Friday, March 27, 2026

Comparing titles: Aye and Amenhotep Hapu

 


 

by

 

Damien F. Mackey

 

 

 

Conventionally, about three decades separate the death of the revered scribe

and sage, Amenhotep son of Hapu (d. 1356 BC) from the beginning of the reign

of Aye, or Ay (c. 1326 BC). Despite that, the impressive titles borne are similar.

 

 

Hopefully, I have been able to lift away the heavy veil that enshrouds the famous, but most enigmatic, Amenhotep son of Hapu, chief official of the Eighteenth Dynasty pharaoh Amenhotep ‘the Magnificent’, by identifying him with the similarly enigmatic and supposedly ‘obscure’ prince Amenhotep who became pharaoh Akhnaton:

 

Akhnaton not obscure before he became Pharaoh

 

(18) Akhnaton not obscure before he became Pharaoh

 

Now, given the likenesses of the extraordinary titles borne by Amenhotep son of Hapu and those borne by Aye, who seems to emerge to prominence from out of nowhere, I today (27th March, 2026) have begun to wonder if there might be a most significant extra dimension to the composite Amenhotep-Akhnaton in the form of Aye.

 

Titles

 

Amenhotep, Vizier and Chief Architect, accrued an ever-expanding array of titles throughout the extensive and prosperous reign of Amenhotep III, ultimately solidifying his status as the quintessential statesman:

 

Military Titles, including: Chief of the Memphis Army, Chief of Recruitment, Governor and Scribe of the Soldiers…

 

Religious Titles, such as: Priest Shem, First Prophet of Athribis, Great Celebrant of Amun, Intendant of the flocks of Amun…

 

Civil Titles, comprising: Royal Scribe, Head of the Census, Head of Public Works, and most notably, Head of all the King’s work, which elevated him to the position of royal architect—a title he seemed to hold with great pride.

 

Courtly Titles, denoting his close relationship with the monarchy, such as: Friend of the King, Bearer of the Royal Seal, Fan-bearer on the Right Side of the King, Administrator of the estate of Sitamun, daughter of Amenhotep III.

 

CountSole CompanionFanbearer on the King's Right HandChief of the King's WorksRoyal ScribeScribe of the RecruitsOverseer of the Cattle of Amun in the South and North, High Priest of Horus at AthribisGod's Father, and Steward of Princess-Queen Sitamun.[1]

 

Aye was:

 

  • Overseer of all the horses of his majesty
  • Troop Commander
  • Overseer of horses
  • Fan-bearer on the right side of the king
  • Acting scribe of the king
  • Grand Vizier
  • Father of the god
  • Shem priest.

 

Amenhotep, Aye, in common: Grand Vizier; Army Commander; Fan-bearer on the right side of the king; Scribe; Father of the god; shem priest, etc.

 

 

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