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The period of Aten worship has been called "the Amarna heresy"; it was considered heretical because, not only did Pharaoh Akhenaten declare the Aten the supreme diety, he declared the Aten the only diety. This has led some to speculate that the cult of the Aten could actually be a precursor of the monotheistic religions that now dominate our world: Judaism, Christianity and Islam.
Kemp says one of the interesting things they've discovered, during their excavations of the cemetery at Amarna, is that the people died very young. He says the average age of the people they've found is around 35. The puzzle now, for those studying Amarna, is to figure out why these people died when they did. There is evidence of a pandemic during Ankhenaten's reign, but Kemp points out that pandemics tend to decimate older populations. Tonight, you can hear Kemp speak for yourself on UAB's campus in Bell Auditorium. That begins at 5:30 p.m. -- Rosemary Pennington, November 14, 2006 More: |








| Egypt -- When people think of Egypt pyramids and papyrus and the Nile all come to mind; as does Egypt's seemingly endless pantheon of gods. There was Osiris, god of life, death and fertility, his wife Isis and their son Horus, god of the sky. But, for a period of about twenty years, all the gods were usurped by an obscure solar diety -- the Aten.
The center of the Atenist revolution was in an area of Egypt now known as Amarna. British archaeologist and Egyptologist Barry Kemp has been the director of the Amarna Project since 1977. Since that time, as the digging's gotten deeper, so has archaeologists' understanding of the city found there, its pharaoh-founder Akhenaten and the Aten, the god that turned Egypt on its head.
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