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[[File: Akhenaten, Nefertiti and their children.jpg|thumbnail|250px|left|Akhenaten, Nefertiti, and their children]]
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In 1353 or possibly 1351 BCE, Amenhotep IV ascended to the throne of Egypt. In the fourth year of his reign, he changed his name to Akhenaten. He created a new [[How did Monotheism Develop?| monotheistic religion]] devoted to a single god named the Aten. However, the pharaoh’s loyalty was not enough, and soon Akhenaten required that all of Egypt adopt his new god and abandon their old pantheon in favor of sun worship. This religion consumed his reign, and the changes he made were remarkable. The most notable effects of his conversion included an entirely new religious philosophy and style of artistic expression, the establishment of a new capital city, and a ruinous disregard for foreign policy. His efforts would ultimately prove to be futile, as Akhenaten and his sun cult were all but forgotten in the years following his death.
==Why did Akhenaten try to erase the Old Egyptian Gods?==
[[File:Amun-Ra.jpg|thumbnail|275px|left|Amun-Ra from Karnak Temple complex]]
In the same year, Akhenaten began a widespread attempt to remove any signs of the traditional Egyptian deities systematically. It appears that Amen was the main focus of the king’s disapproval, and a fleet of semi-literate workers wer=e dispatched to chisel away symbols and words that bore any passing resemblance to his name. <ref>Williamson, <i>UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology</i>: 8</ref> Even private tombs were defaced, including the tomb of Khereuf, where many of the images of Amen were chiseled off the walls. <ref><i>The Tomb of Kheruef</i>, 17</ref>

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