Spiritweb.us

PROMOTING SPIRITUAL CONSCIOUSNESS 

   ART GALLERY - CHANNELING - EGYPT - LIGHTWORK - UFO  -  HEALING - REINCARNATION  - MEDITATION
-
OUT OF BODY  - YOGA PATHS - VEDA & DHARMA -
 THEOSOPHY - MYSTICISM  - ASTROLOGY 


The Egypt Connection

EGYPTIANS IN THE AMERICAS

ABYDOS - AHMOSE I - AKHENATON - AMARNA - AMENHOTEP I - AY DENDERA - EGYPTIAN GODS -  GIZA  -
HATSHEPSUTHERMES - KARNAK - KIYA - LUXOR - MERYTATEN - MOSES-  MYSTERY SCHOOLS NEFERTITI  -
 
P'TAAH - RA-TA - ISIS  SAQQARA SITAMUN - SMENKHKARE -
THEBES - THOTH - TIYE - TUTANKHAMUN - YUYA - ZOSER

AY

 

Rule 18th Dynasty: 1325 - 1320 BC.
Predecessor Tutankhamen
Nomen Birth name: Ay: Father of the God
Praenomen Throne name: Kheperkheperure: Everlasting are the manifestations of Ra
Consorts Tey [Tiye] was his main wife, and the mother of Nefertiti
  • After Tutankhamen's death, Hittite archives state that Ankhesenamun wrote to Suppiliumas, the Hittite Pharaoh, requesting one of his sons to marry her. Suppiliumas granted this request, but his son Zannanza was killed on his way to Egypt.
    Ay apparently inherited the thrown by marrying Tutankhamen's widow, Ankhesenamun against her will, and outmaneuvered the designated successor Horemheb.
  • Capital city Thebes
    Reign
  • His native city was Panopolis, where he built a rock cut chapel and dedicated it to the local deity Min
  • Ay was the Vizier and royal chancellor of Akhenaten, and supported the Aten monotheism.
    He was the father of Nefertiti, Akhenaten's chief Queen.
  • Later, during Tutankhamen reign Ay was also the Grand Vizier of the Pharaoh, how was only nine years, and Ay was the real ruler behind the scenes.
  • Under Tutankhamen Ay helped restore the Amun cult, and abandoned the monotheism.
  • Ay married Tutankhamen's sister, Akhenaten's daughter Akhsenpaaten in order to become Pharaoh.
  • He was an old man, at least 70 years old, when he succeeded the throne, and only ruled four years, without any notable accomplishments
  • Ay was amongst the Amarna Pharaohs whose memories were execrated under later rulers.
  • Burial Valley of Kings - KV 23
    Successor
  • Ay planned for Nakhtmin to be his successor. However, Ay's plan went awry as the military advisor Horemheb succeeded the throne and wrecked Ay's tomb.
  • Wikipedia Ay
    Ay
    Aya
    Portrait study thought to be of Ay
    Portrait study thought to be of Ay
    Pharaoh of Egypt
    Reign 1323–1319 BC or 1327–1323 BC,  18th Dynasty
    Predecessor Tutankhamun
    Successor Horemheb
    Consort(s) Tey and Ankhesenamun
    Children Possibly Nefertiti and Mutnedjmet
    Died 1319 or 1323 BC
    Burial WV23
    Monuments Amarna Tomb

    Ay was the penultimate Pharaoh of Ancient Egypt's 18th dynasty. He held the throne of Egypt for a brief four-year period (probably 1323 – 1319 BC[1] or 1327 – 1323 BC, depending on which chronology is followed), although he was a close advisor to two and perhaps three of the pharaohs who ruled before him and was the power behind the throne during Tutankhamun's reign. Ay's prenomen or royal name—Kheperkheperure—means "Everlasting are the Manifestations of Ra" while his birth name Ay it-netjer reads as 'Ay, Father of the God.'[2] Records and monuments that can be clearly attributed to Ay are rare, not only due to his short length, but also because his successor, Horemheb, instigated a campaign of damnatio memoriae against him and other pharaohs associated with the unpopular Amarna Period.

     Origins

    Ay is usually believed to be a native Egyptian from Akhmim. During his short reign, he built a rock cut chapel in Akhmim and dedicated it to the local deity there: Min.[3] He may have been the son of Yuya, who served as a member of the priesthood of Min at Akhmin as well as superintendent of herds in this city, and wife Tjuyu.[4] If so, Ay could have been of partial non-Egyptian, perhaps Syrian blood since the name Yuya was uncommon in Egypt and is suggestive of a foreign background.[5] Yuya was an influential nobleman at the royal court of Amenhotep III who was given the rare privilege of having a tomb built for his use in the royal Valley of the Kings presumably because he was the father of Tiye, Amenhotep's chief Queen. There are also noted similarities in the physical likenesses of monuments attributed to Ay and those of the mummy of Yuya, and both held similar names and titles.[6]

     Amarna Period

    Born a commoner, Ay managed to rise through the hierarchy of Egyptian society under the "heretical" Pharaoh Akhenaten. One version of events maintains that he and his wife Tey (Tiye)were the parents of Akhenaten's chief wife, Nefertiti and that another of their daughters, Mutnedjmet, was the wife and queen of Horemheb, Ay's successor. Another version suggests that he was the son of Yuya and Tjuyu, thus being a brother or half-brother of Tiy, brother-in-law of Amenhotep III and maternal uncle of Akhenaten.

    The two theories are not mutually exclusive, but either relationship would explain the exalted status to which Ay rose (see below), during Akhenaten's Amarna interlude, when the royal family turned their backs on Egypt's traditional gods and experimented, for a dozen years or so, with monotheism; an experiment that, whether out of conviction or convenience, Ay appears to have followed under the reign of Akhenaten.

    If Ay was the son of Yuya, who was a senior military officer during the reign of Amenhotep III, then he likely followed in his father's footsteps, finally inheriting his father's military functions upon his death. All that is known for certain was that by the time he was permitted to build a tomb for himself at Akhetaten during the reign of Akhenaten, he had achieved the title of "Overseer of All the Horses of His Majesty", the highest rank in the elite charioteering division of the army, which was just below the rank of General.[7] The Great Hymn to the Aten is found in his Amarna tomb which was built during his service under Akhenaten. However, "it is likely that this was required by Akhenaten and therefore this is not evidence that Ay agreed with Akhenaten's decision to promote the Aten above all other gods."[8]

     Titles

    In his Amarna tomb, Ay's titles are given as Companion, Head of the Companions of the King, Father of the Divinity, Fan-bearer on the Right Side of the King, Acting Scribe of the King, beloved by him, and Overseer of All the Horses of His Majesty. Some of these titles are purely standardised noble ones, but the 'Fan-bearer on the Right Side of the King' is a very important position, and is viewed as showing that the bearer had the 'ear' of the ruler.

     Tutankhamun

    Ay's reign was preceded by that of Tutankhamun, who ascended to the throne at the age of nine or ten, at a time of great tension between the new monotheism and the old polytheism. He was assisted in his kingly duties by his predecessor's two closest advisors: Grand Vizier Ay and General of the Armies Horemheb. Tutankhamun's nine-year reign, largely under Ay's direction, saw the gradual return of the old gods – and, with that, the restoration of the power of the Amun priesthood, who had lost their influence over Egypt under Akhenaten.

    Egyptologist Bob Brier suggested that Ay murdered Tutankhamun in order to usurp the throne, a claim which was based on X-ray examinations of the body done in 1968 that found bone fragments inside Tutankhamun's skull. He also alleged that Ankhesenamen and the Hittite Prince she was about to marry were also murdered at his orders, and one can speculate he might be also involved at Ankhesenamen's two miscarriages and even at Akhenaten, Nefertiti and Smenkhare's deaths.[9] This murder theory was not accepted by all scholars, and more detailed CT-scans of the mummy undertaken by National Geographic (published in late 2005) suggested that Tutankhamun did not die from a blow to his head as Brier had theorized. The National Geographic forensic researchers instead presented a new theory that Tutankhamun died from an infection caused by a badly broken leg since he is often portrayed as walking with a cane due to spina bifida, a hereditary trait in his family on his father's side.[10] The bone fragments found in Tutankhamun's skull were most likely the result of post-mortem damage caused by Howard Carter's initial examination of the boy king "because they show no evidence of being inundated with the embalming fluid used to preserve the pharaoh for the afterlife."[11]

    When the results of the CT-Scan examination had been published, many scientists accepted its findings, but some still believe the mystery of Tutankhamun's death is far from solved and continue to support the older murder theory. There are books that have subsequently been published that adhere to the original murder theory and dispute the conclusions reached by the CT-Scan team, though also citing other means of murder, such as poisoning.[12] [13]

     Rule as Pharaoh

    Tutankhamun's untimely death at the age of 18 or 19, together with his failure to produce an heir, left a power vacuum that his Grand Vizier Ay was quick to fill: Ay is depicted conducting the funerary rites for the deceased monarch and assuming the role of heir. The grounds on which Ay based his successful claim to power are not entirely clear. The Commander of the Army, Horemheb, had actually been designated as the "idnw" or "Deputy of the Lord of the Two Lands" under Tutankhamun and was presumed to be the boy king's heir apparent and successor.[14] It appears that Horemheb was outmaneuvered to the throne by Ay who married Ankhesenamun, the widow of Tutankhamun, in order to legitimise his claim to the throne. Ay was certainly a powerful figure: he was close to the centre of political power at the royal palace for some 25 years under both Tutankhamun and Akhenaten. But this was probably still not enough, however, to legitimize his claims to the throne in the highly hierarchical society of Ancient Egypt, if he was of non-royal birth especially at a time of domestic upheaval without his marriage to Tutankhamun's widow. Since he was already advanced in age upon his accession, Ay ruled Egypt in his own right for only four years. During this period, he consolidated the return to the old religious ways that he had initiated as senior advisor and constructed a mortuary temple at Medinet Habu for his own use. A stela of Nakhtmin (Berlin 2074), a military officer under Tutankhamun and Ay—who was Ay's chosen successor— is dated to Year 4, IV Akhet day 1 of Ay's reign.[15] Manetho's Epitome is sometimes believed to attribute a reign of 4 years and 1 month to Ay.

    Royal Succession

    Prior to his death, Ay designated Nakhtmin to succeed him as pharaoh. However, Ay's plan for his succession went awry since Horemheb instead became the last king of Egypt's 18th Dynasty instead of Nakhtmin. The fact that Nakhtmin was Ay's intended heir is strongly implied by an inscription carved on a dyad funerary statue of Nakhtmin and his spouse which was presumably made during Ay's reign. Nakhtmin is clearly given the titles rpat (Crown Prince) and zA nzw (King's Son).[16] The only conclusion which can be drawn here is that Nakhtmin was either a son or an adopted son of Ay and that Ay was grooming Nakhtmin for the royal succession instead of Horemheb. The Egyptologists Aidan Dodson and Dyan Hilton observe that the aforementioned statue:

    "is broken after the signs for 'King's Son of', and there has been considerable debate as to whether it continued to say 'Kush', making Nakhtmin a Viceroy of Nubia, or 'of his body', making him an actual royal son. Since there is no other evidence for Nakhtmin as a Viceroy--with another man [Paser I][4]attested in office at this period as well--the latter suggestion seems the most likely. As Nakhtmin donated items to the burial of Tutankhamun without such a title, it follows that he only became a King's Son subsequently, presumably under Ay. This theory is supported by the evidence of intentional damage to Nakhtmin's statue, since Ay was amongst the Amarna pharaohs whose memories were execrated under later rulers."[17]

    Aftermath

    The burial chamber of Ay's tomb in the Valley of the Kings

    It appears that one of Horemheb's undertakings as Pharaoh was to eliminate all references to the monotheistic experiment, a process that included expunging the name of his immediate predecessors, especially Ay, from the historical record. Horemheb desecrated Ay's burial and had most of Ay's royal cartouches in his WV23 Tomb Wall paintings erased while his sarcophagus was smashed into numerous fragments.[18] However, the sarcophagus lid was discovered in 1972 by Otto Schaden, the US Egyptologist who opened Tomb KV63 in the Valley of the Kings in 2006. It still preserved Ay's cartouche. The sarcophagus had been buried under debris in this king's tomb.[19] Horemheb also usurped Ay's mortuary temple at Medinet Habu for his own use. Uvo Hölscher (1878-1963) who excavated the temple in the early 1930s provides these interesting details concerning the state of Ay-Horemheb's mortuary temple:

    'Wherever a cartouche has been preserved, the name of Eye [ie: Ay] has been erased and replaced by that of his successor Harmhab. In all but a single instance had it been overlooked and no change made. Thus the temple, which Eye had begun and finished, at least in the rear rooms with their fine paintings, was usurped by his successor and was thenceforth known as the temple of Harmhab. Seals on stoppers of wine jars from the temple magazines read: "Wine from the temple of Harmhab."'[20]

     In Fiction

    Ay appears as a major character in P. C. Doherty's trilogy of Ancient Egyptian novels, '"An Evil Spirit Out of the West", "The Season of the Hyaena" and "The Year of the Cobra". He is also a character in Mika Waltari's historical novel "The Egyptian" and Wolfgang Hohlbein's Die Prophezeihung (The Prophecy). He is also a major character in Michelle Moran's bestselling novel Nefertiti.

    References

    1. ^ Erik Hornung, Rolf Krauss & David Warburton (editors), Ancient Egyptian Chronology (Handbook of Oriental Studies), Brill: 2006, p.493
    2. ^ Peter Clayton, Chronicle of the Pharaohs, Thames & Hudson Ltd, 1994. p.136
    3. ^ [1]
    4. ^ Egypt during the reign of Akhenaton
    5. ^ Yuya's name was analysed by G. Maspero in "The Tomb of Iouiya and Touiyou" by Theodore M. Davis, Archibald Constable and Co. Ltd, 1907, pp.xiii-xiv
    6. ^ Hindley, Marshall. Featured Pharaoh: The God's Father Ay, Ancient Egypt, April/May 2006. p.26
    7. ^ Hindley, Marshall. Featured Pharaoh: The God's Father Ay, Ancient Egypt, April/May 2006. p.27-28.
    8. ^ http://www.ancientegyptonline.co.uk/ay.html
    9. ^ Hawass, Zahi. "Scanning Tutankhamun", KMT. Volume 16, Number 2. p.33. Summer 2005.
    10. ^ Hawass, Zahi. "Scanning Tutankhamun", KMT. Volume 16, Number 2. p.34. Summer 2005.
    11. ^ [2] [3] King Tut Not Murdered Violently, CT Scans Show, National Geographic, March 8, 2005.
    12. ^ Haywood, John. The Penguin Historical Atlas of Ancient Civilizations p.56. Penguin. 2005. ISBN 0141014482
    13. ^ King, Michael R., Cooper, Gregory M. Who Killed King Tut?: Using Modern Forensics to Solve a 3300-Year-Old Mystery (with New Data on the Egyptian CT Scan), New Ed. 2006. ISBN 1591024013
    14. ^ Peter J. Brand, The Monuments of Seti I: Epigraphic, Historical and Art Historical Analysis, Brill, NV Leiden, (2000), p.311
    15. ^ Urk IV: 2110
    16. ^ Wolfgang Helck, Urkunden der 18. Dynastie: Texte der Hefte 20-21 (Berlin: Akademie-Verlag, 1984), pp.1908-1910
    17. ^ Aidan Dodson & Dyan Hilton, The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt, Thames & Hudson, (2004), p.151
    18. ^ Bertha Porter, Topographical Bibliography of Ancient Egyptian Hieroglyph Texts, Vol 1, Part 2, Oxford Clarendon Press, (1960), Tomb 23, pp.550-551
    19. ^ Otto Schaden, Clearance of the Tomb of King Ay (WV 23), JARCE 21(1984) pp.39-64
    20. ^ Uvo Hölscher, Excavations at Ancient Thebes 1930/31, pp.50-51
    • Jürgen von Beckerath, Chronologie des Pharaonischen Ägypten, MÄS 46 (Philip von Zabern, Mainz: 1997), pp.201

     See also

     External links

     

    Ay, Successor to Tutankhamun
    by Mark Andrews

    Cartouche of AyThe 18th dynasty is one of the most interesting periods in Egypt's history, having such notable kings as Akhenaten, the heretic king, and such well known kings as Tutankhamun.  Ay, who was probably an old man (at least 70) when he inherited the throne from Tutankhamun, apparently inherited the throne by marrying Tutankhamun's widow, Ankhesenamun. There seems to have been considerable intrigue to this marriage. This she likely did against her wishes, as Ay was probably her grandfather. Further, is would seem that she was not even regarded as a dominant wife, as paintings in his tomb usually showed Ay accompanied by Tiy, (Tiye)an older wife. In fact, we learn from Hittite archives that Ankhesenamun wrote to Suppiliumas, the Hittite king, requesting one of this sons for her to marry and make pharaoh. After some investigation by Suppiliumas, this request was granted, but his son, Zannanza was killed en-route while traveling through Syria.  

    But evidence of Ankhesenamun's  marriage to Ay was noted by Professor Percy Newberry, who recorded a ring he found in Cairo in the 1920s with the cartouches of Ay and Ankhesenamun inscribed side by side, a typical way of indicating marriage.  This wedding must have happened rapidly, for Ay officiated at Tutankhamun's funeral as a king wearing the Blue Crown, thus enhancing his claim to the thronn. His reign was brief, believed to only have been four years. It is likely that Ankhensenamun died very shortly afterwards, for there is no mention of her beyond the Cairo ring. In fact, her image has been hacked out on several monuments, and it has been suggested that her dealings with the Hittites may have disgraced her, resulting in her death.

    Ay (it-netjer) means "Father of God.  His Throne name was Kheperkheperu-re, meaning "Everlasting are the Manifestations of Re". He is first documented as a Master of Horses at the court of Akhenaten, though he was probably originally from Akhmin, where was responsible for the rock chapel to the local god, Min.  His career is fairly well documented during the reign of Akhenaten, when he rose to the position of Vizier and royal chancellor. He probably never held any priestly office prior to becoming king, however, but was instead a military man like most of the men of power during this period. He may have been related to Yuya, the father of Queen Tiye, making him the brother-in-law of Amenophis III.

    Ay, Successor to TutankhamunWe believe Ay reigned in Egypt between 1325 and 1321 BC, and was burried in Tomb KV 23 in the Valley of the Kings on the West Bank at Luxor (ancient Thebes), though his mummy has never been positively identified. It has been suggested that the mummy from the 1881 cache originally identified as Amenhotep III might rather be that of Ay, but this is probably doubtful. This tomb was probably originally meant for Tutankhamun.  Ay's sarcophagus was very similar to Tutankhamun's with winged goddesses at each corner. Also present, as in Tutankhamun's tomb, were decorative designs featuring the representation of the twelve monkeys, symbolizing the night hours on one of the burial chamber walls.  Totally unique to any royal tomb are beautiful bird hunting scenes.  The tomb was discovered by Belzoni in 1816.

    It was probably Horenheb who succeeded Ay and who wrecked havoc in Ay's tomb in the Valley of the Kings.  When Belzoni found the tomb, the sarcophagus was in fragments and his figure was hacked out and his name excised in the wall paintings and text. Likewise, little of Ay's building projects can be identified probably because Horenheb probably usurped these Ay, Successor to Tutankhamunas well.  In Ay's mortuary temple near Medinet Habu, he had his name inscribed on two quartzite colossi of Tutankhamun, but these too were modified by Horenheb when he took over Ay's temple complex. Ay had nominally carried on the heretic religious practices of Akhenaten, and it would be Horemheb who would put an end to this.

    It should also be noted that early on, Ay began construction of one of the largest tombs at El-Amarna, containing the longer of the two surviving versions of the Hymn to the Aten.  The last decoration in Ay's el-Amarna tomb was probably created in the ninth year of Akenaten's reign. However, this tomb was later abandoned in favor of the tomb in the Valley of the Kings. 

    Archives

     

     

     

    Spiritweb.us

    PROMOTING SPIRITUAL CONSCIOUSNESS 

       ART GALLERY - CHANNELING - EGYPT - LIGHTWORK - UFO  -  HEALING - REINCARNATION  - MEDITATION
    -
    OUT OF BODY  - YOGA PATHS - VEDA & DHARMA -
     THEOSOPHY - MYSTICISM  - ASTROLOGY