Chapter 619: The Awakening of the Stand-in

Shi Siming's descendants actually got in touch with Tang Zhangwei and Tang Zhaozong's stand-ins.

These shadow warriors, after seeing Tang Zhaozong and Tang Zhangwei's pomp, they gradually became unwilling to only play the role of shadows in the dark, and they wanted to play a more important task.

Tang Zhangwei and Tang Zhaozong have stand-ins, especially after Tang Zhaozong leaves Chang'an City in the Tang Dynasty, his fake stand-in will appear.

So Tang Zhaozong often said to Tang Zhangwei: "If we are replaced by those stand-ins, then we are in danger." ”

However, they really didn't expect these two stand-ins to be bold and reckless, and really cooperated with Shi Siming's descendants in a vain attempt to replace them, after Tang Zhaozong and Tang Zhangwei found out about this, they had to take decisive action to avoid further deterioration of the situation.

After suppressing the activities of the two stand-ins, Tang Zhaozong and Tang Zhangwei both felt interested, and they decided to go out together to relax, Tang Zhaozong and Tang Zhangwei came to Egypt together.

There were a large number of pharaohs in Egypt, and they were determined to dig up some more of the pharaohs' graves, especially after the Middle Kingdom.

In the tombs of these pharaohs, there is the god Amun.

At the same time, there are many Aten gods in the tombs of these pharaohs, and with these gods, these pharaohs feel safe, and of course these gods do bless these pharaohs.

Queen of the Egyptian pharaoh Akhenaten. Nefertiti was one of the most important queens in Egyptian history, and legend has it that she was not only stunningly beautiful, but also the most powerful and powerful woman in ancient Egyptian history. An archaeologist discovered a colorful bust of Nefertiti, who became the first cover girl in history and was hailed as "the most beautiful woman in the world".

Amun was the Hellenistic name of an Egyptian god transliterated as? mn, meaning "hidden" (also spelled "Amon"), he was one of the eight Ogdoads who married Mut. The god Amun is depicted wearing two feathers on his head and holding a scepter. He symbolizes the man's temperament, and the ram and the female goose are his sacred animals. The center of his worship was in Thebes, and his importance reached its peak during the Middle Kingdom period.

The god Amun, the creator of all things, is depicted wearing two feathers on his head and holding a scepter. He symbolizes the man's temperament, and the ram and the female goose are his sacred animals. The center of his worship was in Thebes, and his importance reached its peak during the Middle Kingdom period.

Literally, Amon means "something invisible", and although he is believed to be the creator of all things, there are few legends about him.

Despite the lack of a mythological background, his importance grew. During the Middle Kingdom, Thebes (now Luxor) formed a center of worship of the god Amun, where he was worshipped along with the sun god Re, known as the god Amun-Re. Later, he gained the favor of the royal family, and by the eighteenth dynasty he surpassed the other gods. During this time, a magnificent shrine was built in Karnak, which still exists to this day.

Amun was the Hellenistic name of an Egyptian god transliterated as? mn, meaning "hidden" (also spelled "Amon"), is one of the eight Ogdoads. Married to Mut.

First of all, he was the local deity of Thebes. At that time, Thebes was a humble town on the east bank of the Nile, and today the area around it is occupied by the temple of Karnak. The Eleventh Dynasty originated with a family in the state of Hermonthite (or possibly just in Thebes) who decorated the temple with statues. The name of Amun was compounded into the name of the founder of the Twelfth Dynasty, Amenemhe. The name was in turn inherited by his three heirs. Several kings of the Middle Kingdom period also adopted the same name; When the Seventeenth Dynasty of Thebes drove out the Hyksos, Amun was re-established as a god of the royal city.

However, it was not until the rulers of the Eighteenth Dynasty drove their victorious armies from all directions to the frontier that Amun began to become a universally recognized god in Egypt, crowding out other Egyptian gods, and even going out of Egypt to become the god of the universe. The pharaohs attributed all their victories to Aemon and spent their wealth and labor on the temple of Amun.

Amun is depicted in human form, wearing a headband from which two parallel feathers protrude straight from it. This may symbolize the tail feathers of an eagle. Emmon has two common images: one seated on a throne and the other standing, holding a whip, much like the god Min of Coptos and Chemmis (Akhmim), the latter of which may have been his original image, the god of fertility. The king solemnly ploughed the land that was to be sown or reaped the ripe grain in front of him. His spouse is sometimes referred to as Amaunet (the feminine word for Amun), but is often called Mut; She had a human head and wore a double cron for the upper and lower Egyptians, and their son was Chons.

The name of Ra, the sun god, is sometimes combined with Amon's name, especially when he was the "king of the gods". In Egypt, the dominion of heaven belonged to the sun god, and Ammon was the supreme god, so logically, Amon was Ra. Amun was called "King of the Throne and the Lands", or more proudly "King of the Gods".

Egyptian archaeologists have discovered in Luxor, in the south of the country, the tomb of a goldsmith who served the god Amun during the Eighteenth Dynasty of ancient Egypt, which is about 3,400 years old.

Also translated as Hongsu or Khonsu, one of the moon gods in Egyptian mythology. He is known as the "King of Truth" and "the author of fate". Take charge of the darker parts of the night, evil spirits, spells, and more. It is believed that the god Amun was the son of Mut, and there is a stone statue of him and his parents side by side in Thebes. The image is mostly a young man's mummy. Wear a meniscus. The disc on the head of the sun in ancient Egypt with Horus Aten Aten, the sun god when the sun was just emerging from the horizon. Around 1390 BC, Pharaoh Amenhotep III succeeded to the throne. Amenhotep III ruled over a 1,900-kilometre stretch from the Lati River to the Fourth Falls of the Nile, and Egypt was unimaginably wealthy.

Amenhotep III, together with Empress Tiya, ruled Egypt for 37 years, and he worshipped the god Amun. During this period, the people lived a prosperous life, and a great deal of wealth flowed from Egypt. In Akhenaten (Amenhotep IV, i.e. Amenhotep IV) abandoned the national belief in Amun and other gods in favor of the sun disc Aten.

Amenhotep IV later changed his name to Akhenaten, which means "one who is good for Aten", and abandoned the original city of Debes, and built a city in the place of Amana. The god Amun was deprived of his power and wealth, and the god Aten gained the right to rule. Aten was worshipped as the one true god, and Akhenaten's successor, Tuankhamun, left Amana and returned to Thebes to worship the god Amun.

Unlike other Egyptian gods, Aten was invisible, but the sun.

(End of chapter)