The gods temple Ipet-Sut is predicted by Hatshepsut on her obelisk hill of the start, indicating that it was the set where Amun took the cosmos into existence. Hymns from the late New Kingdom emphasise the role of Amun as a primeval deity, making sky and earth by his thoughts. The phenomenon of the annual Nile flood, and the blowing of the north wind upriver derive from Amuns nature as elusive to determine as the air, which, alike all the other gods, is but a reflection of the deep Amun. Guess on Amun as a universal super deity brought the Egyptian theologiser very close to the concept of monotheism, although they never considered the steps that would exclude all other deities from the temples. The worship of Amun in this prospect was henotheism in Egyptian terms turning ones tightness onto the superb deity while not denying that he has provided a myriad of other God to be honoured as tell of his breeding power.