AKHNATONThe Traveller Pharaoh Author : Zenon Kelper - Editor : Leona Termini-Theaux |
Pharaoh Akhnaton (born
Amenophis the Fourth) was
King of Egypt in 1350 BC.
Several
generations before Akhnaton,
Egypt had been occupied by invaders
from the North (Hyksos).
The
Egyptian rulers, at that time, had fled into Africa, near the source of the
Nile where they lived as refugees. This exiled community began their recovery
with pharaoh AhMoses (beginning of the
18th Dynasty, 1575 B.C., followed by ThotMoses I in 1520 B.C.).
Later, in 1479B.C., ThotMoses
III applied revolutionary leaderhip in overthrowing the reigning pharoah,
Atchepsut, (his transvestite aunt). The 18th Dynasty
continued to expand the Egyptian territory beyond the mouth of the Nile,
in the North.
ThotMoses IV then
restored the Sphinx, while the momentum of conquests extended the Kingdom
further North, up to and beyond the Sinai, Palestine,
Syria, reaching Babylonia (contemporary
Iraq), and nearly the Hittite land
(contemporary Turkey).
Israel and Greece did not exist at
that time - Moses' historical deeds were to follow shortly
thereafter..
At the end of this
recovery, Amenophis III (1380B.C.) reigned on
the reconquered and settled lands, with provinces and colonies bordering
what is now known as Turkey. With the full power of the re-established
Egypt, this opulent monarch was like a Louis the Fourteenth. His palace
stood in Thebes (near the contemporaryKarnak/Louxor). His
wife, Queen Tiy, was also powerful, with private domains in Northen Egypt,
probably by the Red Sea, and near the border of the Sinai.
There were Egyptian temples on the Sinai. Tiy's statues
have been found there by Egyptologists.
Israel
still did not exist.
Egypt was allied, nearly
blended, with Babylonia. But the Hittites were not conquered. Crete was a
citadel, and ruled by Minos (Minotaurus), and was allied with Egypt and
Babylonia.
Athens
still did not exist.
This is also
the best known period in Egyptology
- the most popular Egyptian characters (except for
Cleopatra) are concentrated there - such an affinity of signs
showing the relation of this time with our present civilization%%.
Tiy's parents are well known -
their two mummies have been found intact. Although their tomb has been plundered,
like most of Egyptian sanctuaries, the painted stories on the walls of their
burial chamber give enough information for us to know that they were not
'Egyptians'. Actually, the walls of Tiy's mother's and
father's tomb indicate that she/he was, in all
probability, Hebrew, and perhaps one of the important figures
of Hebrew history (related to Joseph%%).
Though Israel did not yet exist (the first archeological traces of Hebrew tribes appear from around that time), Tiy was, as we say today, 'Jewish' - and so was her son, Akhnaton.
Such a presence
of a dual couple on the throne of Egypt is explainable, for the numerous
tribes and their noble families had intermarried in the previous exile -
thus the lineages of the reinstalled rulers was merged. It also means
that the restoration of the State had to pass through a compulsive
re-organization of distinctive identities.
It is therefore not surprising
that the heir of Amenophis III and
Queen Tiy encountered resistance in
succeeding his father to the throne of Egypt. So their
son, Amenophis IV, (the
young Akhnaton), after
having been reared at some distance from the Capital, first reigned in co-regency
with his father (mother?%%.
This young King of Thebes, Amenophis .4th, was married to the
famous
Nefertiti, whose origins are still
mysterious. Regarding the internal policy of Egypt, we know that Amenophis
3rd (and/or mother Tiy) had prepared and began a political
transformation (re-instituting monotheistic, primal and ancient,
Egyptian rituals of worshipping the Sunsetting
Sun God Aton). This
established the young couple's reign. It seems they announced that their
son, Amenophis 4th, was the "Messiah" of this new religion. And
all this while, Egyptian interests in external affairs led them to seek
an established alliance with the Hittites%% (mention Nephertiti's possible
Hittite origins??%% (as shown later by Akhnaton's successor,
Ramses, and his marriage with a Hittite princess%% give her name...).
But when his father died, the young King Akhnaton
found too much opposition by the polytheistic priests, in the Thebean Court,
to effectively promulgate his monotheistic philosophy. Having to fight
continuously to set up and impose it, his reign, and his plans, changed as
he was driven out of Thebes and settled in a new capital at a respectable
distance to the North.
As he definitely
intended to promote a universal religion, the monotheistic worship of
Aton, he changed his name from
Amenophis the Fourth into
AkhnAton, and baptised his new capital,
AkhtAton
(the City of Horizon
- today
Tel-El-Amarna).
From
this place on the East bank of the Nile, Akhnaton could express and experience,
as well as develop and promote, his new movement. This took the form
of an actual restoration of a primal cult in
Heliopolis, alias
On, and thus deeply rooted in Ancient Egypt.
He disbanded the corrupt cult of the God Amon, with its
politically powerful priests, and imported several new foreign features into
his policies, as he intended to promote
his new policies to the entire Eastern Mediterranean.
For instance he
represented himself as reigning with his Mother (after the death
of
his father, while Nefertiti slipped slowly into disgrace and/or
oblivion). Although sacred in
Babylon, Egyptians considered this tradition
to be sacrilegious, in that it appeared as an incestuous
relationship.
The picture (form Huya's Tomb) shows Akhnaton leading
Tiye to the Temple, along with a princess depicted as their daughter.
Akhnaton also
introduced other trends, such as artistic influences from Crete/Minos
such as... This new Capitol represented a single God in an open
Cult, a non-violent and nearly Democratic Society, a rational philosophy
and nearly scientific schools of thought.
Akhnaton planned the development of
a single civilization which would comprise all
of the territories appending the Ithmus, between Africa and
Eurasia. But
this ambitious leader, great writer and builder, may have overlooked
how his projects provoked military threats. After a few years, his plans
failed,and the Thebean politicians, among them the Amon priests who hated
him for divesting them of their power, took advantage of both the military
difficulties at the borders, and the economical turmoil in the country. They
threatened Akhnaton as his entire Kingdom crumbled. Then,
suddenly...
Egyptology lost all trace of the King.
He vanished!
Akhnaton disappeared - his mummy was never found Nefertiti disappeared - her mummy was also never found Tiy disappeared - her mummy has never been found |
Of course one assumes that Akhnaton
died, perhaps killed. Yet his tomb stayed unoccupied - as did Nefertiti's.
Tiy's tomb was occupied by a mummy in
Akhnaton's garment who was none ot them (probably
Semenkhare, Tut's brother)!
It
is clear that a terrible confusion surrounded the apparent conclusion of
Akhnaton's experiments. For, instead relief in announcing his death, his
successors launched frenetic propaganda against him - accusing him of being
a traitor, a criminal, and eventually prohibiting his name to be spoken.
They also razed his City of the New Horizon to the ground, the
(Akhtaton, Tel el Amarna) and plowed it with
salt.
These series of events do not fit with the idea that Akhnaton simply
died in Egypt. His successors (Amon
priesthood) destroyed traces of him. (this is why he was discovered
only recently by Egyptologists). They erased him from all historical
records (and even later negotiated with neighboring nations
to also delete his name from memory, and asked that records of their
relationships with him be obliterated from their archives (see
Kadesh/Quades: negotiation with Hittites). Then they took one of his
sons, ThotAnkhAton, and changed his name into ThotAnkhAmon,
(famous King Tutankamon). They brought
him back to Thebes where he reigned as a child king for a short time,
before being killed (in all likelihood).
History reveals
that a short time later, Israel appeared, surging with a brand new
Monotheism. For centuries, its rabbis
have claimed to have been led from Egypt by a prophet,
Moses, whose face/identity
they swore to keep secret (rule of the Ancient Alliance).
However, it happens that Science sometimes brings
new ways of seeing things, and Egyptology today shows
a compelling probability that Moses was, in fact, the masked figure
of Akhnaton.
This has led the Egyptologist, Ahmed Osman, to believe that
Akhnaton did not die in Egypt, but in the Sinai -
as Freud also believed about Moses; that
human Monotheism was branded with failure and a death toll to pay (Re: Thanatos,
Death Drive).
Yet another thread of this mystery lies in Ancient Greece.
There is striking evidence that the
story of Akhnaton-Moses was
recorded into the legend of Oedipus
(see:
Velikovsky) in Greece - specifically, as the Founder
of Athens. Theseus, 1,300-1000B.C., is said to have been influenced by
Oedipus-Akhnaton in exile beyond his
colony (re: Oedipus at Colonus). Sophocles was the main
commentator, who divulged all the details, at the fall of Theseus' Athens
(400BC). If this is correct - it means that Akhnaton
did not die as `Moses,murdered', as Velikovsky
suggested, it brings light on the decisions as to the motive and policy
which took place in the short period (400-300BC), between the end of Socrates'
time and the conquest of Alexander the Macedonian.
There are important clues:
We know that the end /death of Moses
(acknowledged to be between 1300-1000B.C.), as
well as his identity, was kept secret
by the Rabbis, and therefore remained a mystery. It deserves to
be reconsidered at this point in history. Actually, the Hebew tradition
states only that Moses fled/hid in secret, after having delivered the Tables
of the Law, still pursued and threatened by Satan, alias Seth (according
to Osman's Egyptological demonstration, Seti-the-First was Akhnaton's harassing
successor).
Signorelli's painting - Vatican Museum - shows Moses administrating power and giving laws (A&B). Then (C) an angel shows him the valley (on the right/East) of the Promised Land. Then in (D) he leaves alone, but with a companion (angel? disciple?daughter?), to reach the second valley (left/West) where he dies in secret, or with a limited set of companions (E). |
Except for prejudicial interpretations,
nothing in the Bible actually refutes Moses'
identification as Oedipus, (on the contrary, it presents
a veiled memory - for while remarkable prejudice defines Oedipus as a decadent
and perverted man, it is built up by resistance to his memory, since his
legend is one of the first noble dramas of consciousness. This prejudice
is the same as the one which was casted on Akhnaton's memory by his
enemies); inversely, the Egyptological conclusion
that Moses is Akhnaton does not refute Velikovsky's identification of
Oedipus-Akhnaton - it even reinforces it (repairing Velikovsky's eluded
analysis of Oedipus at Colonus).
As Freud noted,
Akhnaton could not have been alone, and must have been supported by a group
of people who he called 'neo-egyptians'. But what happened to their endeavor?
Was it aborted in Egypt? Did it end by the Sinai, after the introduction
of Writing had been transmitted to the Hebrews, along with the moral laws,
and/or perhaps the Knowledge of Egyptian politics - usually
kept secret in Temples/Schools at that
time (see Fabre d'Olivet / Hebrew as Secret
Egyptian Hieroglyph)? Or, was the Sinai mystery
intended to preserve a step of this great Initiation for civilization, further
North, towards the Hittites and/or Crete, just before Athens made its appearance
in History? The
first Delos League (Athens) and the Kingdom
of David (Israel) are roughly contemporary, and they appear while the
Ramessides - i.e. Dynasties following the Ramses Code of
Politics - Dynasty in Egypt
(Akhnaton's successors)
systematically continued to eradicate the
Akhnaton period from memory.
Amongst the many clues of what
actually occured:
the story of Akhnaton's city, (AkhtAton, alias The City of the Horizon).
As said above, as
soon as Akhnaton disappeared, his city, AkhtAton, was razed and thus deleted
from the map of Egypt. The statues were dismantled, and the carved stones
and painted pieces of the monuments were stacked and hidden. Many of
these great stones were used in the foundations of new monuments that his
successors (Horemheb, Seti, Ramses) erected for themselves. Ironically, they
constitute the best depositories that one could imagine in preserving Akhnaton's
data for today's Egyptologists.
Similarly, if Akhnaton had not left
an important quota of information at the foundation of Athens, there would
be no sound explanation of why, at the time
Alexander the Great
extended Greek territories into Egypt, the following
Greek rulers (Ptolemeans) would have built, on the very location of The City
of Horizon (AkhtAton, Tel El
Amarna), the
major city: Hermopolis
Magna!.
From this new site, (actually
on the opposite bank of the Nile), they erected temples to
worship the legendary Messenger, the Traveler
Hermes, who was then called
HermesThot.
From the
Ptolemean temples and Schools of Hermopolis Magna,
it was possible to cross the Nile, and after a short walk, to gaze at the
only remains of AkhtAton that had not been destroyed
- that is, stellas and huge figures which had been carved on the cliffs
surrounding the former City of Horizon (AkhtAton),
showing AkhnAton worshipping the Sun God, Aton.
It
is still possible to see AkhTaton,s sculptures today, carved
high on those same cliffs, for they could never have been hidden or buried
in the sand. Therefore, it was a conspicuous historical spot for pilgrims,
who came from all over the civilized world (from Greece,
but now also from Roma, Re: Caesar's visit), to Hermopolis
Magna (the Great City of
Hermes).
This is a pencil drawing by Robert Hay, made in 1827 of one of his teams in Turkish dress, contemplating Boundary Stella A on the Western cliff South (unfortunately the quality of the picture is poor, and just a bit clearer in C.Aldred books: Akhenaten King of Egypt. Before being able to attain a better view, I choose to insert it there since it is so symbolic of what was Hermopolis Magna master sightseeing).
To add to these observations, the greatest
Egyptian historian, Manetho
(Egyptian chronicler of the 3rd century BC) clearly
stated that Moses, the prophet of their Israeli neighbors, had been one of
the most important high priests of Egypt. And another great historian, known
as Strabon, at the end of
the Ptolemean era, just before Christinanity, wrote again and even more
precisely, that Moses had been a ruler who had intended to settle a new religion
in Egypt, and who had built a city to worship his sole Solar God. Added
to this were other compelling details which match the itinerary of Akhnaton's
exile.
So the Greek
(Ptolemean) worship at HermoPolis Magna supports that the exile of
Akhnaton-Hermes did not end with Moses' exploits on the Sinai... And this
was the cultural situation in Egypt when the Holy family took refugees there,
during Jesus' youth... so that the memory of Akhnaton did not stop with the
Greek worshipping of Hermes Thot, near the remnant of his
city - here follows the description
of this continuity:
History teaches
that the end of the Ptolemean period occured when the Romans
(from Caesar to Octavius) took over the whole Mediterranean
territory. Cleopatra, the last Ptolemean ruler, died while the library of
Alexandria was 'inadvertently' destroyed. Hermopolis Magna
also then fell into decay. This suggests that the Messenger Hermes, from
Greece, had come back (with Alexander's conquest)
to Egypt (thus claiming the Greek legitimacy of a universal Egyptian
civilization) and faded from mankind's awareness. Rome
pretended, in its turn, to be the center of the historical world, in its
own right. It was, at this precise moment, that Christianity appeared
in the land of Israel.
It is known that
an important corpus of the Christian foundation stems from Egypt, where the
young Jesus stayed (when Rome was deleting the Ptolemean Egypt, and
destroying Alexandria's famous library etc...) and was taught
in the mysteries (in place of Amarna according to the Gnostics
), before
coming back to Israel, and had his famous discussions with the Rabbis. It
explains why Jesus later announced his unveiling of Moses' identity by his
own transfiguration (see the Transfiguration
Scene - where Jesus presents Moses unveiled before his disciples - in the
Gospels and comments by Saul to the
Corinthians).
Then the first
Christians took over the tradition of Hermes-Thot, whom
they called 'Trismegistus', alias Triple Master, Trice Great (the
Fathers of the Church: Suidas,
Justin Martyr,
Athenagoras, Clement of
Alexandria, Tertullian,
Cyprian, Lactance,
St Augustine, Cyril of
Alexandria, all refer to
HermesTrsimegistus)
. They identified him as a Monotheist Egyptian King who had initiated
Israel and Greece.
This tradition lasted during all
of the Middle-Ages, and was reinforced during the Renaissance, when information
from Macedonia drove Cosme de Medicis and
Marsilo Ficino to identify anew the Triple Great
Egytian King as 'Moses'. At the same time,
Campanella described Hermes' Solar City in Egypt,
which he called Adocentyn (see Giordano
Bruno by Frances Yates/Warburg Institute/Royal University of
London). By 1600AD, the Inquisition
eventually suppressed all reference to Hermes Trismegistus - a repression
which lasted until today. Yet, there again, this was based on arguments
(Casaubon) which have been invalidated by the
mid-20th-century (Nag Hammadi).
There is little doubt, in making any conclusions about the
study of Hermes Trismegistus, that this legendary Monotheist King was, in
fact, Akhnaton. And this is finally established historically, and objectified
by science (Egyptology). It fullfills Jesus explanation, on the Transfiguration
Scene, that it was in vain to expect the return of this memory by the means
of any religious institution.
Today, the city of Assiout stands
by the site of the City of Horizon, where tourism is not encouraged by Muslim
activists who live there, and can contemplate the old engraved cliffs which
still display AkhnAton, and Tiy, his mother, or Nefertiti, worshipping the
Sun God Aton.
As Oedipus prophesized, his
sons were to fight forever - yet, Savitri Devi, in 1940 made
an interesting remark - She noted that by the mid-20th-century, it would
be realized that Akhnaton's failure to establish his
civilization was unfortunate, for its principle would have fit the Eastern
and Asian mentality. Therefore, she said, West and East could have
united - for the only way we could successfully approach planetary problems
such as pollution, overpopulation, depletion etc, would be as a unified global
community and/or Artificial intelligence Network.
Yet
Savitri could not see that Akhnaton's civilization was
established, in fact. The only difficulty is
to root out its memory from a Unconscious state. This is the task of
Psychoanalysis, just as Freud began to disclose it. Meanwhile, the long
Alchemist Tradition (Hermes Trismegistus - Emerald
Tables), which upheld Akhnaton's revolution through its long
lasting oblivion, is also indicative: once its repression released,
a Scientific state of mind will support and stimulate human societies to
find the answer to the modern Sphinx: Ecology.
In this series you can also find:
Akhnaton, Moses, Oedipus, Triple Hermes, Freud, Lacan, Velikovsky, Osman, Theaux.
The Egyptologist Jan Assmann published in 1997
The interpretation/review is dense |
END OF THE PAGE
FOOT PAGE
EXCHANGE IDEAS, IMPROVE KNOWLEDGE
Registration to a
Mailing
List -
free
subscription
Membership access
area -
one
time $15 fee All transactions are secured
|
© William Theaux 1949-1999