(West Asian mythology)

An Egyptian ram-headed god, often shown as a bearded man wearing a cap with two tall plumes. The era of this Theban sky god's greatest ascendancy occurred in the sixteenth century BC when the Egyptians expelled the Hyksos invaders and extended the imperial frontiers into Canaan. Rivalry with Re was eliminated by the association of Amun with Re as Amon-Re, except during the reign of Akhenaton. As a dynastic guardian, Amon-Re was ‘king of the gods’, incarnate in the ruling pharaoh, and out of the tribute of Asia great temples were built for his worship at Luxor and Karnak.

Amun was looked upon as one of the creators of the universe and in prayers devotees besought his known generosity. To the Greeks he was Ammon, identified with Zeus, and famous for his oracle at Siwa in Libya. Herodotus was told by ‘the priests of Thebes that two of their priestesses had been abducted by Phoenicians, who sold one in Libya, and the other in Greece. These women, they said, were the founders of divination in those two countries, setting up there the original oracles.’

Amen

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also A·mon or Am·mon (ä'mən) pronunciation
n. Mythology
The Egyptian god of life and reproduction, represented as a man with a ram's head.



Granite statue of Amon in the form of a ram protecting King Taharqa, 25th dynasty, 690–664
(click to enlarge)
Granite statue of Amon in the form of a ram protecting King Taharqa, 25th dynasty, 690–664 (credit: The British Museum/Heritage-Images)
Egyptian deity revered as king of the gods. Amon may have originally been one of the eight deities of the Hermapolite creation myth. His cult spread to Thebes, where he became patron of the pharaohs by Mentuhotep I's reign (20081957 ) and was identified with the sun god Re. Represented as a human, a ram, or both, Amon-Re was worshiped with the goddess Mut and the youthful god Khons. Akhenaton directed his reforms against the cult of Amon, but with little success, and Amon's status was restored in the 14th13th century . In the New Kingdom, Amon came to be seen as one of a triad with Ptah and Re, and in the 11th10th century as a universal god who intervened in affairs of state by speaking through oracles.

For more information on Amon, visit Britannica.com.


A word meaning "truly" or "so be it," used to endorse a hope or wish but more especially to confirm a blessing, curse, or prayer which one has heard. There are 14 examples of this formula in the Hebrew Bible (Deut. 27:15ff., Ps. 106:48, etc.). In the ritual of the First Temple, as a congregational response to the Priestly Blessing, amen was not used. During and after the period of the Second Temple, it assumed lasting importance in the synagogue Liturgy. From the musical service of the Levites and from the prayers and blessings of later Jewish worship, the use of amen as a standard response was also adopted by Christians (and, to a lesser extent, by Muslims). Talmudic sources relate that the huge central synagogue of Alexandria drew such a vast congregation that an official had to signal with a flag whenever worshipers needed to respond with amen (Suk. 51b). According to a rabbinic homily, this term is an acronym for El Melekh Ne'Eman ("God, faithful King"; Shab. 119b). Both sinful Jews and righteous Gentiles have only to say amen once to be saved from perdition (Yal. Deut. 837). In general, the rule is that all prescribed Benedictions are to be answered with amen. It is forbidden to do so, however, when someone pronounces a vain or superfluous blessing, nor may one give this response to a blessing of one's own, except when reciting the benediction for Jerusalem in Grace After Meals. Amen should be said after each complete sentence of the Kaddish and after each verse of the Priestly Blessing, the only time that amen can be melodically prolonged (cf. Ber. 47a). In some Diaspora communities, the response after the last verse of the Priestly Blessing is extended to amen, ken yehi ratson---"Amen, may this be God's will!"

A Hebrew word transliterated in Gree k or sometimes translated "truly" (Jer 28:6, Septuagint), "let it happen," or "so be it" (Jer 11:5). In one text it is possible that God is called Amen or "God of Truth" (Is 65:16).

Amen is an exclamation by which listeners participate in a prayer, doxology, blessing or curse and declare their willingness to bear the results of this participation. By saying "Amen", the speaker promises to do as commanded by the king or God, and asks God to do what he has promised or what is requested in the prayer (I Kgs 1:36; Jer 11:5; 28:6).

Such a response can also be liturgical; e.g. when the wife accused of adultery responds to the curse of the priest with "Amen, so be it" (Num 5:22) and especially when the people respond to the curses of the Levites (Deut 27:15-26).

The doxological Amen is a special liturgical response with early roots going back at least to the Exile in Babylon (Ps 106:46-48). Although perhaps not used in the Herodian Temple, elsewhere the benediction "Blessed be the Lord", uttered by the leader or choir brought the congregation to respond with-the word Amen (I Chr 16:36). The division of the books of Psalms was marked either with a single (Ps 106:48) or a double Amen (Ps 41:13; 72:19; 89:52).

The NT usage of Amen is mainly consistent with the above. It forms a response to a spoken prayer which all have understood (I Cor 14:16), to a doxology (Rev 1:6; 5:14), or to a promise of the heavenly Christ (Rev 22:20). Paul declares that the Christ proclaimed by him "was never a blend of Yes and No. With him it was and is, Yes. He is the Yes and Amen pronounced upon God's promises, every one of them." He argues further that this is the reason why, "when we give glory to God, it is through Christ Jesus that we say Amen" (II Cor 1:19-20, New English Bible). Three unique usages of the NT writers are reflected in this Pauline affirmation. "The Amen" becomes one of the titles of Christ as the faithful and the true witness (Rev 3:14). Paul also seems to be in touch with the solemn use of this formula by Jesus, reflected most strongly in the Johannine writings where it appears some 24 times in almost stereotypical fashion. The fact that the gospel tradition attributes it exclusively to the lips of Jesus, indicates something of the importance attached to it as a solemn statement having the force of an oath (Luke 23:43).



(Amon, Amun) [Di]

God of Thebes in Upper Egypt who came to prominence during the rise of the Theban dynasties in the Middle and New Kingdoms. Though represented in human form, he is associated with the ram, and later came to be assimilated with the sun god Ra and as Amen-Ra was patron god of the Egyptian empire.

Amon (ā'mŏn) [Heb.,=trustworthy].

1 King of Judah (642-640 B.C.), son and successor of Manasseh. According to Chronicles, he was inattentive to the worship of God, and the accounts accordingly denounce him strongly. However, his worship of other gods indicates that he, like his father, was an Assyrian vassal. Amon was murdered, and Josiah succeeded him.

2 In the Bible, Ahab's governor of Samaria.

  See crossword solutions for the clue Amen.
Amun

Amun depicted with a tall feather crown
King of the Gods
Name in hieroglyphs
i mn
n
C12
Major cult center Thebes
Symbol two vertical plumes, the ram-headed Sphinx (Criosphinx)
Parents none (self-created)
Consort Amunet
Wosret
Mut

Amun, reconstructed Egyptian Yamānu[citation needed] (also spelled Amon, Amoun, Amen, Zeus Amun, and rarely Imen or Yamun, Greek Ἄμμων Ammon, and Ἅμμων Hammon[citation needed]), was a god in Egyptian and Berber mythology who in the form of Amun-Ra became the focus of the most complex system of theology in Ancient Egypt. Whilst remaining hypostatic, Amun represented the essential and hidden, whilst in Ra he represented revealed divinity. As the creator deity "par excellence", he was the champion of the poor or troubled and central to personal piety.[1]

Amun was self-created, without mother and father, and during the New Kingdom he became the greatest expression of transcendental deity in Egyptian theology. He was not considered to be immanent within creation nor was creation seen as an extension of himself. Amun-Ra did not physically engender the universe. His position as King of Gods developed to the point of virtual monotheism where other gods became manifestations of him. With Osiris, Amun-Ra is the most widely recorded of the Egyptian gods.[1] He was also widely worshipped in the neighboring regions of Ancient Libya and Nubia.

Contents

Family

Amun created himself alone.[2] His first wife was Wosret, but he later married Amunet and Mut. With Mut he is a father of the moon god Khonsu.

Rise of god after expulsion of Hyksos

Bas-relief depicting Amun as pharaoh

When the army of the founder of the Eighteenth dynasty expelled the Hyksos rulers from Egypt, the victor's city of origin, Thebes, became the most important city in Egypt, the capital of a new dynasty. The local patron deity of Thebes, Amun, therefore became nationally important. The pharaohs of that new dynasty attributed all their successful enterprises to Amun and they lavished much of their wealth and captured spoil on the construction of temples dedicated to Amun.

As the Egyptians considered themselves oppressed during the period of the Hyksos rule, the victory accomplished by pharaohs who worshipped Amun, brought him to be seen as a champion of the less fortunate. Consequently, Amun was viewed as upholding the rights of justice for the poor.[1] By aiding those who traveled in his name, he became the Protector of the road. Since he upheld Ma'at (truth, justice, and goodness),[1] those who prayed to Amun were required, first, to demonstrate that they were worthy by confessing their sins. Votive stelae from the artisans' village at Deir el-Medina record:

[Amun] who comes at the voice of the poor in distress, who gives breath to him who is wretched..You are Amun, the Lord of the silent, who comes at the voice of the poor; when I call to you in my distress You come and rescue me...Though the servant was disposed to do evil, the Lord is disposed to forgive. The Lord of Thebes spends not a whole day in anger; His wrath passes in a moment; none remains. His breath comes back to us in mercy..May your ka be kind; may you forgive; It shall not happen again.[3]

Much later, because of the evidence of the adoration given to Amun in many regions during the height of his cult, Greek travellers to Egypt would report that Amun—who they determined to be the ruler of the Egyptian pantheon—was similar to the leader of the Classical Greek pantheon, Zeus, and therefore they became identified by the Greeks as the same deity. Likewise, Amun's consort Mut became associated by these Greeks with Zeus's consort in the Classical pantheon, Hera.

Praises of Amun on stelae are strikingly similar in language to those later used in the reign of Akhenaton, in particular the Hymn to the Aten:

"When thou crossest the sky, all faces behold thee, but when thou departest, thou are hidden from their faces.. When thou settest in the western mountain, then they sleep in the manner of death..The fashioner of that which the soil produces,...a mother of profit to gods and men; a patient craftsmen, greatly wearying himself as their maker..valiant herdsman, driving his cattle, their refuge and the making of their living..The sole Lord, who reaches the end of the lands every day, as one who sees them that tread thereon..Every land chatters at his rising every day, in order to praise him."[4]

Amun-Min as Amun-Ra ka-Mut-ef from the temple at Deir el Medina.

Subsequently, when Egypt conquered Kush, they identified the chief deity of the Kushites as Amun. This Kush deity was depicted as ram-headed, more specifically a woolly ram with curved horns*—so Amun became associated with the ram: indeed, due to the aged appearance of the Kush ram deity.

Since rams were considered a symbol of virility due to their rutting behavior, Amun also became thought of as a fertility deity, and so started to absorb the identity of Min, becoming Amun-Min. This association with virility led to Amun-Min gaining the epithet Kamutef, meaning Bull of his mother,[5] in which form he was found depicted on the walls of Karnak, ithyphallic, and with a scourge, as Min was.

Sun God

i mn
n
ra
Z1
C1
Amun-Ra
in hieroglyphs
Amun-Ra

As the cult of Amun grew in importance, Amun became identified with the chief deity who was worshipped in other areas during that period, the sun god Ra. This identification led to another merger of identities, with Amun becoming Amun-Ra. In the Hymn to Amun-Ra he is described as

"Lord of truth, father of the gods, maker of men, creator of all animals, Lord of things that are, creator of the staff of life."[6]

During the later part of the eighteenth dynasty, the pharaoh Akhenaten (also known as Amenhotep IV) disliked the power of the temple of Amun and advanced the worship of the Aten, a deity whose power was manifested in the sun disk, both literally and symbolically. He defaced the symbols of many of the old deities and based his religious practices upon the deity, the Aten. He moved his capitol away from Thebes, but this abrupt change was very unpopular with the priests of Amun, who now found themselves without any of their former power. The religion of Egypt was inexorably tied to the leadership of the country, the pharaoh being the leader of both. The pharaoh was the highest priest in the temple of the capital and the next lower level of religious leaders were important advisers to the pharaoh, many being administrators of the bureaucracy that ran the country.

When Akhenaten died, the priests of Amun-Ra reasserted themselves. His name was struck from Egyptian records, all of his religious and governmental changes were undone, and the capital was returned to Thebes. The return to the previous capital and its patron deity was accomplished so swiftly that it seemed this almost monotheistic cult and its governmental reforms had never existed. Worship of the Aten ceased and worship of Amun-Ra was restored. The priests of Amun even persuaded his young son, Tutankhaten, whose name meant "the living image of Aten"—and who later would become a pharaoh—to change his name to Tutankhamun, "the living image of Amun".

As Amun-Re he was petitioned for mercy by those who believed suffering had come about as a result of their own or others wrongdoing.

Amon-Re "who hears the prayer, who comes at the cry of the poor and distressed...Beware of him! Repeat him to son and daughter, to great and small; relate him to generations of generations who have not yet come into being; relate him to fishes in the deep, to birds in heaven; repeat him to him who does not know him and to him who knows him...Though it may be that the servant is normal in doing wrong, yet the Lord is normal in being merciful. The Lord of Thebes does not spend an entire day angry. As for his anger - in the completion of a moment there is no remnant..As thy Ka endures! thou wilt be merciful!"[7]

In the Leiden hymns, Amun, Ptah, and Re are regarded as a trinity who are distinct gods but with unity in plurality.[8]"The three gods are one yet the Egyptian elsewhere insists on the separate identity of each of the three."[9] This unity in plurality is expressed in one text:

"All gods are three: Amun, Re and Ptah, whom none equals. He who hides his name as Amun, he appears to the face as Re, his body is Ptah."[10]

The hidden aspect of Amun and his likely association with the wind caused Henri Frankfort to draw parallels with a passage from the Gospel of John: "The wind blows where it wishes, and you hear the sound of it, but do not know where it comes from and where it is going."[John 3:8][11] A Leydon hymn to Amun describes how he calms stormy seas for the troubled sailor:

The tempest moves aside for the sailor who remembers the name of Amon. The storm becomes a sweet breeze for he who invokes His name... Amon is more effective than millions for he who places Him in his heart. Thanks to Him the single man becomes stronger than a crowd.[12]

Decline

Although the capital was moved back to Thebes and the power base of Amun's cult had been revivified, the authority of Amun began to weaken after the Twentieth dynasty. Under the Twenty-first dynasty the secondary line of priest pharaohs of Thebes upheld his dignity to the best of their power, and the Twenty-second favoured Thebes, but they became weak and ineffective.

The sarcophagus of a priestess of Amon-Ra, ca. 1000 B.C. - Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History

As the leadership weakened, division between Upper Egypt, the southern portion, and Lower Egypt, the northern portion, reasserted itself. The unification of Egypt failed, falling into regional autonomy again. Nubia took over the rule of southern Egypt. Southern Egypt includes Thebes and it would have decayed rapidly had it not been for the piety of the rulers of Nubia toward Amun, who had been worshipped in their own country for a long time. Initially, they made Thebes their Egyptian capital and they honoured Amun greatly.

Cult in Nubia, Libya, and Greece

In areas outside of Egypt where the Egyptians had previously brought the cult of Amun his worship continued. In Nubia, where his name was pronounced Amane, he remained a national deity, with his priests, at Meroe and Nobatia,[13] regulating the whole government of the country via an oracle, choosing the ruler, and directing military expeditions. According to Diodorus Siculus, these religious leaders even were able to compel kings to commit suicide, although this tradition stopped when Arkamane, in the 3rd century BC, slew them.

In Libya there remained a solitary oracle of Amun in the Libyan Desert at the oasis of Siwa.[14] The worship of Ammon was introduced into Greece at an early period, probably through the medium of the Greek colony in Cyrene, which must have formed a connection with the great oracle of Ammon in the Oasis soon after its establishment. Ammon had a temple and a statue, the gift of Pindar, at Thebes,[15] and another at Sparta, the inhabitants of which, as Pausanias says,[16] consulted the oracle of Ammon in Libya from early times more than the other Greeks. At Aphytis, Chalcidice, Ammon was worshipped, from the time of Lysander, as zealously as in Ammonium. Pindar the poet honoured the god with a hymn. At Megalopolis the god was represented with the head of a ram (Paus. viii.32 § 1), and the Greeks of Cyrenaica dedicated at Delphi a chariot with a statue of Ammon.

Such was its reputation among the Classical Greeks that Alexander the Great journeyed there after the battle of Issus and during his occupation of Egypt, where he was declared the son of Amun by the oracle. Alexander thereafter considered himself divine. Even during this occupation, Amun, identified by these Greeks as a form of Zeus,[17] continued to be the principal local deity of Thebes.

Iarbas, a mythological king of Libya, was also considered a son of Hammon.

Derived terms

Amun on relief

Several words derive from Amun via the Greek form, Ammon: ammonia and ammonite. The Romans called the ammonium chloride they collected from deposits near the Temple of Jupiter Amun in ancient Libya sal ammoniacus (salt of Amun) because of proximity to the nearby temple.[18]

Ammonia, as well as being the chemical, is a genus name in the foraminifera. Both these foraminiferans (shelled Protozoa) and ammonites (extinct shelled cephalopods) bear spiral shells resembling a ram's, and Ammon's, horns.

The regions of the hippocampus in the brain are called the cornu ammonis – literally "Amun's Horns", due to the horned appearance of the dark and light bands of cellular layers.

See also

Self-creation cosmology

References

Specific references
  1. ^ a b c d Vincent Arieh Tobin, Oxford Guide: The Essential Guide to Egyptian Mythology, Edited by Donald B. Redford, p. 20, Berkley books, ISBN 0-425-19096-X
  2. ^ Michael Brennan Dick books.google.co.uk note 80 of page 184.Born in heaven, made on earth: the making of the cult image in the ancient Near East(243 pages) Eisenbrauns, 1999 ISBN 1575060248[Retrieved 2011-12-13]
  3. ^ Ancient Egyptian Literature: Volume II: The New Kingdom, Miriam Lichtheim, p105-106, University of California Press, 1976, ISBN 0-520-03615-8
  4. ^ "The Burden of Egypt", John A. Wilson, p. 211, University of Chicago Press, 1951, 4th imp 1963, Republished as "The Culture of Ancient Egypt", ISBN 978-0-226-90152-7 Uchicago.edu
  5. ^ Hart, George (2005). The Routledge Dictionary of Egyptian Gods and Goddesses. Routledge. pp. 21. ISBN 0-415-36116-8. http://books.google.com/books?id=GG3qfiUY3xQC&pg=PA21&lpg=PA21. 
  6. ^ Budge, E.A. Wallis,""An Introduction to Egyptian Literature", p.214, Dover edition 1997, first pub. 1914, ISBN 0-486-29502-8
  7. ^ "The Burden of Egypt", John A. Wilson, p300, University of Chicago Press, 1951, 4th imp 1963, Republished as "The Culture of Ancient Egypt", ISBN 978-0-226-90152-7 Uchicago.edu
  8. ^ Egyptian Religion: Siegried Morenz, Translated by Ann E. Keep, Cornell University Press, 1992, p.144-145,ISBN 0-8014-8029-9
  9. ^ "Before Philosophy", Henri Frankfort, John A. Wilson, Thorkild Jacobsen, p. 75, Pelican, 1951
  10. ^ "Of God and Gods", Jan Assmann. p. 64, University of Wisconsin Press, 2008, ISBN 029922554
  11. ^ "Before Philosophy", Henri Frankfort (contributor), p. 18, Penguin, 1951
  12. ^ "The Living Wisdom of Ancient Egypt", Christian Jacq, p. 143, Simon & Schuster, 1999, ISBN 0-671-02219-9
  13. ^ Herodotus, The Histories ii.29
  14. ^ Pausanias, Description of Greece x.13 § 3
  15. ^ Pausanias, Description of Greece ix.16 § 1
  16. ^ Pausanias, Description of Greece iii.18 § 2
  17. ^ Jerem. xlvi.25
  18. ^ "Ammonia". h2g2 Eponyms. BBB.CO.UK. 2003-01-11. http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/alabaster/A632990. Retrieved 2007-11-08. 
Other sources

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. 

  • Adolf Erman, Handbook of Egyptian Religion (London, 1907)
  • David Klotz, Adoration of the Ram: Five Hymns to Amun-Re from Hibis Temple (New Haven, 2006)
  • Ed. Meyer, article "Ammon" in W. H. Roscher's Lexikon der griechischen und römischen Mythologie
  • Pietschmann, articles "Ammon" and "Ammoneion" in Pauly-Wissowa, Realencyclopädie.

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