Routledge, 2009. — 144 p.
The Amarna Age (ca. 1350-1321 BC) at the end of the 18th dynasty was one of the most interesting and studied, but at the same time the most obscure periods in the history of Ancient Egypt. It remains in the cultural memory of mankind as the first, albeit unsuccessful, attempt at ideological reformation, the first clash between the ruling institution and the now-powerful temple clergy, and the first experiment with the idea of monotheism.
This bibliography presents a detailed list of studies published on this topic until the end of the last century by the British Egyptologist Geoffrey Thorndike Martin (b. 1953).