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  2. Great Hymn to the Aten - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Hymn_to_the_Aten

    The Great Hymn to the Aten is the longest of a number of hymn-poems written to the sun-disk deity Aten. Composed in the middle of the 14th century BC, it is varyingly attributed to the 18th Dynasty Pharaoh Akhenaten or his courtiers, depending on the version, who radically changed traditional forms of Egyptian religion by replacing them with ...

  3. Aten - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aten

    Aten does not have a creation myth or family but is mentioned in the Book of the Dead. The first known reference to Aten the sun-disk as a deity is in The Story of Sinuhe from the 12th Dynasty, [8] in which the deceased king is described as rising as a god to the heavens and "uniting with the sun-disk, the divine body merging with its maker". [9]

  4. Atenism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atenism

    Atenism was centered on the cult of Aten, a god depicted as the disc of the Sun. Aten was originally an aspect of Ra , Egypt's traditional solar deity , though he was later asserted by Akhenaten as being the superior of all deities.

  5. List of solar deities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_solar_deities

    Amun, creator deity sometimes identified as a Sun god; Aten, god of the Sun, the visible disc of the Sun; Atum, the "finisher of the world" who represents the Sun as it sets; Bast, cat goddess associated with the Sun; Hathor, mother of Horus and Ra and goddess of the Sun

  6. Stela of Akhenaten and his family - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stela_of_Akhenaten_and_his...

    The so-called "Doctrinal name" of the Aten used here is still in its first form. The stela's dating to the end of the first half of Akhenaten's reign follows from this, as well as the depiction of the daughters and stylistic features typical of the Amarna period. [1]

  7. Tefnut - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tefnut

    Tefnut (Ancient Egyptian: tfn.t; Coptic: ⲧϥⲏⲛⲉ tfēne) [1] [2] is a deity in Ancient Egyptian religion, the feminine counterpart of the air god Shu.Her mythological function is less clear than that of Shu, [3] but Egyptologists have suggested she is connected with moisture, based on a passage in the Pyramid Texts in which she produces water, and on parallelism with Shu's connection ...

  8. Book of the Earth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_of_the_Earth

    The final scene in this section shows Aker, who is representing the barque of the sun god, as a double sphinx. The barque is supported by two uraei, and inside the barque are Khepri and Thoth who are praying to the sun god. Underneath the barque are two royal figures with Isis and Nephthys who are holding a winged scarab beetle and a sun disc. [2]

  9. Temple of Amenhotep IV - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temple_of_Amenhotep_IV

    Layout plan of the Gem-pa-Aten, constructed by Amenhotep IV. The Temple of Amenhotep IV was an ancient monument at Karnak in Luxor, Egypt.The structures were used during the New Kingdom, in the first four years of the 18th Dynasty reign of the Egyptian Pharaoh Akhenaten, when he still used the name Amenhotep IV.