300px|thumb|Plan of the complex1: The sun temple 2: Sun chapel and two pavilions on an artificial island 3: Flower beds 4: T-shaped water tanks 5: Palace 6: Quay 7: Houses 8: Entrance hall Maru-Aten, short for Pa-maru-en-pa-aten (The Viewing-Palace-of-the-Aten), is a palace or sun-temple located 3 km to the south of the central city area of the city of Akhetaten (today's el Amarna). It is thought to have been originally constructed for Akhenaten's queen Kiya, but on her death her name and images were altered to those of Meritaten, his daughter.
300px|thumb|Plan of the complex1: The sun temple 2: Sun chapel and two pavilions on an artificial island 3: Flower beds 4: T-shaped water tanks 5: Palace 6: Quay 7: Houses 8: Entrance hall Maru-Aten, short for Pa-maru-en-pa-aten (The Viewing-Palace-of-the-Aten), is a palace or sun-temple located 3 km to the south of the central city area of the city of Akhetaten (today's el Amarna). It is thought to have been originally constructed for Akhenaten's queen Kiya, but on her death her name and images were altered to those of Meritaten, his daughter.
This site is now lost beneath modern fields, but was excavated first by Alessandro Barsanti in 1896 and more fully by Leonard Woolley in 1921.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).