Despite the elaborateness of the royal complex located in
Central City at Amarna,
Egyptologists do not, for the most
part, appear to believe this to be the principal residence of
the heretic king, Akhenaten in his capital. Rather, they
believe this distinction belongs to the North Palace. However,
he likely spent considerable time at this location. Today,
little remains of the royal estate that spanned both sides of
the Royal Road, though after extensive investigation, we do
have a very good idea of the layout with regards to its
various components.
To the east of the Royal Road in Central City at Amarna
is
a royal estate laid out opposite the official palace across
the road. It consisted of what we refer to as the King's
house, an enclosure surrounding a garden, the Royal or Small
Aten Temple, priests' quarters and various storage
magazines.
The Royal or Small Aten Temple
Located near the "King's House" in the Central
City at Amarna
and enclosed within a temenos wall measuring
100 by 200 meters is what some Egyptologists refer to as the
Small Aten Temple and others call the Royal Temple. The
ancient Egyptians apparently called it Hwt-Aten, or "The
Castle of Aten". Unlike the Great Aten
Temple, it was
perhaps directly connected to the royal palace complex that
existed on both sides of the Royal Road, and it has been
suggested that this temple may have acted as a mortuary temple
for Akhenaten. This is evidenced by the temples alignment with
the royal wadi where the king's tomb was excavated.
Prior to the construction of this temple there was a large
high altar measuring 9.35 by 14.4 meters that stood in the
area of the first court.
The temenos wall around the temple was fortified with
buttresses except on the entrance facade along the Royal Road.
The entrance facade took the form of a brick pylon, which might have had
vertical faces and doorjambs lined with stone as depicted in
the tomb of Tutu. Two flagstaffs were fixed into slots in each
tower of the pylon and a second doorway in the enclosure
flanked both towers.
In the first court of the temple, a central ramp about 8.8
meters wide bordered
by rows of brick offering tables ascended to a brick altar.
The main altar was surrounded by 108 offering tables
(sometimes referred to as small altars). This court was followed by another pylon that formed
the
facade of the second court and again this pylon was flanked by
secondary gateways that featured granite stelae. Similar
doorways without stelae opened in the north and south sides of
this court.
Like in the courtyard of the "Sanctuary" in the Great Aten
Temple, there was a priest's house situated in
front of the south tower of the pylon, at the rear of the
second court. This house had its own court with an altar and a
corridor with three rooms, one of which was an alcove for a
bed.
The third pylon and gateway lead directly into the
sanctuary of the temple itself. The court surrounding it was
entered through two subsidiary doorways and contained three
domestic buildings in its south section. The sanctuary in this
smaller temple was rectangular, with wing walls also
similar to those of the sanctuary of the Great Aten
Temple.
This sanctuary consisted of two courts, each with an altar and
a series of offering tables. It appears that there was a
colonnade flanking either side of the doorway to the inner
court. A winding entrance with screen walls led into the
latter, which is bordered with a row of contiguous shallow
chapels.
According to the depictions in the tomb of Tutu, trees seem
to have been grown to the east, behind the sanctuary.

Plan of the Small Aten Temple
The temple in its main lines is similar to the sanctuary of
the Great Temple, though less elaborate.
The King's House

Plan of the King's House
The so called "King's House" had an enclosure
measuring 123 by 140 meters, inside of which the building took
the form of a U around a garden, with the actual residence of
the king at the rear.
There was a large area in front of the King's house that
was laid out as a garden
with a central path bordered with
trees in a stepped arrangement and fronted by a pylon on its
northern approach. Two additional entrances to the house
communicated with the Royal Road and to the bridge across the
royal road. Two lower terraces border the western side of the
King's house. The outer terrace featured an arbor with a roof
on brick piers. Two doorways at both ends of the south wall
connect the garden to the residence.
The plan of the King's house itself is rectangular and
oriented east-west. It is clearly divided into two sections
consisting of the private apartments accessible from the garden
and the servants' quarters accessible from the front
courtyard near the entrance gateway. The servants' quarters
takes the form of an L-shaped plan set on the southwest
corner. It consisted of two sets of rooms on both sides of the
long north-south court and a large house with a private
entrance corridor from the garden. This house is in the
typical Amarna
style with a broad hall and a deep hall out of
which various chambers open. A section to the east of this
house has been identified as a nursery. Its buildings, which
consist of two sets of three bedrooms each are bordered on the
north by a court and on the south by a corridor.
The private chambers within the King's house are located at
the northern side of the complex and basically took the form
of a normal Amarna
villa. Here, the feature element is
a large hall with wooden columns in seven rows of six each. At
the rear is a transverse columned hall. The main hall is
flanked to the west by a court with storerooms and a bathroom,
and on the east by a large room with an altar and the
pharaoh's suite of bedroom, bathroom and latrine. Screen walls
on an L-shaped plan with a curtain on the doorway insured
privacy. Painted dados depicting the symbolic plants of Upper
and Lower Egypt alternating with recessed paneling adorned all
the walls of these rooms. In the pharaoh's suite, wonderful
frescoes depict the small princesses, the queen and other
scenes.
The Bridge
The king's estate to both sides of the Royal Road were
connected by way of a bridge. The bridge was a very solid
structure in brickwork and reinforced with large balks of
cedar. It was built in three unequal spans that were probably
covered by flat roofs. There were, surmounting the bridge
itself, rooms decorated with various paintings. The design of
the bridge would have probably been similar to that of the
gateway of the North Suburb.
Notation: A window of appearance where
Akhenaten would
bestow rewards upon his loyal followers was depicted in local
tombs. Egyptologists believe that this windows was either
located in the bridge itself, or in the King's house, though
its exact location is unknown.
The Main Palace Complex (The Great Palace)
One of Akhenaten's major palaces at
Amarna
lies between the
Royal Road and the cultivation along the river. It was
probably known as the "House-of-Rejoicing-of-the-Aten".
This structure is oriented on a north-south plan and consists
of the state apartments built in stone and bordered along the
eastern side by the servants' quarters (north), the harem
(middle) and the magazines (south), all of which were
constructed of brick. There was a bridge with three spans that
crossed over the Royal Road from the king's house on the east
to the state apartments, passing between the harem and the
magazines.
The Coronation Hall
The coronation hall was a later addition to the palace
complex which was not set in the axis of the remainder of the
complex. Its entrance communicated with the bridge connecting
the King's House to the Royal Palace complex. It has a
relatively square plan featuring a multitude of piers (544) covering
the whole interior, an arrangement that is strikingly similar
to that of the later Persian apadana. The square structure is
divided into three transverse elements.
One element is a court surrounded on three sides by a
portico on pillars. It is flanked on the east and west sides
each by two deep halls with pillars. A sunken pathway bordered
by a yellow brick curb runs down the central aisle of both
eastern halls.
The second element of the Coronation Hall is a huge chamber
accessed through a central doorway. It features 32 rows of 17
square pillars that support a ceiling that had painted
decorations depicting vines on a yellow background. The walls
appear to have been inlaid with faience tiles decorated with
plant patterns.
The final division of this structure is very shallow. It
consists of a court with a sunken area and flanked by two deep
halls with pillars. Here, we find the name of Smenkhkare and
some scholars believe that this building was erected hastily
in about the fifteenth year of Akhenaten's reign for
ceremonies surrounding Smenkhkare's elevation to
co-regent.
The Servants' Quarters
Within the palace, three pylons with central doorways lead
to the three groups forming the "servants'
quarters". The first two groups of structures within the
pylons were actually storage magazines, while the northernmost
group of structures were actually housing. These houses were,
though somewhat nicer, similar to those of the Eastern
Worker's Village. These units contiguous and were uniformly
rectangular in plan, divided into three elements. The first
element was an entrance hall with two columns, a stone
lustration slab and a brick worked dais. There was also a
central hall with one or two columns, on a stone base, and two
rooms with shelves at the back. Each of these houses had a
staircase to a loggia with a column on the terrace, and brick
floors that were sometimes covered by white plaster.
The Harem
The term harem is of course, an Arabic word with not really
the same meaning in ancient Egypt that it acquired later in
history. However, there were women's quarters and in this
palace they stretched between the eastern side of the state
apartments and the Royal Road. An entrance from the road led
into two courts divided the building into two groups, of which
the northernmost grouping appears to have been the more
important. An ambulatory surrounds the northern block and this
may have been a passage for guards. There is no direct
entrance to the inner rooms of these quarters from either the
road or even from the main entrance.
These buildings are not entirely symmetrical. Along the
north-south axis of the northern group are a number of elements. These include a sunken
garden
with a tank at its northern end, bordered on either
long side by a narrow hall with a central colonnade and a row
of small adjacent rooms (perhaps storage magazines).
At the end of the garden to the south a columned portico
stretches along the front of a broad hall which had two rows
of columns. On the main axis down the gangway the painted
pavement depicts a row of Asiatic and African prisoners
flanked by two pools that contained fish and flowers.
The main hall has a square plan and communicates to the
southeast with a large room that had twelve columns inlaid
with faience. Here, the pavement was painted with motifs that
included captives and birds in the marshes in both the main
hall and the columned room. There were adjacent chambers on a
uniform plan that included three rooms to the west and two to
the east that flanked the main hall. Each of these chambers
were also square with a central column, and each had also two
small adjacent rooms to the south. These rooms probably
represented the suites for the ladies of the court. This was
the general layout for the women's quarters at Amenhotep
III's
palace at Malqata and of
Ramesses
III's palace at Medinet Habu.

Painted Pavement in the garden area
The southern group of buildings, entered from the north,
consisted of a long garden
flanked on one side by a court with
two symmetrical suites featuring a hall and four rear chambers
each. On the other side of the garden was an ensemble similar
to that forming the northern part of the quarters. A broad
hall leads axially to a square hall communicating with a
columned room. Here also, all pavements were painted.
The State Apartments
The State Apartments were a huge complex and the only part
of the palace to be built of stone. Its layout is strictly
symmetrical about a north-south axis running parallel to the
Royal Road.
A very large court known as the "broad hall"
fronts the buildings to the north. It was bordered by statues
of Akhenaten
rendered in quartzite and granite and of the
Queen rendered in quartzite. These figures were, on the south
side, standing, while along the two wings, sitting. Originally
there seems to have been planned a gigantic columned portico
some 150 meters in length, which was never carried out.
To the west are remains of a mysterious stone building,
while in the center of the south side an imposing porch on
three rows of four palmiform columns each, made from
sandstone, shades the entrance to a transverse columned hall
with two rows of fourteen columns each. It opens into the
central court of the same breadth with two side courts. The
columns of the transverse hall feature depictions of swages of
ducks hanging on the shafts and free foliage on the capitals.
Here, the paving was of alabaster.
This group of three courts is laid out axially with the
bridge that leads to the King's House across the Royal Road.
Each entrance to the court has a system of ascending and
descending ramps bordered by granite balustrades intended to
allow for the circulation of horse chariots. This is a curious
feature that perhaps indicates a Mesopotamian influence. A
portico existed, built in two wings, that flanked each of the
entrances from the side courts to the broad hall, or to the
bridge (from the east court). Flanking the central axis in the
central court, there appears to have been two series of three
rows of four alabaster stelae each, carved on both sides with
depictions of the royal family worshipping the Aten.
The next transverse group of structural elements consists
of a central hall, of the same width and depth as the central
court, and flanked by two ensembles, each consisting of a
square court surrounded by a colonnaded portico. They
were flanked to the south by two adjacent rooms with square
columns, and to the north by two additional columned rooms,
one of which probably had subsidiary chambers. The center of
each of the square courts was sunk and a central concrete
platform could have been surmounted by a statue. In four rows
of twelve each, the limestone columns of the central hall had
shafts in the shape of bundles of reeds and inverted bell
capitals, not unlike the tent-pole columns in the Festival
Hall of Tuthmosis III at
Karnak. The flanking colonnades were
of a smaller size, which allowed for clerestory lighting in
the central hall. The side courts featured a pair of pavilions
though only one was actually built.

A drawing of the King's House and Small Temple (Upper Left),
Bridge and Great Palace (Bottom Right)
Ramps led up to the south side of the central hall,
probably to some part of the plan which was never
completed.
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 |
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