NOTE: Well, let the A-Z Challenge begin! Before you start (and I hope you do), I must emphasize that what you're about to read over the next month merely scratches the surface. If you wish to learn more, may I suggest you dig even deeper. Also, since we're talking Penwasser Place here, not everything you read is factual. Come to think of it, most of what you read is not factual. But, some is. Good luck with that!
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| Got a condo made of stonah |
| "Come on. You know that's bullshit." |
Akhenaten or Akhenaton
or Echnaton or Lou (to his close friends) was the tenth pharaoh of Egypt’s
Eighteenth Dynasty from 1353 BC-1336 BC (or “BCE” to you politically-correct
ninnies). Or 1351-1334. People aren’t positive. Basically, it was a long-ass time ago.
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| Older than even Keith Richards |
Beginning his
reign as Amenhotep IV, he changed his name to “Akhenaten” (meaning “effective
of Aten”) in the fifth year of his reign (those crazy teenagers) when he
abolished Egypt’s ancient polytheistic (meaning veneration of many gods. Or parrots) cult in favor of that wacky Atenism,
which venerated the sun. And whose motto
was MEGA (Make Egypt Great Again).
Perhaps.
Anyway, he founded
the city of Amarna, which was meant to be the headquarters for the new religion. However, for reasons which will become clear,
it disappeared into the desert and wasn’t discovered until the 19th century.
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| The ruins of Amarn...oops, sorry. This is Los Angeles. |
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| Not to be confused with "Amana." Hey, I wouldn't blame you if you were. There's all sort of crazy stuff here. |
When Lou died, Atenism died with him. Follow-on
rulers ordered that mention of his name be stricken from all aspects of
Egyptian life. This included all executive
orders royal pronouncements, religious inscriptions, monuments, and his
name was even excluded from a list of list of rulers by later pharaohs, preventing
his election to the Egyptian Hall of Fame.
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| "He was called 'that criminal' and 'Nile Crocodile Dung." |
The city of Amarna was even abandoned. And not just because it wasn’t prime beachfront property.
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| The Red Sea was sooooooo close. NOTE: Their wives went to Nag Hammadi |
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| "Come on. You gotta admit, that was pretty funny." |
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| "What'd I say?" |
The residents were encouraged to relocate to Memphis, which proved to be a disappointment, due to lack of jazz and good barbecue.
Bottom line, not a popular guy. Especially once he left.
And not just because he smelled like croc poop.









🤣 OMG. Love this version. You're gonna make me laugh all month! So, has history repeated itself with a dung-smelling leader who is trying to recreate religion? Did Akhen also sell stuff he never delivered? 😅
ReplyDeleteApril is the ideal time to refresh goals and turn small daily actions into major wins, utilizing the season's new energy for growth.
“Every day is a chance to begin again. Don’t focus on the failures of yesterday, start today with positive thoughts and expectations.” ― Catherine Pulsifer
J (he/him 👨🏽 or 🧑🏽 they/them) @JLenniDorner ~ Speculative Fiction & Reference Author and Co-host of the April Blogging #AtoZChallenge international blog hop
Laugh all month? I certainly hope so. Believe it or not, there is actual history sprinkled here and there.
DeleteWhat struck me is how often there are instances of history repeating itself.
He was really unpopular to have himself stricken from all records...
ReplyDeleteIt's a fascinating story. The ancient Egyptians wanted no more part of him once he moved on to the afterlife. The same basic thing happened to the Roman emperor, Elagabalus (my "E" post).
DeleteJamie (jannghiblogspot.com):
ReplyDeleteWhat you are posting may not be factual, it may be worth learning.
The funny thing? Some bits ARE factual. Most aren't though...LOL.
DeleteYou've got a wry sense of humor that i like. I think I'm going to really enjoy this A to Z challenge of reading and posting.
ReplyDeleteI hope so. I think I'm a bit daft.
DeleteThis is gloriously unhinged pseudo-history in the best possible way; I genuinely couldn’t tell at first whether I was reading Akhenaten or an Onion article with footnotes.
ReplyDeleteAlso, my husband always teases me that (according to him) I believe anything prior to the Beatles is basically medieval. So since the Beatles and the Rolling Stones are roughly the same age, I feel “a long-ass time ago” is actually a very scientifically accurate historical unit of measurement.
Lou/Amarna/Memphis/Jazz shortage aside… I’m here for this version of Egypt history.
I hope you come back. The rest of the month will be like this. Not necessarily Egyptian, either.
Delete"Unhinged pseudo-history." I love that.
Mostly because that is precisely what it is.
I have no clue who this guy is but I already forgotten what I read about him. But thanks for the history lesson. I was happily entertained.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your visit to my blog. Have a lovely day.
I'm not surprised he was erased from reality. you can't dictate religious beliefs and expect people to like you. Plus deodorant…they make it for a reason.
ReplyDeleteI was fascinated by this story. As I told Alex above, the same basic thing happened to the Roman emperor, Elagabulus. Purely a coincidence that I chose him for "E."
DeleteWhich just goes to prove that you may try to erase all mention of them, somehow someone will still remember them.
ReplyDeleteSomeone will always find you.
DeleteThis dude was married to Nefrititi, that beautiful bust of a gal with one eye. He was not married to Nefretiri....Yul would have had a conniption fit. I believe their son was King Tut. This guy would have loved the Pope.
ReplyDeleteNefertiri...hubba hubba,
Delete