Tutankhamun

Akhenaten

Akhenaten was an Eighteenth Dynasty pharaoh of Egypt, formerly Amenhotep IV, who promoted exclusive worship of the Aten, founded Amarna, and became one of ancient history's most debated rulers.

Born
1370 BCE
Died
1336 BCE
Role
Pharaoh of Egypt

Pharaoh of Egypt (1370 BC–1336 BC)

Portrait of Akhenaten in ancient Egyptian royal attire
Quick facts

Profile details

Additional identity and tagging details that are not already covered in the introduction.

Also known as
Amenhotep IV
Facts

Akhenaten timeline facts

Selected specifics from this profile's life story.

c. 1370 BC
Royal origins

Akhenaten was born Amenhotep IV into Egypt's powerful Eighteenth Dynasty, inheriting a wealthy kingdom where royal power and temple religion were tightly connected.

c. 1346 BC
Building Akhetaten

He founded Akhetaten, modern Amarna, as a new royal city dedicated to the Aten and separated from Egypt's older sacred centers.

c. 1336 BC
Death and succession

Akhenaten died after about seventeen years on the throne, leaving a fragile succession that quickly moved away from Atenist revolution.

After 1336 BC
Rediscovery and legacy

Modern rediscovery turned Akhenaten into one of Egypt's most debated pharaohs: visionary, fanatic, reformer, heretic, or political centralizer.

Life Journey

Reformation, revolution, and erasure

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c. 1370 BC

Royal origins

Akhenaten was born Amenhotep IV into Egypt's powerful Eighteenth Dynasty, inheriting a wealthy kingdom where royal power and temple religion were tightly connected.

c. 1353 BC

Early reign

He began as Amenhotep IV, but early signs of religious and artistic change showed that his reign would not simply continue the traditions of his father.

c. 1348 BC

The Aten revolution

Akhenaten elevated the Aten above Egypt's traditional gods, changed his name, and turned royal religion into a radical experiment in exclusive solar worship.

c. 1346 BC

Building Akhetaten

He founded Akhetaten, modern Amarna, as a new royal city dedicated to the Aten and separated from Egypt's older sacred centers.

c. 1345 BC–1340 BC

Peak of power

At Amarna, Akhenaten and Nefertiti created one of Egypt's most distinctive artistic cultures while concentrating religion around the royal family.

c. 1340 BC–1336 BC

Signs of strain

Akhenaten's later reign shows signs of strain, from diplomatic complaints abroad to uncertainty over succession and the fate of Nefertiti.

c. 1336 BC

Death and succession

Akhenaten died after about seventeen years on the throne, leaving a fragile succession that quickly moved away from Atenist revolution.

c. 1330 BC–1300 BC

Systematic erasure

Later pharaohs restored Amun, dismantled Amarna, and removed Akhenaten from official memory as if his reign had been illegitimate.

After 1336 BC

Rediscovery and legacy

Modern rediscovery turned Akhenaten into one of Egypt's most debated pharaohs: visionary, fanatic, reformer, heretic, or political centralizer.

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Content note

This profile is written for educational use and connects to related Stories of History pages. Illustrations are original artistic interpretations.

References

Sources & Further Reading

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Further reading

  1. Encyclopaedia Britannica, Search results for Akhenaten,” accessed June 2026.Open source
  2. WorldCat, Books and library holdings for Akhenaten,” accessed June 2026.Open source

Primary sources

  1. Library of Congress, Search results for Akhenaten,” accessed June 2026.Open source

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