"Over 3,000 years ago, Pharoah Akhenaten and Queen Nefertiti decided to abandon worship of the Egyptian gods in favor of what the Pharaoh called the one true God - rejecting a millennia of tradition." READ MORE
In case you weren't aware, all Egyptian Pharaoh's throughout history had a variation of -amun or -amen in their name. (ex. Tutankhamun) Amun was the Egyptian god of the air who later was known as Amun Ra. Ra was the sun god.
King Akhenaten was born under the throne name of Amenhotep IV, but in the fifth year of his reign, he changed his name along with his religious beliefs. Amenhotep means: "Amun is satisfied", whereas Akhenaten means: "effective for Aten."
King Akhenaten is famous in Egyptian history for moving the Egyptian religion from a pantheon of gods, to a single sun god, Aten. He was SO hated for this decision that upon his death, all of his monuments were dismantled and his statues, defaced. His name was even removed from the Egyptian king list. It's even believed that his sarcophagus may have been hidden in the tomb of his son, King Tut, for protection.
Interestingly, there are conspiracies that King Akhenaten may have been around during the time of the biblical Moses... and may have even be his Egyptian brother. This would certainly explain why the Egyptian Pharoah attempted to move Egypt away from the pagan pantheon to follow a monotheistic god.
In this video clip from an episode of Ancient Aliens, we're told that King Tut's untimely death at such a young age would have proven a problem for tomb makers. According to archaeologists, his middle sarcophagus is different from the other two. It also appears that King Tut's name was written over the top of the original name on the sarcophagus. Ankhkheprure. It is likely that Ankhkheprure may have been the birth name of a mysterious member of King Tut's family - whose throne name was Prince Thutmose.
Thutmose was allegedly Akhenaten's brother who was suppose to rule as King, but never got to. In fact, he actually disappears from historical record. One of the rumors as to why he never ruled... comes from an unexpected source. Sigmund Freud, the famous psychoanalyst, was also a scholar of Judaism and Ancient Egypt. In 1939, he was the first to suggest that monotheism began with Akhenaten, and that his brother Thutmose, could potentially be the biblical Moses. Even his Egyptian name could be a play off of his birth name: Moses.
If you remember, Moses was raised Egyptian.
Now Ancient Aliens tries to put forth that Moses left Egypt and mimicked Akhenaten by promoting a "knock off" of the god that Akhenaten instituted in Egypt. They also shared how the ark of the covenant, could have been a "knock off" of a device found, much later, in the tomb of King Tut.
Personally, I think it's the other way around. I think the God of Moses, who appeared as a burning bush and then rained plague after plague upon Egypt... was WAY more likely to have influenced the Egyptian King's view of who the REAL god was. This may have been why he was the only Pharoah in all of Egyptian history who promoted a single god.
In fact, the device found in the tomb of his son, was eerily similar to the Israelite ark of the Covenant.
It's called the "Osiris" device. In the temples of Seti in Abydos, depictions of this device are listed as the single most powerful relic in all of human history, which functioned as a stairway to heaven.
Osiris was the Egyptian name given for the Babylonian King, Nimrod. Join my private blog to hear more about this connection. If you remember, Nimrod, also, was attempted to access heaven.
So it's an interesting connection that this very device, is a replica of the ark of the covenant - which God, himself, came and dwelt on. Literally a portal to the holy of holies.
Queen Nefertiti was the wife of Akhenaten. On September 25, 2022 archaeologists claim to have discovered her remains. Lying in the Valley of the Kings, were two female mummies. What is believed to be Nefertiti, and Ankhesenamun, the wife of King Tut. CT scans may ultimately be used to replicate the features of these queens, essentially "bringing them back to life."
These were two of the most important and revered queens in Egyptian history.
Commenti