Building Legacies. It is easy to overlook Ay, as a minor figure in the history of ancient Egypt. However, when we step back, and view his entire career (including pre-royal achievements), we can see things more clearly. As pharaoh, Ay continued many projects started under Tutankhamun. But since Ay had been a major advisor / courtier for that king, we can recognise these projects as part of a larger, longer trend. After the death of Akhenaten, the royal household radically reshaped many of its priorities. Since he first appeared on the scene, Ay was at the heart of those decisions…
Episode details:
Date: c.1331 BCE.
Kings: Kheper-kheperu-Ra Ay, “Who Repels the ‘Asiatics.’”
Episode logo: A colossal statue in Cairo Museum. Often attributed to Tutankhamun but excavated from the Memorial Temple of Ay.
Music: “Lament of Isis and Nephythys on the Death of Osiris,” by Jeffrey Goodman
www.jeffreygoodmanmusic.com.
Additional music interludes by Luke Chaos
https://twitter.com/Luke_Chaos.
References and images at
www.egyptianhistorypodcast.com.
Support the show at
www.patreon.com/egyptpodcast.
Select References:
A. Dodson, Amarna Sunset: Nefertiti, Tutankhamun, Ay, Horemheb, and the Egyptian Counter-Reformation (2nd edn, 2017).
M. Gabolde, Toutankhamon (2015).
U. Hölscher, The Excavation of Medinet Habu II: The Temples of the Eighteenth Dynasty (1939). Free download available from The University of Chicago website.
O. Schaden, ‘The God’s Father Ay’, PhD Thesis (1977).
Full bibliography and references at
www.egyptianhistorypodcast.com.
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