293:: Akhnaton is revealed as the sculptor of the famous bust of Nefertiti (see right). They now have five daughters. Tyi is no longer regent and Akhnaton rules in his own right. Nefertiti dislikes Horemheb, thinking that he dislikes her but Akhnaton's love for the soldier and belief in him is as great as ever. Horemheb himself is worried at the signs of dissent that he sees in Egypt but Akhnaton brushes these worries aside, obsessed with the perfection of the beauty of his new city. Tyi arrives, old and ill. She is deeply concerned about the feelings of the people and particularly the way in which Akhnaton's tax-gatherers rob them of their money. Horemheb is an ally of her worries and promises to watch over Akhnaton. Tyi misses nothing and warns Horemheb to be careful of Nezzemut. Akhnaton receives foreign tributes but declines to impress them with the grandeur they expect. Tyi is scornful that they will see this as a sign of weakness. She recognises Ptahmose in the crowd and tries to warn her son of the spies in his midst but dies before she can do so.
352:: One tragedy after another falls on Akhnaton as he hears of further rebellions across Egypt, as Horemheb tells him that he no longer supports him, that his son-in-law Tutankhaton has turned against him and that the supposedly finished cult of Amon has risen again. He falls into a hysterical fever at these events, prompting Nezzemut to suggest that Para make one of her famous brews (i.e. poison) to calm him. Nefertiti feeds the brew to Akhnaton and is about to drink some herself when a horrified Nezzemut stops her. Nefertiti realises that she has been betrayed and has been tricked into poisoning her husband. Horemheb arrives and is distraught at the events he has caused. Akhnaton dies and Nefertiti herself drinks the brewβ¦
303:: Tutankhaton is a good friend of Horemheb and takes instruction from him in the soldier's arts. Two Syrian emissaries arrive to speak with Horemheb. Meriptah has smuggled himself into Horizon and speaks with Tutankhaton and Horemheb, attempting to sow discord over the new religion. News is brought of rebellion in the vassal states of Egypt and riots within its cities. Akhnaton is convinced that the religion of Amon is to blame and issues decrees to wipe all traces of him from Egypt β even from the tombs of the dead. His supporters are just as horrified as his enemies but Akhnaton is determined.
342:: Meriptah, Horemheb, Tutankhaton and Nezzemut plan Akhnaton's overthrow. Horemheb obtains a promise that Akhnaton's life will be spared and that he will be allowed to live with honour for the rest of his life in Horizon. However, Meriptah and Nezzemut plan separately: Tutankhaton will be allowed to live for only a couple of years before he dies and Nezzemut can rule, and Akhnaton must die as Horemheb still has a love for the Pharaoh. Nezzemut will arrange for his death, but tells Meriptah that Nefertiti β who she truly loves β must be unharmed.
269:: The populace of the old city are revealed as being angry with the changes that Akhnaton has brought to their country with his attack on the old religion. Meriptah overhears their complaints as he waits for an acolyte, Ptahmose to arrive from Horizon with news of events there. Ptahmose reveals that Tutankhaton is betrothed to Akhnaton's second daughter, Horemheb is now commander of the armies of Egypt and that Ptahmose has an ally in the cunning Nezzemut. Meriptah's plan is the restoration of the old religion and his own power and riches.
204:(called Tyi in the play) greets the delegation together with her son, Akhnaton, who is described as a "fragile-looking boy with intelligent eyes". He stays behind and meets Horemheb. Akhnaton is revealed to the audience as an artist, poet and mystic who believes in a world where all men are free and fighting will end through love. He also recognises the goodness in Horemheb, asks for and receives his allegiance. As the scene ends, Meriptah reveals that the Amenhotep has died and that Akhnaton is now Pharaoh.
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318:: Akhnaton is weak and ill, but still believing in the goodness of men, he is still deaf to the pleas of Horemheb who begs to be allowed to deal with the insurrectionists across Egypt and its provinces. Nezzemut tries to convince Horemheb that the Pharaoh is mad. Horemheb, for the best motives, tries to persuade Akhnaton to allow Tutankhaton to rule with him. Akhnaton is now set on a course of
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is introduced. She and her husband
Akhnaton have a genuine love for each other and their only child, a daughter. Tyi warns Nefertiti that she must persuade her husband not to oppose the cult of Amon to any great degree, knowing the danger that such a move would present to him, but she is too loyal to
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from 30 March until 30 September of that year, although she admitted that it would be an expensive production to stage. She made minor revisions to her 1937 manuscript and asked that it be published; however there were still major differences between events in the play and what was then known of this
114:, Christie confessed that she never thought that the play would be produced but that she simply enjoyed writing plays or writing something different from that which she was used to. There is no record of any serious attempt to get the play staged once it had been written, but
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of Egypt until
Akhnaton comes of age. The young man shows little interest in ruling as his father had done and antagonises Meriptah. It is revealed that it was Tyi who instilled in Akhnaton a dislike of the religion of Amon and a reverence of
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religion of Amon, his country and his
Pharaoh, somewhat in that order, whereas Horemheb is a simpler though more honourable man for having equal loyalty to his country and his Pharaoh and through him his religion. Queen
31:
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puts forward the theory that the publishers thought it not commercial, and was not what the public expected of Agatha
Christie, who was seen at the time as purely a writer of crime fiction.
332:: Horemheb and Meriptah hear the people as they mourn the dead who have lost their lives through famine, plague and attack from outside. Horemheb is determined that Egypt will rise again.
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and is determined to obliterate all trace of all gods except Ra from Egypt. This persuades
Horemheb that Nezzemut is right and that Akhnaton has lost his sanity.
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her husband to go against his wishes. Nefertiti's calculating sister, Nezzemut asks her dwarf servant, Para, for a vision of the future through sand
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In May 1972, Christie came across the manuscript, and sent it to her publisher in view of the interest in ancient Egypt prompted by the
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with them in hope that it cures
Pharaoh Amenhotep of his illness. The audience is introduced to the High Priest of Amon,
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when he became
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time in
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in May 1973. A new, hardcover, facsimile edition of the play was issued in 2009.
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74:. It was written in 1937, around the same time she was writing
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to a spot where he will build a new city to the glory of Ra.
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when he was a child. In conversation with another priest,
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arrive at the palace bringing the shrine of the goddess
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364:. The religion of Amon is to be restored to Egypt.
147:The play has been used by some amateur groups and
1237:The Witness for the Prosecution and Other Stories
360:A Captain reads out a proclamation to a group of
1679:
103:, who was a friend of both her and her husband,
1286:Miss Marple's Final Cases and Two Other Stories
406:; Facsimile edition (reissue) (29 October 2009)
299:β Horemheb's apartments in the city of Horizon
348:β A Room in the Palace of the city of Horizon
496:
289:β The King's Pavilion in the City of Horizon
246:β A bank of the Nile, 300 miles below Thebes
167:β The Great Courtyard of the Royal Palace of
265:β A bank of the Nile in the City of No Amon
84:, and followed the exploits of the Egyptian
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29:
1293:Problem at Pollensa Bay and Other Stories
271:
1307:While the Light Lasts and Other Stories
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1258:The Adventure of the Christmas Pudding
471:
423:
367:
120:The Life and Crimes of Agatha Christie
484:
1001:The Mirror Crack'd from Side to Side
338:β A room in the High Priest's House
195:. Meriptah is loyal to himself, his
1562:Agatha Christie: A Life in Pictures
510:
13:
1718:Cultural depictions of Tutankhamun
1531:Agatha Christie's Secret Notebooks
1244:Three Blind Mice and Other Stories
14:
1734:
1272:The Golden Ball and Other Stories
1713:Cultural depictions of Nefertiti
1708:Cultural depictions of Akhenaten
1662:
1661:
1594:Agatha and the Midnight Murders
1251:The Under Dog and Other Stories
637:The Mysterious Affair at Styles
1586:Agatha and the Curse of Ishtar
1578:Agatha and the Truth of Murder
445:
417:
1:
1649:Agatha Christie Award (Japan)
1524:The Mousetrap and Other Plays
686:The Mystery of the Blue Train
410:
140:). The play was published by
1265:Double Sin and Other Stories
1043:By the Pricking of My Thumbs
728:Murder on the Orient Express
554:Tommy and Tuppence Beresford
429:Agatha Christie, A Biography
306:
131:exhibition which ran at the
7:
1723:William Collins, Sons books
1367:Witness for the Prosecution
672:The Murder of Roger Ackroyd
355:
154:
10:
1739:
1703:Plays set in ancient Egypt
1496:Come, Tell Me How You Live
798:Hercule Poirot's Christmas
735:Why Didn't They Ask Evans?
700:The Murder at the Vicarage
574:Chief Inspector James Japp
559:Lady Eileen "Bundle" Brent
257:
159:
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1612:
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1133:The Rose and the Yew Tree
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658:The Man in the Brown Suit
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455:. p. 471. Collins, 1977.
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47:
37:
28:
23:
1698:Plays by Agatha Christie
1570:The Unicorn and the Wasp
1548:Agatha Christie Memorial
1332:And Then There Were None
1209:Parker Pyne Investigates
826:One, Two, Buckle My Shoe
812:And Then There Were None
431:. Collins. p. 226.
171:in the City of No Amon (
128:Treasures of Tutankhamun
1464:Butter in a Lordly Dish
1230:The Labours of Hercules
1140:A Daughter's a Daughter
931:They Do It with Mirrors
847:The Body in the Library
693:The Seven Dials Mystery
651:The Murder on the Links
569:Captain Arthur Hastings
210:β A Room in the Palace
16:Play by Agatha Christie
1339:Appointment with Death
1202:The Listerdale Mystery
1181:The Mysterious Mr Quin
1071:Elephants Can Remember
1057:Passenger to Frankfurt
875:Death Comes as the End
791:Appointment with Death
665:The Secret of Chimneys
328:β A Street in No Amon
314:β The King's Pavilion
283:
191:, and a young soldier
1300:The Harlequin Tea Set
1188:The Thirteen Problems
987:Cat Among the Pigeons
910:A Murder Is Announced
763:Murder in Mesopotamia
707:The Sittaford Mystery
549:Superintendent Battle
275:
1395:The Unexpected Guest
1279:Poirot's Early Cases
1126:Absent in the Spring
973:4.50 from Paddington
959:Hickory Dickory Dock
945:A Pocket Full of Rye
917:They Came to Baghdad
644:The Secret Adversary
564:Sir Henry Clithering
390:Dodd, Mead & Co.
377:, London, May 1973.
1503:Star Over Bethlehem
1223:The Regatta Mystery
1167:Poirot Investigates
1119:Unfinished Portrait
1015:A Caribbean Mystery
980:Ordeal by Innocence
952:Destination Unknown
749:Death in the Clouds
474:, pp. 370β371.
368:Publication history
316:(three years later)
267:(eight years later)
212:(Three years later)
175:): A delegation of
1489:The Road of Dreams
1402:Go Back for Murder
1346:Murder on the Nile
1216:Murder in the Mews
1195:The Hound of Death
1022:At Bertram's Hotel
924:Mrs McGinty's Dead
896:Taken at the Flood
833:Evil Under the Sun
770:Cards on the Table
756:The A.B.C. Murders
714:Peril at End House
451:Christie, Agatha.
330:(six months later)
291:(six months later)
284:
149:repertory theatres
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1632:Ashfield, Torquay
1573:(2008 TV episode)
1174:Partners in Crime
938:After the Funeral
882:Sparkling Cyanide
861:The Moving Finger
784:Death on the Nile
742:Three Act Tragedy
721:Lord Edgware Dies
277:Bust of Nefertiti
101:Stephen Glanville
77:Death on the Nile
63:
62:
56:Original language
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1628:(second husband)
1602:See How They Run
1565:(2004 docudrama)
1517:An Autobiography
1457:Three Blind Mice
1435:television plays
1050:Hallowe'en Party
966:Dead Man's Folly
854:Five Little Pigs
579:Miss Jane Marple
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453:An Autobiography
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1092:Sleeping Murder
1078:Postern of Fate
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116:Charles Osborne
80:. It is set in
72:Agatha Christie
48:Place premiered
42:Agatha Christie
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118:, in his book
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1036:Endless Night
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1605:(2022 film)
1597:(2020 film)
1589:(2019 film)
1581:(2018 film)
1557:(1979 film)
1481:Other books
1443:Wasp's Nest
1159:collections
819:Sad Cypress
594:Parker Pyne
533:Adaptations
472:Morgan 1984
400:. 157 pages
385:. 157 pages
362:stonemasons
97:Tutankhamun
91:, his wife
1693:1973 plays
1688:1937 plays
1682:Categories
1541:Depictions
1433:Radio and
1353:The Hollow
1147:The Burden
1104:Westmacott
1029:Third Girl
1008:The Clocks
889:The Hollow
542:Characters
411:References
320:monotheism
38:Written by
613:Locations
307:Act Three
233:Nefertiti
214:: Tyi is
93:Nefertiti
1667:Category
1423:Chimneys
1416:Akhnaton
1102:As Mary
528:Universe
427:(1984).
356:Epilogue
238:divining
193:Horemheb
189:Meriptah
155:Synopsis
89:Akhnaton
67:Akhnaton
24:Akhnaton
1613:Related
1388:Verdict
1085:Curtain
1064:Nemesis
840:N or M?
375:Collins
346:Scene 4
336:Scene 3
326:Scene 2
312:Scene 1
297:Scene 3
287:Scene 2
263:Scene 1
258:Act Two
244:Scene 3
208:Scene 2
185:Nineveh
177:Syrians
165:Scene 1
160:Act One
142:Collins
86:Pharaoh
59:English
1640:(home)
1634:(home)
1554:Agatha
629:Novels
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392:1973.
388:US by
381:
373:UK by
252:Amarna
216:regent
181:Ishtar
173:Thebes
1510:Poems
1317:Plays
457:ISBN
433:ISBN
394:ISBN
379:ISBN
229:Nile
202:Tiye
138:Kiya
254:).
183:of
1684::
225:Ay
221:Ra
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504:e
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490:v
441:.
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