The Akhenaten Temples

Akhnenaten was second son and successor to Amenhotep III. He
spent the first five years of his reign in Thebes, and he
favored the sun shrine characteristic of the Heliopolitan
center of solar worship, which featured open courts on a
central axis. Smaller stones were used which a single man could
carry. Tens of thousands of these in the best sandstone were
quarried at Gebel el-Silsila, about 100 km south of
Thebes.
These small blocks were recycled later as the sun temples were
reduced, and used as fill or foundation in walls and pylons of
the 19th Dynasty. Some have been found in Horemheb’s Pylons II
and IX at the Amun temple at Karnak, as foundation blocks
beneath the hypostyle hall of the Amun temple, and in Ramesses
II’s pylon and outbuildings in the Luxor temple. Some survived
to be used as late as the reign of Nectanebo I, and some turned
up at Medamud in Ptolemaic period
constructions.
Akhenaten erected four major structures at Karnak during the
first five years of his reign. The major building was called
"the Sun-disk is Found", built in anticipation of the jubilee;
then there were the "Exalted are the monuments of the
Sun-disc", and "Sturdy are the movements of the Sundisk." The
smallest of the four was the Hwt-bnbn, "Mansion of the
benben stone." A Hwt-itn, "Mansion of the Sun-disk,"
mentioned in tombs on the west bank, has not as yet turned up
in the scenes on these blocks.
Only one of the four structures has been located and partly
excavated. The main Aten temple was built to the east of
Karnak. From the center of its western side ran a columned
corridor 12 feet wide that led west to connect with the 18th
Dynasty royal palace which lay just north of Pylons IV, V and
VI of the Amun temple. There were probably life-size statues
made of red quartzite representing the king, arms crossed,
though other statues may have included the queen as well.
Reliefs show the king with one arm outstretched and being
caressed by the rays of the sun-disc.
In the Aten temple, the consistent theme was the celebration of
the jubilee, or heb-sed. Scenes in the entrance corridor coming
from the palace show the approach of the royal party, courtiers
kissing the earth, men dragging bulls, etc. Turning right along
the west wall, to the southwest corner and then east along the
south wall, are reliefs depicting the ritual of the "days of
the White Crown," when the king made offerings dressed as the
monarch of Upper Egypt. It is presumed that similar scenes were
depicted showing the King in the same ritual for the Red Crown
and Lower Egypt.
The Hwt-bnbn, though to-date not found, is
reconstructed in the scenes on the blocks featuring tall
graceful pylons and walls. But the identity of the celebrant of
the offering to the sun-disc is not Akhenaten, but instead, his
wife Nefertiti.
The relief decorations of the two temples called "Exalted are
the monuments of the Sun-disc," and "Sturdy are the movements
of the Sundisk," both structures also as-yet undiscovered, show
domestic apartments, rewarding of officers, and other scenes
from domestic life.

After the fifth year of his reign, Akhenaten moved from Thebes
to Amarna, the new city he had built, and work on Karnak
ceased. The name of Amun was obliterated throughout Karnak and
the Theban area.
by Marie Parsons -
Marie Parsons is an ardent student of Egyptian
archaeology, ancient history and its religion. To learn about
the earliest civilization is to learn about
ourselves.
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Also see: Ancient Observatories: Karnak
References:
Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt ed by Katharine Bard
Complete Temples of Ancient Egypt by Richard Wilkinson
The Cultural Atlas of Ancient Egypt by John Baines and Jaromir
Malek
Source: http://www.touregypt.net/featurestories/karnak.htm
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