The complex known as the Maru-Aten is well to the south of the
main residential areas of Amarna
(ancient Akhetaten) and is located near the river and the
village of el-Hawata. Though now lost beneath modern fields,
it was excavated by Leonard Woolley in 1921 and later by
others, so we know that it once consisted of two contiguous
enclosures oriented on an east-west axis. The larger of these
enclosures contained a symbolic complex of temples, a lake and
a palace.
Within the southern enclosure is what has been called the
entrance hall, a large court with four rows of nine columns
each. The limestone capitals of these columns were palmiform
and filled in with colored pastes. A central path through the
columns opens at both ends where, to the west is the street
and to the east the interior of southern enclosure and
the garden and its pool within. Just to the north of the
entrance hall was a columned court and to the south, a court
with an altar or throne surrounded by three or more columned
rooms. At the eastern end of the garden,
which was planted with shrubs, are two houses.
The western end of the northern enclosure is segregated
from the remainder of its plan by a wall, and within the wall
are uniformly planned houses in a row. These house are of the
same type as in the Eastern Workers Village at Amarna,
with a narrow common yard along their long, eastern side,
where it seems animals were kept. Each has a tripartite plan
that consists of an entrance or front hall, a living room with
two columns and two small rooms in their rear. Of course,
these seem to be the houses used by workmen or officials of
the precinct.

Plan of the maru-Aten
From the wall that divided off the small front section of
the northern enclosure, a quay extended along the enclosures
axis to an artificial lake which dominated its interior
space. The quay extended into the water and has a breast wall
on both sides and presumably an awning at its end. The
rectangular lake was about one meter deep and measured some
120 by 60 meters. It had sloping gravel sides similar to the
lake in the palace of Amenhotep
III at Malqata.
The lake in the northern enclosure was surrounded by a garden
planted with trees in holes filled with Nile humus and
enclosed within a low mud wall.
On the northwest end of the lake is a building on a
symmetrical plan along a east-west axis with an entrance
through a long passage between two screen walls on its western
side. Its ground plan consisted of three adjacent courts
divided by two transverse walls. In the first court are two
rows of three columns. It may have contained a throne and a
painting of the Aten
on its back wall. The balusters were decorated with colored
stripes. In the southern section of this court stretched a
long room and at the rear of it was an alcove which may have
functioned as a bedroom where the pharaoh might withdraw while
worshipping his god, Aten.
In the north part of this first court were three contiguous
rooms with brick floors and whitewashed walls.
The second court of this structure was the largest. It had
two rows of columns along two series of four contiguous
lateral rooms. A brick coping less then a quarter of a meter
high was built against the column bases and enclosing the
central part of this court, which was left open to the sky.
From the west a central alley flanked by two smaller columns
led to two mud compartments The walls were decorated with
painted patterns of grapes and pomegranate designs. There were
also two staircases that led up to a roof terrace.
The third court of this structure has a central hall with
three rooms, each of which have four columns. They are flanked
by two series of three lateral rooms, probably used as
cellars, evidenced by the quantities of broken wine jars found
in their ruins. The walls of this area are plastered with
cement and painted in tempera with vine patterns and
pomegranate designs.
It has been suggested that this building may have been a
temple palace, which would have typically been laid out in
front of the funerary temple in the New
Kingdom at Thebes.
To the northeast of the lake, and running along its eastern
side was the largest and probably the most important grouping
of elements, consisting of buildings (a temple and a kiosk on
an island, flower beds and a water court. This was most likely
a maru which was a religious building that would have served
as a "viewing place" of the solar god so that
members of the royal family might be rejuvenated by the sun's
rays.
The front temple was situated on a north-south axis with
the remainder of this complex, and on a east-west axis of the
large lake. This temple is in the typical Amarna
style, with an outer court with four column. The lower
part of these columns were made from alabaster, while the
upper sections were sandstone. There was also a pronaos with
four columns and a sanctuary open to the sky, including a
central altar exposed to the sun flanked by two columns along
each side wall. It has been suggested that a window of
appearance opened in the east rear wall of this sanctuary just
above the altar so that the Aten
could be seen and adored as it rose in the morning.
This sanctuary was probably very richly adorned. The shafts
of the columns are carved with wreaths of grapes and ducks
while the capitals had lotus carvings. The lintels were made
of alabaster and the walls were adorned with inlaid reliefs
and inscriptions.
This building's connection with the lake is clearly
indicated by the west-east axis that is common to both. The
quay on the other side of the lake would have formed the
parallel element to view the Aten
in the morning across the lake, and the sun disk could have
been viewed at sunset from the temple as it went down over the
lake. It is possible that the lake was symbolic of the Nile
River, which is said in the solar hymns of Akhenaten
to have been created by the sun.
A kiosk forms the central element of this eastern complex.
It seems to be a chapel surrounded on all sides by columns and
raised on a platform accessed by a stairway. Four columns with
reed style shafts connected by high screen walls form the
sides of the pavilion. In the middle rose a dais for an altar
or throne. The outside of these walls were adorned with
naturalistic designs of plants and animals. According to some
scholars, the kiosk would have served as a
"sunshade" which was mentioned in a number of
inscriptions.

Cross section of the Kiosk Island
The kiosk stood amidst an artificial moat so that it formed
a small, square island. The approach to the kiosk was flanked
by two houses that were similar in design and decoration. Each
had a pavilion with an open front facade on two pillars
flanking the doorway. These structures were carefully made,
with reeded doorjambs, screens that were perhaps in the shape
of inlaid quartzite or alabaster stelae, floors of alabaster
and internal walls lined with faience.
It has been suggested that this kiosk might have functioned
as a temple where the initial monthly festival of the Aten,
called "Birth of Aten" (mswt-ltn), was celebrated.
It may have been connected with the eleven tanks in the
northern most water court, which could have symbolized the
remaining eleven monthly festivals. The flower beds flanking
the pathway between the kiosk and the water court would then
symbolize the beneficial action of the sun upon plants. One of
the solar hymns of Amarna read, "Thy rays nourish every
garden".
The water court itself was a long rectangular space with a
central row of thirteen square piers in the midst of a series
of contiguous T-shaped shallow tanks. The design of these
tanks is interesting. The T-shaped elements alternate in plan
and are separated by ridges that are triangular in section and
plastered with mud. The sloping sides of the tanks were
adorned with designs of water plants above the water level,
and below were painted white. The floor of the passage that
bordered the tanks was also decorated with motifs such as fowl
and heifers. The rich colors were probably symbolic of the
flora and fauna of each month, and calls to mind the treatment
of the pavement in the Northern
Palace. The artwork shows a good sense of composition and
technical ability with a mixture of details and
impressionistic treatment.
In the initial phase of construction of this water court,
the whole area of the tanks was excavated and cross walls were
built in brick as were the floors. Two of the pillars were
reinforced with timber beams laid crosswise in superimposed
layers. It should be noted that the tanks were laid out
asymmetrically about the alley and the axis of the kiosk. This
may be explained if we accept the assumption that each tank
symbolized a specific month with its particular flora and
served the celebration of the monthly "Birth of Aten".
However, we must point out an alternate theory. Some
scholars believe that the complex was a miniature
representation of the cosmos for the celebration of the birth
of the Aten,
with the eleven tanks representing the eleven stretches of
water that the sun god had to cross during the nightly
journey, while the Kiosk would form the island emerging out of
the waters to form the primeval mound.
On the southeast corner of the lake are the remains of an
unusual square structure with two wings flanking a central
core and a tank. In the wings, cellars formed the lower story,
perhaps surmounted by a loggia, while the central element
consisted of various rooms of uncertain distribution.
With the exception of the cenotaph
of Seti
I at Abydos,
the Maru-Aten is probably the most elaborate symbolic layout
in religious architecture built during the New
Kingdom. It would have represented by means of
architectural elements and layout the various aspects of Aten
in his potentiality as Creator. However, we must also point
out that a number of scholars may point out that, due to the
limited remains of this structure, its real purpose could
differ. Most of the excavated pavement remains from this
temple are now located in the Bolton Museum and Art Gallery.
A final notation: It would seem that a number of sites on
the internet describing Maru-Aten confuse this site with the Northern
Palace. They are two very distinct sites located almost as
distantly from each other as two complexes could be in the
valley at Amarna,
though there may be some similarities in their design and even
in their function. Certainly one reason for this is that both
seem to, from all accounts, have had inscriptions originally
engraved for the King's consort, Kiya, that were apparently
usurped by his daughter Meritaten. However, it is likely that
the Maru-Aten never served as a principal palace for his
daughter or Kiya, as possible did the Northern Palace.
References:
| Title |
Author |
Date |
Publisher |
Reference Number |
|
Akhenaten: King of Egypt |
Aldred, Cyril |
1988 |
Thames and Hudson Ltd |
ISBN 0-500-27621-8 |
|
Art and History of Egypt |
Carpiceci, Alberto Carlo |
2001 |
Bonechi |
ISBN 88-8029-086-x |
|
Chronicle of the Pharaohs (The Reign-By-Reign Record of the Rulers and Dynasties of Ancient Egypt) |
Clayton, Peter A. |
1994 |
Thames and Hudson Ltd |
ISBN 0-500-05074-0 |
|
Dictionary of Ancient Egypt, The |
Shaw, Ian; Nicholson, Paul |
1995 |
Harry N. Abrams, Inc., Publishers |
ISBN 0-8109-3225-3 |
|
Egyptian Treasures from the Egyptian Museum in Cairo |
Tiradritti, Francesco, Editor |
1999 |
Harry N. Abrams, Inc. |
ISBN 0-8109-3276-8 |
|
Encyclopedia of Ancient Egyptian Architecture, The |
Arnold, Eieter |
1994 |
Princeton University Press |
ISBN 0-691-11488-9 |
|
History of Ancient Egypt, A |
Grimal, Nicolas |
1988 |
Blackwell |
None Stated |
|
History of Egyptian Architecture, A (The Empire (the New Kingdom) From the Eighteenth Dynasty to the End of the Twentieth Dynasty 1580-1085 B.C. |
Badawy, Alexander |
1968 |
University of California Press |
LCCC A5-4746 |
|
Oxford History of Ancient Egypt, The |
Shaw, Ian |
2000 |
Oxford University Press |
ISBN 0-19-815034-2 |
Archives
|