Amun King of the Gods

Amun king of the gods put Amenhetep III to the throne
In the New Kingdom the divinity of Amun was  enhanced  by  reading  him  as  a mysterious  demonstration  of  the  ancient sun-god  of  Heliopolis. The  name  of  the deity is given the additional symbolisation of the solar disk. The solar connexion is found in imagery of Amun and the lion, the sun-gods  creature: Amun  is  called  a  fierce red-eyed  lion.  Amun  as  sun-deity  is the substance of a description practiced to him in the Book of  the Dead as eldest of the gods of the northeastern sky. During the rule of Amenhotep III  in the 18th Dynasty  two brothers,  Suti  and  Hor,  were  architects took in the memorial of Amun now named Luxor temple. On a granite stella in the  British  Museum  they  illustrate  the important  and  it  led  to  Amun  being involved  as  the  pre-eminent  god  of  the pantheon. His style king of the deities (first occurrent  in  the  White  Chapel  of Senwosret I of the twelfth Dynasty) illustrates his superb  status.  The  Egyptian  title  for Amun-Ra king of the gods was Amon-Ra  nesu  netjeru which  lies  down  the Greek  version  of  Amonrasonther.  This sovereignty is also got by an name first found in the Middle Kingdom, Lord of  the  Thrones  of  the  Two  Lands (i.e. Upper  and  Lower  Egypt  are  associate  his swing). Later it was natural for the Greek writers  like  Herodotus  and  Plutarch  to rationalise Amun  by  tracing  that  he was Olympian Zeus among the Egyptians. This recognition with the Greek deity is held  into  the  Roman  period. Minings  at Tell  el-Farama  south-east of Port Said revealed evidence of a temple to the chief deity Zeus Casius. The site is to  be  equated  with  ancient  Pelusium, a name  deriving  from  the  Egyptian description thinking house of Amun

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