-m 2 UMBER m ng been EMUin^d, cnunblfid and vanished into oblivion nturiee ago, have been rtf* 41$* tWto th* discovery of tomb. 0f &n Pharaoh whose name^Tu **Jf has now subslded'and the »ble questions arias., * * Why l Tutenkhamon mean so much? r current curiosity justified? is there about his relation to ireer of Egypt that makes his ^:im^r^it? ■■;■.(■ ‘ begin with, we must confute a pread impression of Egyptian atlon as a changeless unity.. In » Egypt offers us our clearest e of the. development of a r central Government, a real i, out of originally disconnected ments along its great river.' fcgr the need of grater co-op n in controlling the Nile, for ion purposes and commerce, primitive communities Were brought together into the Units of Upper; and Lower , Which in turn were later eon* by the numbered dynasties. Xiu, s King strengthened: hir hold on e united nation, the finst great och of Egyptian history—the so tted Old Kingdom (third or sixth nasty)—developed. This was the ae when the Great Pyramid of sell and its fellows Were con noted as permanent sepulchers to sserfe the? bodies of the Pharaohs d thereby assure their future life, e fact that not even these huge tsses of almost solid masonry were le to protect the ornaments and rsons of thei£ occupants from rob in was largely responsible for the icealment of the royal tombs of the ipire within the rugged cUffs at 5 Old Kingdom (about 3,000 B;. C.) was only one great ago ypt’a bistory. Weakened by <ie tWelfth, which jy in l Asia, added to renewed and enlarged incomb from thd Sudan; produced an age of. unprecedadted magnificence Am0% 4tlie local god of Thebes, p*r tron of the new dynasty, wafs ed with riches Political developments are, how ever,, but one aapect^f a ?nati^s Me. Religiously progress had been made from the conception of a here after attainable only by those of royaFoir nobib bfrth tb that of a uni versal union With Osiris, the.great ruler of the dead. Wheredu any man might share. The basis of attain ment, also, had prOgnpesi^ -beyond the wholly material princijfe Implied in preservation of the, body and pro vision of food and Other offerings; so thai moral worth (Was now recognis ed. In long rolls of Charms andjj prayers which, according to the cus tom under the empire^ must accom pany the deceased for ‘ his future guidance and protection—rolls lAshich we group, despite their varying con tents, under the term “the Book of the Dead’’—a prominent feature is the judgment scene wherein the heart is actually pictured in the scales, bal anced against the feathered emblem of truth and righjtousnes*: ikhnaton—Father of New Cult. Outstanding Asiatic conquests. by Thutmose Iff., the most able of the Egyptian emperors, allowed his suc cessors more leisure for the arts of peace. At the court of his great grandson, Amenhotep in., luxury and splendor raeched their apogefej | Such periods, however, fVk MJp, J1P m endow compart , _^_y. .p(p|Biistanoe,' however, the, period of decadence proved more glorious;-than Egypt's "Stead splendors. For the son and successor of Ameohofep Ilf;1 ijrab Amenhotep IV., better known by hiej later, name, Ikhnaton, the fether-in- j law of Tutenkhamon and a* drehmer of great dreams.. *' j The prominence of imperial Egypt’ in Asiatic affairs had been attended by various intermarriage* with other royal lines. How much foreign blood flowed in the veins of Amenhotep IV. is uncertain; a recent suggestion is that he was partly of Hittite stock- * In any event, this King became to the later Egyptians a religious heretic,^ but to us, as the American Egyptol ogist, J^ofefesor Breasted, has phras ed it, he is “the first individual in history**’ The King’s “heresy” was connected with the conception of the sun-deity. The Son, so outstanding a llgtdnv S. aS Jte *(f ;the irc^ld in his i falcon 'Efar\ toss tbe ®*7, , rolling be* whereih its *se and <rt8er; bad acquired st» ot Amon si: for their - eathedi'ftl iffl a-s part common partimony one of June 22^ Day fo£! / Qur hew Budget Fins] System is now in operation this is ou^jirst opportunit shOw^our iiffeest in* the |£ {forward5 movement * for : interests of oug eofife Chi We must make Children’s all that' it should be in e hhurctT ij* the Denoininal unaff m ppum ijfP Wre" ic*e. Ihhnaton% energies were, ft fouid aeeim fuift occupied with far Aertog the*« new Ylems of retiglm. m •*»* Aatatl<! ;,his ancestors had trottt up melted away, while bis commanders Netted at inaetion, the Amon ■ priesthood plotted to regain it. wealth and power, and the common people, de prived of their familiar gods and cue toms, chafed in the new regime. Ini however, was not physieal and probably not over On he died- He had been Wh.A large family of daugh however, d|d Tutebkh loyatty tcf'; his father . That he residedfirst . . , i the motherand the father 'Of .This epochal innovation in My at aj^r Ota host of deities, was gave way m: m to mmmmlmmMB8U* g, in decoration, freer curves and Image Ikhnaton’s Enkhosen Aton’%/ own 'to us uttoBi”; on and Ives _ carry on the faith in the1 of which Ikhnaton had sue- . lP“® Mjm them t~41 ere even ; ^ \ suppose® i ce of his. ) on rings, . ts from its ruins, but] I an occasional additfon, j ‘^ahatioii of Amon/’ and a seene I twherjsin' Tuteukhaton appears wor- , shipping Amon and his consort Mut, - ’show how thej tide w*s running, /this I reactionary tendency, supported as it j was by the old priesthoods, the army; and the common folk, soon brought the young King back,, to Thebee, | whence have come most of th,e other s'srjcsrj ?sj| flKb V* j' jj| JrVkW uJA. rMLLjJ£ri in Own words NegroekDfganize Will m#an V.' ■

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