The Fall of the Egyptian Empire
In my opinion, the fall began when the Pharaohs got smart to the setup the priests
had. Try reading (
The Curse of the Pharaoh!) first for a background on Akhenaton.
Akhenaton was the first pharaoh in a long time to take charge of the kingdom
again. He was a new-kingdom pharaoh and, previously, pharaohs were sheltered in
their palace while priests took care of everything
economical, and any
decision
that king should make. The king was only their to perform
rituals to ensure
stability in the universe (read:
Daily Rituals of the Pharaoh for further
background).
Akhenaton was originally named
Akhenamen, after the god amen. Amen was the
alpha-god in a
pantheon of smaller gods. They were still gods, but not as
important. Akhenamen took the god Aton (a god that as not very important) and
made him the
only god. He tried to convert the whole kingdom to
monotheism. Then he changed his name to Akhenaton, after the god Aton. With
only one god, their only needed to be one figure of power. He no longer needed or
wanted priests ruling with him. The priests didn't like this. He changed the capital
from
Thebes to a city built for
Aton, Amarna (now called Tell el-Amarna).
After Akhenaton's death, his city was thouroughly abandoned and then torn down.
The
traditional religion reigned, but only after king Tut came around. King
Tutankhamen was very young when he became king; not even 9. At this young age
he was very easily
influenced. That's why the priests started when he was young.
King Tutankhamen ruled for a decade until he was
eighteen. It is most likely that
he was the son of Akhenaton by a minor wife. He does hae some of the distorted
bodily features as Akhenaton and he wears the same style of clothing that
Akhenaton invented. Obviously the priests thought it was ok. There are DNA
analysese being conducted currently to prove that Tutankhamen was the son of
Akhenaton but until the results are made public, we don't know yet. Anyways,
remember how Akhenaton's name used to be Akhen-
amen. Well, the
famous king
Tutkhamen's name used to be Tutankh-
aton. He was
originally named after Aton as his father wanted. So was his wife, but it was then
changed by the priests who coerced him into reinstating the old religion in Egypt.
Now let's fast-forward to a more
zealous king,
Ramses II. He happens to be just
about the last great
pharaoh. The first, noticable thing we mention he did was
proclaim himself a "full god" during his life-time. Now, we all know the kings were
supposedly descendants of the gods, but they were not officially "full gods" until
they died and fused with
Osiris. This is shown in his
sculpture. The front of his
temple is four
gigantic sculptures of himself. They are very
blocky and
undetailed compared to small sculptures but that's just because they are so large.
It also does give him a more
intimidating look. The gods shown around him are all
much smaller than him. This is
highly unusual. Normally, the rest of the pharaoh's
family and his subjects are all smaller than him, which is normal. But usually gods
are shown much large than the pharaoh, unless they are in animal form, in which
case they are shown in a higher position or in some form of protective position.
So, after the last great king, Egypt started having trouble. Not at first, but soon it
developed. It began with
internal conflict, between the city-states that made up
Egypt. The king returned to his
position as a
solitary ritual-performer with no
real power and the leaders of the individual city-states started defying the king.
THey made their own laws, collected
taxes for themselves and disregarded any
orders from the king's palace.
Then the conflicts became
international and
Egypt, in its weakest state ever, had
little to call an
army, and it was invaded several times; first, by the
Assyrians,
then the
Persians. They both eventually left and the
Greeks took over, until
finally the
Romans came and wanted to add Egypt to their huge
Empire (and we
all know how that turned out).
I think that the outright religous defiance of King Ramses II was Egypt's "blaze of
glory" before it fell and it was the last straw before corruption completely took
over, became fat, and eventually
helpless. Ramses II was
famous, but not for
this. He was the king who enslaved the
Hebrews and made them build his temple
(remember the whole thing with
Moses?). Some might also say that
God cursed
the kingdom after that. (I don't
know about that.)