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el-amarna (akhetaten)
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The
site of Amarna (commonly known as el-Amarna) is located on the east bank
of the Nile River in the modern Egyptian province of al-Minya, some 58 km
(38 miles) south of the city of al-Minya, 312 km (194 miles) south of the
Egyptian capital Cairo and 402 km (250 miles) north of Luxor. The site of
Amarna includes several modern villages, chief of which are el-Till in the
north and el-Hagg Qandil in the south. The area contains an extensive
Egyptian archaeological site that represents the remains of the capital
city newly–established and built by Akhenaten. The name for the city
employed by the ancient Egyptians is written as Akhetaten which translates
literally as "the Horizon of the Aten".
Akhetaten was abruptly abandoned
following Akhenaten's death after an occupation of only 25-30 years, and it is
for this reason that the ruins of el-Amarna are probably the best preserved example of an Egyptian settlement during the New
Kingdom. The city included temples, palaces, and large areas of mud-brick
housing, and archaeologists have been able to study these ruins and ground plans
to see how an ancient city developed. The plundered
and vandalised remains of the royal tombs of Akhenaten and his family were
discovered several kilometers outside the city in the late 1880's.
Amarna has been examined by a
succession of excavators, including Flinders
Petrie, Howard Carter and Leonard Woolley (Royal city of Ur). Current
investigations have been in annual operation since the late 1970s, directed by
Dr Barry Kemp from the university of Cambridge, under the auspices of the Egypt
Exploration Society (EES).
The Amarna Letters
Important cache of
documents from el-Amarna, discovered in 1887 by a village woman digging for
sebakh (decomposted organic material) for use as a fertiliser. There are 382
known clay cuneiform tablets, most of which derive from "the place of letters of
Pharaoh", a building identified as the official "records office" and record
selections of diplomatic correspondence from the Pharaoh. The exact chronology of these tablets is still
debated, but they span a 15-30 year period beginning around the year of
Amenhotep III (1390-1352 BC) and continuing through to no later than the first
year of Tutankhamun's reign (1336-1327 BC), with the majority dating to the time
of Akhenaten.
These tablets shed light on Egyptian relations with
Babylonia, Assyria, the Mitanni, the Hittites, Syria, Palestine and
Cyprus. They are important for establishing both the history and
chronology of the period. Letters from the Babylonian king Kadashman-Enlil
I anchor Akhenaten's reign to the mid-14th century BC. Also within the
tablet was the first mention of a Near Eastern group known as the Habiru,
whose possible connection with the later Hebrews remains debated. Other
rulers include Tushratta of the Mittani, one Lib'ayu whom David Rohl has
argued should be identified with the Biblical king Saul, and the extensive
correspondence of the querulous king Rib-Hadda of Byblos, who constantly
pleads for Egyptian military help.
Most of these tablets are written in a dialect of the Akkadian
language, (the popular language of the time) although the languages of the
Assyrians, Hittites and the Hurrians are also represented.
Amarna Art
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| A
sculptor's study showing Akhenaten and possibly Smenkhare. Cairo Museum |
A
study piece of a princess eating roast duck. Cairo Museum |
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.
Artistic representations of Akhenaten usually give him a strikingly
feminine appearance, with slender limbs, a protruding belly and wide hips.
Other leading figures of the Amarna period, both royal and otherwise, are
also shown with some of these features, suggesting a possible religious
connotation, especially as some sources suggest that private
representations of Akhenaten, as opposed to official art, show him as
quite normal.
The result is a realism that breaks away from the rigid
formality and stylisation of earlier official depictions. It is
characterised by a sense of movement and activity in images, with figures
having raised heads, many figures overlapping and many scenes are crowded
and very busy. Individuals such
as the young princesses are shown as almost "alien like" with
characteristic elongated skulls and protruding stomachs. The illustration
of hands and feet were obviously thought to be important, shown with long
and slender fingers, and great pains were gone to be show fingers and
finger nails. Flesh was shown as being dark brown, for both males and
females (contrasted with the more normal dark brown for males and light
brown for females) - this could merely be convention, or depict the ‘life’
blood. As is normal in Egyptian art, commoners are shown with 2 left feet
(or 2 right feet). There is a delicacy to
it that at times can border on the grotesque.
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Detail from a stele showing Akhenaten holding and kissing his baby
daughter |
Fragmentary statue of Akhenaten |
Akhenaten, Nefertiti and their daughter shown adoring the Aten sun disc |
Akhenaten, Nefertiti and their
daughters were consistently shown making offerings to Aten, whose rays stretched
down into hands, often offering the ankh symbol of life to the royal family (see
above).
The depiction of the Royal Family is often seen as being informal, intimate and
with a family closeness, but this hides the conventions of the style. Central to
most scenes is the disc of the
Aten, shining down
on the Royal Family and literally giving life and prosperity to Akhenaten and
Nefertiti. Royalty are shown with left and right feet, each with a big toe.
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| Detail from a
wall painting from a private house at Amarna, showing two of Akhenaten and
Nefertiti''s daughters. |
The
discovery of the workshop of the king's sculptor Thutmose in 1912
uncovered one of the most important collection of works
encountered anywhere in Egypt. A total of more than 20 prototype
plaster casts taken at various stages of production, from clay
masters, together with a whole range of incomplete and finished
sculptures carved in a variety of hard and soft stones. Most
principal members of the court can be recognised, including
Akhenaten, Nefertiti, Kiya (another of Akhenaten's queens) and
several of the royal princesses. The quality of all of these works
is superb, but the unrivalled centrepiece of the collection is one
of ancient Egypt's most famous icons: the unfinished limestone
painted bust of Nefertiti wearing her characteristic flat-topped
crown.
The famous bust of Nefertiti also depicts
her with an elongated neck, although she is not subjected to quite the same
extremes as others in Amarna art. An unusually prominent figure in official art,
she dominates scenes carved on the blocks of the temple to the Aten at Karnak.
One such block shows her in the warlike posture of pharaoh grasping captives by
the hair and smiting them with a mace. Not what one would usually expect of a
"peaceful" queen and mother of six daughters! Nefertiti obviously
played a far more prominent role in her husband's rule than was perhaps
considered the norm.
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Limestone column fragment showing Nefertiti making offerings to Aten.
Ashmoleon Museum, Oxford. |
Unfinished limestone painted bust of Nefertiti by the sculptor Thutmose.
Ägyptisches Museum Berlin. |
Relief of Nefertiti in the Cairo Museum, discovered during excavations in
the great temple of Aten at Amarna. |
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