I have read a number of accounts of the rise of Nazism in Germany. (The best is "The Fuhrer" by Konrad Heiden, 1944.) This notion ("unlying factor"?) appears nowhere in the political life of Germany post-WW1. Germans were preoccupied with economic struggle. King Tut was not on their radar. You are barking up an unoccupied tree.
I have read a number of accounts of the rise of Nazism in Germany. (The best is "The Fuhrer" by Konrad Heiden, 1944.) This notion ("unlying factor"?) appears nowhere in the political life of Germany post-WW1. Germans were preoccupied with economic struggle. King Tut was not on their radar. You are barking up an unoccupied tree.