenaten's reign marked no
great discontinuity with that of his
predecessors. Not only was he crowned at Karnak
(temple of the god Amun) but, like his father he
married a lady of non-royal blood, Nefertiti, the
daughter of the vizier Ay. Ay seems to have been
a brother of Queen Tiy (Anen was another) and a
son of Yuya and Tuya. Nefertiti's mother is not
known she may have died in childbirth or shortly
afterwards, since Nefertiti seems to have been
brought up by another wife of Ay named Tey, who
would then be her stepmother. - 2
18The cult of the Aten
- Some say that he was the most remarkable king to
sit upon Egypts throne. There can be little
doubt that the new king was far more of a thinker
and philosopher than his forebears. Akhenaten
was traditionally raised by his parents,
Amenhotep III and Queen Tiy (1382-1344 B.C.) by
worshipping Amen. Akhenaten, however, preferred
Aten, the sun god that was worshipped in earlier
times. Amenhotep III had recognized the growing
power of the priesthood of Amun and had sought to
curb it his son was to take the matter a lot
further by introducing a new monotheistic cult of
sun-worship that was incarnate in the sun's disc,
the Aten. When early in his reign he changed his
name to Akhenaten, meaning He Who is of Service
to Aten, he also renamed his queen to
Nefer-Nefru-Aten, which is Beautiful is the
Beauty of Aten. Akhenaten's innovation was to
worship the Aten in its own right. Portrayed as a
solar disc whose protective rays terminated in
hands holding the ankh hieroglyph for life, the
Aten was accessible only to Akhenaten, thereby
obviating the need for an intermediate
priesthood.
19The New Religion
- It was said that one day Akhenaten had a vision
wherein he saw a sun disc between two mountains.
He felt that God was guiding him to make change.
He was shown the God, Aten, as the Sun Disk - the
Light. He felt guided by Aten to build a city
between the two mountains. In the sixth year of
his reign Akhenaten rejected the Gods of Thebes.
They were never part of his childhood anyway
since he had been shunned as a child. - Akhenaten had declared for the first time in
recorded that there was only one God - the
concept of monotheism. He turned 2,000 years of
Egyptian religious upside down overnight! - To make a complete break, the king and his queen,
left Thebes behind and moved to a new capital in
Middle Egypt, 180 miles north of Thebes half way
between Memphis and Thebes. - It was a virgin site, not previously dedicated to
any other god or goddess, and he named it
Akhetaten - The Horizon of the Aten. - Today the site is known as El-Amarna.
- In essence he was an cult leader taking his
following into the mountains and desert to build
a new paradise.
20In The Beginning.
- At first, the king built a temple to his god Aten
immediately outside the east gate of the temple
of Amun at Karnak, but clearly the coexistence of
the two cults could not last. He therefore
proscribed the cult of Amun, closed the god's
temples, took over the revenues. He then sent
his officials around to destroy Amens statues
and to desecrate the worship sites. These actions
were so contrary to the traditional that
opposition arose against him. The estates of the
great temples of Thebes, Memphis and Heliopolis
reverted to the throne. Corruption grew out of
the mismanagement of such large levies. - 2
21A new Capitol
- To make a complete break, in Year 6 the king and
his queen, left Thebes behind and moved to a new
capital in Middle Egypt, half way between Memphis
and Thebes. It was a virgin site, not previously
dedicated to any other god or goddess, and he
named it Akhetaten-The Horizon of the Aten. Today
the site is known as el-Amarna.
22In its finished state Armana offered a theatrical
setting for celebrating Akhenaten's kingship. The
city sprawled for miles over the plain. There
were elegant palaces, statues of the Pharaoh,
good housing throughout the city, a royal road
that ran through the center of town, probably the
widest street in the ancient world. It was
designed for chariot processions, with Akhenaten
leading the way.
23A new Art Form
- It is evident from the art of the Amarna period
that the court officially emulated the king's
unusual physical characteristics. Thus
individuals such as the young princesses are
endowed with elongated skulls and excessive
adiposity, while Bek-the Chief Sculptor and
Master of Works-portrays himself in the likeness
of his king with pendulous breasts and protruding
stomach. On a stele now in Berlin Bek states that
he was taught by His Majesty and that the court
sculptors were instructed to represent what they
saw. The result is a realism that breaks away
from the rigid formality of earlier official
depictions, although naturalism is very evident
in earlier, unofficial art.
24A lime stone slab, with traces of the
draughtsman's grid still on it, found in the
Royal Tomb of Amarna. Its style is characteristic
of the early period of Akhenaten's reign. The
king is accompanied by Nefertiti and just two of
their daughters, but this does not necessarily
indicate that these are the eldest, since others
of the six may have been omitted Cairo Museum
25Realism was a part of the new art form note the
king walking with a cane
26Nefertiti is depicted in her advanced years. She
wears a long, white linen dress that allows the
contours of her body to be seen. It has been
speculated that this small statuette was the
model for a life size representation that was
never executed. Arnold points out that, although
she is past her prime, she is not old. While this
may be true, the sagging features of the
statuette do indicate that she is no longer the
vivacious Queen.
27The End of a Dream
- Akhenaten's reign lasted 16 years. This was a
difficult time in Egyptian history. Many scholars
maintain that Akhenaten was responsible for this
decline, but evidence suggests that it had
already started.
28In 1332 BC Akhenaten died, the circumstances
never explained. His memory and all that he had
created soon to erased from history not to be
found for centuries later.
29Royal Tomb at Amarna Akhenaten and Nefertiti
grieve over daughterDrawing of Relief (N.
Davies, The Rock Tombs of el-Amrna, 1903-08)
Note that behind the King and Queen there is
what appears to be a wet-nurse holding an infant.
30Was The New Religion for Everyone?
- According to present evidence, however, it
appears that it was only the upper echelons of
society which embraced the new religion with any
fervor (and perhaps that was only skin deep).
Excavations at Amarna have indicated that even
here the old way of religion continued among the
ordinary people. On a wider scale, throughout
Egypt, the new cult does not seem to have had
much effect at a common level except, of course,
in dismantling the priesthood and closing the
temples but then the ordinary populace had had
little to do with the religious establishment
anyway, except on the high days and holidays when
the god's statue would be carried in procession
from the sanctuary outside the great temple
walls. - The standard bureaucracy continued its endeavors
to run the country while the king courted his
god. Cracks in the Egyptian empire may have begun
to appear in the later years of the reign of
Amenhotep III at any rate they became more
evident as Akhenaten increasingly left government
and diplomats to their own devices. Civil and
military authority came under two strong
characters Ay, who held the title 'Father of the
God' (and was probably Akhenaten's
father-in-law), and the general Horemheb (also
Ay's son-in-law since he married Ay's daughter
Mutnodjme, sister of Nefertiti). Both men were to
become pharaoh before the 18th Dynasty ended.
This redoubtable pair of closely related high
officials no doubt kept everything under control
in a discreet manner while Akhenaten pursued his
own philosophical and religious interests. - 2
31- Akhenaten wanted everyone to be happy. He created
a beautiful, idealistic religion and Utopia for
his people but many just didn't understand it.
Akhenaten was not living in the reality of his
worshippers. Though he had found himself and his
God but the people were used to Gods they could
see, carved in stone with beautiful bodies, many
with heads of animals. Akhenaten's God was too
much of an abstraction. Aten was the basic
principle of the universe, Light! They also
wondered why the sun God only shed its rays on
the royal family and not everyone. - According to present evidence, however, it
appears that it was only the upper echelons of
society which embraced the new religion with any
fervor. Excavations at Amarna have indicated that
even here the old way of religion continued among
the ordinary people. On a wider scale, throughout
Egypt, the new cult does not seem to have had
much effect at a common level except, of course,
in dismantling the priesthood and closing the
temples but then the ordinary populace had had
little to do with the religious establishment
anyway, except on the high days and holidays when
the god's statue would be carried in procession
from the sanctuary outside the great temple
walls. - 4
32Or the Planting Of a Seed?
- Perhaps Egypt was not ready to give up 1000s of
years of tradition. But change, It has to start
somewhere - What about the ancestors, and who they prayed to
and dedicated the temples to? - What about the confession to Maat? Why would you
need to confess to 42 Gods and Goddesses other
than The Aten? - Perhaps it was the concepts that he taught that
are his legacy? - He was the first in recorded history to openly
worship One God, Perhaps the Hebrews and
Egyptians have more in common than they want to
admit? - was Akhnaton's religion different from how we
define religion today. An opinion, Akhnaton
taught a way of life. - Perhaps we are sharing in this seed he planted
-
33Refrences
- Work Cited
- 1. Hymn To The Aten Rosicrucian Mystery
Schools Translated by J.A. Wilson in ANET, pp.
369-371. - 2. http//www.touregypt.net/18dyn10.htm
- 3 Open http//web.ics.purdue.edu/rauhn/Akhnaton.h
tm in a new window. - 4 http//www.lost-civilizations.net/ancient-egypt
-egiptian-pharaoh-akhenaten-nefertiti-page-3.html - http//www.eternalegypt.org/EternalEgyptWebsiteWeb
/HomeServlet?ee_website_action_keyaction.display.
homelanguage_id1 - http//www.virtual-egyptian-museum.org/Collection/
FullVisit/Collection.FullVisit-JFR.html?../Content
/WOD.XL.00141.html0
34Akhnatons Cartouche