Fragment mit den Namen Echnaton und Meketaten
Zusammenfassung
Public domain photograph of 3d object, free to use, no copyright restrictions image - Picryl description.
Few scholars now agree with the contention that Amenhotep III associated his son Amenhotep IV on the throne for several years of coregency; it is assumed here, in accordance with general scholarly consensus, that the older king died before his son gained power. At or shortly after the time of his accession, Amenhotep IV seems to have married the chief queen of his reign, Nefertiti. The earliest monuments of Amenhotep IV depict the traditional worship of deities executed according to the artistic style of the preceding reign—with the exception of a prominent role accorded to the falcon-headed god Re-Harakhte, who is given an unusual epithet containing the phrase “who rejoices in his horizon, in his aspect of the light which is in the sun’s disk.”
- Element with the names of Akhenaten and Meketaten
- Ca 1336 hi-res stock photography and images - Page 7 - Alamy
- Amarna great temple hi-res stock photography and images - Page 4
- Inscribed names hi-res stock photography and images - Alamy
- Meketaten hi-res stock photography and images - Alamy
- Inscribed base hi-res stock photography and images - Page 4 - Alamy
- Pit temple hi-res stock photography and images - Page 13 - Alamy
- Inscribed names hi-res stock photography and images - Page 15
- Akhenaten aten hi-res stock photography and images - Page 6 - Alamy
- Temple of akhenaton hi-res stock photography and images - Alamy