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Wilkinson, John Gardner
The Architecture Of Ancient Egypt: In Which The Columns Are Arranged In Orders, And The Temples Classified; With Remarks On The Early Progress Of Architecture, Etc.; With A Large Volume Of Plates Ilustrative Of The Subject, And Containing The Various Columns And details, From Actual Measurement (Text) — London, 1850

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https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.572#0151
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PART II. ERASURE OF AMUN'S NAME. 123

god of their own country. For, as these strangers
were Asiatics, they may have traced in Atin their
own Adonai;* and the additional title of Re, "the
Sun", was well suited to their worship.-}- "Re" had
been appended by the Egyptians to the name of
Atin, as to that of Amuu; and in the sculptures
where Atin-re was substituted, by the Strangers,
for Amun-re, the adjunct " Re" was found to suit
equally well the names of both deities. This ac-
counts for its being frequently left, when they
erased the name of Amun.

Atin, or Atin-re, was an ancient Egyptian title,^
often given to Kneph, who is called Kneph Nou-re,
Nou-atin, and Noum-atinre; and that too in the
time of Thothmes III, and even at the later period
■of Remeses IX; but he was not represented as a
distinct god, nor with rays terminating in human
hands, § except in monuments of Bakhan, and the
other Stranger kings. The erasure, then, of Amun,
and the temporary abolition of his worship, were
not an Egyptian caprice ; they were owing to the
tyranny of foreigners, who obtained a footing in
Egypt; and the abject manner, in which the soldiers
and others are represented, crouching before those
kings, in the tombs of Amarna, shews the despot-
ism then exercised; as the erasure of their royal

* " Our Lord", whence the name of Adonis.

t They were probably from some country, farther east than Syria;
and a god of a similar name seems to have been worshipped by other
people of Asia ; as Attin, or Atys, by the Phrygians, etc. Vide Ancient
Egyptians, vol. iv, p. 297.

{ Vide Ancient Egyptians, vol. iv, p. 298.

§ I have once found the sun so figured, in a tablet, apparently of
the time of Remeses II.
 
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