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Tel El Amarna

tombs, city, egypt and ruins

TEL EL AMARNA, the name now given to a collection of ruins and rock tombs in Upper Egypt near the east bank of the Nile, 58 m. by river below Assiut and 190 m. above Cairo. The ruins are those of Akhet-Aton, a city built c. 1360 B.C. by Ikhnaton (Amenophis IV.) as the new capital of his empire (in place of Thebes) when he abandoned the worship of Ammon and devoted himself to that of Aton, i.e., the sun. Shortly after the death of Ikhnaton the court returned to Thebes, and the city, after an existence of perhaps only twenty years—of fifty years at the utmost—was abandoned. Not having been inhabited since, the lines of the streets and the ground-plans of many buildings can still be traced. The chief ruins are those of the royal palace and of the House of the Rolls ; there are scanty remains of the great temple. In the palace are four pavements of painted stucco work in fair preservation. They were discovered in 1891-92 by Prof. Flinders Petrie. In the Rolls House were discovered in 1887 by the fellahin some 30o clay tablets inscribed with cunei form characters. They are letters and state documents addressed to Amenophis IV. and his father, from the kings of Babylon, Assyria, etc., and from the Egyptian governors in Syria and neigh bouring districts. The greater part of them were purchased for

the Berlin Museum, but a large number were secured for the British Museum. Their contents proved invaluable for the re construction of the history, social and political, of Egypt and Western Asia during that period.

Hewn out of the sides of the hills on the east are two groups of tombs; one group lies m. N.E., and the other 3 m. S. of the city. The tombs, all of which belong to the time of Ikhnaton, are full of interesting scenes in the peculiar style of the period, accompanied by hymns to the sun god. The most important tomb is, perhaps, that of Meri-Ra, high priest of the sun, which has a façade nearly 1 oo ft. long and two large chambers. In the early centuries of Moslem rule in Egypt the northern tombs were in habited by Copts, one tomb, that of Pa-Nehesi, being turned into a churCh.

The tombs and the great stelae sculptured on the cliffs which mark the bounds of the city of Akhet-Aton have been the object of special study by N. de G. Davies on behalf of the Archaeological Survey of Egypt. The results, with numerous plates and plans, are embodied in a series of memoirs, Rock Tombs of El Amarna (six parts, 19o3—o8).