“It was a fresh start,” says Stevens, assistant director of the Amarna Project, which is excavating Akhenaten’s city. “Ostensibly it was about building a new cult home for the Aten on virgin land – this is what Akhenaten tells us in the inscriptions on the boundary stelae [inscribed stone slabs] around Amarna’s perimeter. But we can guess that there were other motivations, such as a desire to surround himself with loyal officials and create distance from those who offered opposition.” One way of demonstrating that Akhetaten represented a clean break with the past was by sponsoring radically new forms of architecture. “Egyptian temples were traditionally closed affairs,” explains Stevens. “Once you entered the inner part of the complex, the floor level gradually rose, and the roof dropped. Lighting was restricted to a few small windows and lamps. The solar cult brought with it open-air sanctuaries – a form used long before Akhenaten’s reign, but now translated to a much grander scale. Akhenaten’s temples incorporated vast open-air courts with offering tables and unroofed shrines. The cult image, of course, was no longer a statue hidden deep in the sanctuary, but the Aten above.”