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Amarna Project, Great Aten Temple Excavations
Amarna Project, Great Aten Temple Excavations
The Boundary Stelae of Amarna and scenes and texts in the decorated
rock tombs at Amarna give pride of place to the ‘House of the Aten’. The
way it is depicted in some of the tombs leaves little doubt that it is
to be identified with the building in the Central City of Amarna that,
in modern times, has been named the Great Aten Temple. It formed part of
the grand clearance of the Central City undertaken in the 1930s by the
Egypt Exploration Society and directed by the archaeologist John
Pendlebury. The plans of the remains of the building were made by the
architect Ralph Lavers.
The removal of the stonework at the end of the Amarna Period
had left the site largely flat and featureless, the original buildings
reduced to heaps of stone chippings and dust. The EES excavations had
the effect of removing this loose material to the perimeters of the
buildings, heaped into mounds and ridges surrounding shallow depressions
marking the locations of areas of flat foundations that were all that
was left when the stone blocks were taken away. The flat foundation
layer had been made from gypsum concrete. Large patches of this
survived, often preserving the outlines of the walls and other
architectural features that had been erected on them. These were
recorded by Pendlebury and Lavers who were, as a result, able to
reconstruct the plan and general appearance of the two main parts.
One of these was a long narrow building towards the
front of the temple enclosure. Its original name might have been
Gem-pa-Aten (‘Discovery of the Aten’); here the neutral term Long Temple
is preferred. The other, the Sanctuary, lay towards the rear of the
huge temple enclosure. Between the two, and arranged on a perpendicular,
north–south axis, was a series of lesser features that included a
free-standing stela.
One of the achievements of these excavations was
the demonstration that the temple had seen two major phases of building,
an earlier and more modest set of constructions replaced during
Akhenaten’s reign by a grander design.
The Pendlebury excavations were carried out on a
large scale that enabled the main parts of the temple to be exposed and
recorded in a relatively short time. It is almost always the case that a
second examination of the sites of older excavations uncovers fresh
evidence. A more pressing reason to re-open the site, however, is the
effect of the site being left open and untended for such a long time,
since 1932–3. Apart from the effects of weathering on the relatively
fragile gypsum foundation surfaces, the site lies adjacent to the modern
cemetery of the village of El-Till. The official boundary between
ground that belongs to the Egyptian antiquities authority and the
village is poorly defined. The cemetery continues to expand at the
expense of the temple ground. Increasing quantities of village rubbish
have also, in recent years, been dumped over the front part. It is, too,
the case that visitors to the site miss the opportunity to see and
appreciate what was, in its heyday, Amarna’s principal place for the
devotion of the Aten.
In 2012 the Amarna Project began a scheme to study
the temple remains afresh, to clean the site and to mark the main
building outlines in fresh stonework.
The work done at the Great Aten Temple is organised
on the ground through a 5 x 5-metre grid that is numbered grid 18 in
the Amarna excavation grid system.
Publications
W.M.F Petrie, Tell El Amarna (London, Methuen 1894), 18–19, Pl. XXXVII.
H. Frankfort, ‘Preliminary report on the excavations at Tell el-‘Amarnah, 1926–7.’ Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 13 (1927), 209–18.
J.D.S. Pendlebury, ‘Preliminary report of the excavations at Tell el-‘Amarnah, 1932–1933.’ Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 19 (1933), 113–8.
J.D.S. Pendlebury, ‘Excavations at Tell el Amarna: Preliminary Report for the Season 1933–4.’ Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 20 (1934), 129–36.
J.D.S. Pendlebury, The City of Akhenaten III. (MEES 44; London, 1951), 5–20.
B. Kemp, M. Shepperson and A. Hodgkinson, ‘Great Aten Temple’, in B. Kemp, ‘Tell el-Amarna, 2011–12.’ Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 98 (2012), 9–26.
B. Kemp, M. Bertram, A. Hodgkinson and S. Kelly, ‘Great Aten Temple’, in B. Kemp, ‘Tell el-Amarna, 2012–13.’ Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 99 (2013), 20–32.
B. Kemp, M. Bertram, D. Driaux, A. Hodgkinson and S. Kelly, ‘Great Aten Temple’, in B. Kemp, ‘Tell el-Amarna, 2014.’ Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 100 (2014), 1–33.
B. Kemp, M. Bertram, D. Driaux, A. Hodgkinson, S.
JÄ™draszek and S. Kelly, 'Great Aten Temple', in B. Kemp, ‘Tell
el-Amarna, 2014–15.’ Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 101 (2015), 5–17.
Reports
Great Aten Temple - Spring 2012 Season - Preliminary Report
Barry Kemp
Marsha Hill
Anna Hodgkinson
Mary Shepperson
October 2012
PDF - High Resolution (9 Mb)
PDF - Low Resolution (700 k)
Great Aten Temple - Autumn 2012 Season - Preliminary Report
Barry Kemp
January 2013
PDF - High Resolution (11 Mb)
PDF - Low Resolution (2 Mb)
Great Aten Temple – Spring 2013 Season – Preliminary Report
Barry Kemp (with an appendix by K. Thompson)
March 2013
PDF - High Resolution (6 Mb)
PDF - Low Resolution (1Mb)
Great Aten Temple – Spring 2014 Season – Preliminary Report
Barry Kemp
April 2014
PDF - High Resolution (16 Mb)
PDF - Low Resolution (2 Mb)
Great Aten Temple – Spring 2015 Season – Preliminary Report
Barry Kemp
April 2015
PDF - High Resolution (8 Mb)
PDF - Low Resolution (2.5 Mb)
Great Aten Temple - Autumn 2017, Spring and Autumn 2018 - Preliminary Report
Barry Kemp, Miriam Bertram
December 2018
PDF - High Resolution (7 Mb)
PDF - Low Resolution (5 Mb)
The Solar Observation and Offering Platform at the Front of the Great Aten Temple
Barry Kemp, Paul Docherty
January 2019
PDF - Hi Resolution (600kb)
Great Aten Temple - Report on Recent Work (May-June 2019)
Barry Kemp, Miriam Bertram
October 2019
PDF - High Resolution (7Mb)
PDF - Low Resolution (3 Mb)
Great Aten Temple - Report on Recent Work (October–November, 2019)
Barry Kemp and Miriam Bertram
November 4th, 2019
PDF - High Resolution (16 Mb)
PDF - Low Resolution (1 Mb)
Great Aten Temple - Report on Recent Work (February–May, 2020)
Barry Kemp, Miriam Betram, Anna Hodgkinson and others
May 30th, 2020
PDF - High Resolution (7 Mb)
PDF - Low Resolution (4 Mb)
(no fieldwork was carried out in 2016 owing to security conditions in Egypt)
Reports will also be found in the Horizon newsletter:
http://www.amarnaproject.com/downloadable_resources.shtml
‘Reclaiming the House of the Aten.’ Horizon 11, 1–6.
‘Reclaiming the House of the Aten (continued).’ Horizon 12, 6–8.
‘The House of the Aten. The work of the spring 2013 season.’ Horizon 13, 8–9.
'The House of the Aten' Horizon 15, 1-7.
'Further work at the Great Aten Temple.' Horizon 16, 2-3.
'Miniature landscapes.' Horizon 17, 5-6.
'A new head of Akhenaten.' Horizon 18, 10-11.
'Carved limestone fragments from the Great Aten Temple.' Horizon 18, 14-18.
'The Great Aten Temple as newly revealed.' Horizon 19, 3-10.
'Understanding statuary from the Great Aten Temple.' Horizon 19, 11-18.
Documentation
EES photographs 1932: with commentary on what they
show. The locations of the pictures are marked on the plan: Annotated
Lavers plan.
EES photographs 1932 PDF (11 Mb)
The plan, by architect Ralph Lavers, is published in J.D.S. Pendlebury, The City of Akhenaten III. (MEES 44; London, EES 1951), Pl. III.
Annotated Lavers Plan (PDF 3.6Mb)
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