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Mentuhotep II

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Egyptian pharaoh of the 11th Dynasty
Mentuhotep II
Painted osiride sandstone seated statue of pharaoh Nebhepetre Mentuhotep II, on display at the Egyptian Museum, Cairo.
Paintedosiride sandstone seated statue of pharaoh Nebhepetre Mentuhotep II, on display at theEgyptian Museum, Cairo.
Pharaoh
Reign2060–2009 BC[1]
PredecessorIntef III
SuccessorMentuhotep III
Horus name
(1) s-ankh-[ib-t3wy]
(2) Sematawy
Sm3-t3.w(j)
He who unifies the two lands
G5
F36N16
N16
Nebty name
Sematawy
Sm3-t3.w(j)
He who unifies the two lands
G16
F36N16
N16
Golden Horus
Biknebu Qashuti
Bjk-nbw-q3-šwtj
The Golden Falcon, lofty in plumes
N29G5
S12
S9


Abydos King List
Nebhepetre
Nb-ḥ3pt-Rˁ
The Lord of the rudder is Ra
<
N5
V30
P8
>

Karnak king list
Nebhepetre
Nb-ḥ3pt-Rˁ
The Lord of the rudder is Ra
<
N5
V30
P8
>

Turin King List
Nebhepetre
Nb-ḥ3pt-Rˁ
The Lord of the rudder is Ra
<
N5
V30
P8G7HASH
>
[2]
Praenomen
Nebhepetre
Nb-ḥ3pt-Rˁ
The Lord of the rudder is Ra[3]
L2
t
M23
t
<
ra
nb
P8
>
Nomen
Mentuhotep
Mn-ṯw-ḥtp
Montu is content[4]
G39N5<
mn
n
TwHtp
tp
>
ConsortTem,Neferu II,Ashayet,Henhenet,Kawit,Kemsit,Sadeh
ChildrenMentuhotep III,Mayet(?)
FatherIntef III
MotherIah
Died2009 BC ?
Burialmortuary temple at Deir-el-Bahri
Dynasty11th Dynasty

Mentuhotep II (Ancient Egyptian:Mn-ṯw-ḥtp, meaning "Mentu is satisfied"), also known under hisprenomenNebhepetre (Ancient Egyptian:Nb-ḥpt-, meaning "The Lord of the rudder isRa"), was anancient Egyptianpharaoh, the sixth ruler of theEleventh Dynasty. He is credited with reuniting Egypt, thus ending the turbulentFirst Intermediate Period and becoming the first pharaoh of theMiddle Kingdom. He reigned for 51 years, according to theTurin King List.[5] Mentuhotep II succeeded his fatherIntef III on the throne and was in turn succeeded by his sonMentuhotep III.

Mentuhotep II ascended Egypt's throne in theUpper Egyptian city ofThebes during the First Intermediate Period. Egypt was not unified during this time, and theTenth Dynasty, rival to Mentuhotep's Eleventh, ruledLower Egypt fromHerakleopolis. After the Herakleopolitan kings desecrated the sacred ancientroyal necropolis ofAbydos in Upper Egypt in the fourteenth year of Mentuhotep's reign, Pharaoh Mentuhotep II dispatched his armies north to conquer Lower Egypt. Continuing his father Intef III's conquests, Mentuhotep succeeded in unifying his country, probably shortly before his 39th year on the throne.[6][7] Following and in recognition of the unification, in regnal year 39, he changed histitulary toSematawy (Ancient Egyptian:Smȝ-.w(j), meaning "He who unifies the two lands").[8]

Following the unification, Mentuhotep II reformed Egypt's government. To reverse the decentralization of power, which contributed to the collapse of theOld Kingdom and marked the First Intermediate Period, he centralized the state in Thebes to stripnomarchs of some of their power over the regions. Mentuhotep II also created new governmental posts whose occupants were Theban men loyal to him, giving the pharaoh more control over his country. Officials from the capital travelled the country regularly to control regional leaders.[9]

Mentuhotep II was buried at the Theban necropolis ofDeir el-Bahari. Hismortuary temple was one of Mentuhotep II's most ambitious building-projects, and included several architectural and religious innovations. For example, it included terraces and covered walkways around the central structure, and it was the first mortuary temple that identified the pharaoh with the god Osiris. His temple inspired several later temples, such as those ofHatshepsut andThutmose III of theEighteenth Dynasty.[9] Some depictions of Mentuhotep II seem to indicate that he suffered fromelephantiasis, resulting in swollen legs.[10][11]

Family

[edit]
See also:Eleventh Dynasty of Egypt family tree
Silsilehrock relief depicting a giant king Mentuhotep II, on the right Intef III and thetreasurer Kheti and, on the left, queen Iah.

Mentuhotep II was the son ofIntef III and Intef III's wifeIah who may also have been his sister. This lineage is demonstrated by the stele of Henenu (Cairo 36346), an official who served underIntef II, Intef III and hisson, which the stele identifies asHoruss-ankh-[ib-t3wy],[12][13] Mentuhotep II's first Horus name. As for Iah, she bore the title ofmwt-nswt, "King's mother".[14] The parentage of Mentuhotep II is also indirectly confirmed by a relief at Shatt er-Rigal. Some scholars have suggested that Mentuhotep II was of Nubian origin. Specifically, Wildung and Lobban have argued that Egyptian iconography represented Mentuhotep II with pronounced, Nubian facial features. Crawford noted that the rulers of the 11th dynasty were based in the Theban or southern region of Upper Egypt and had close relations with Nubia.[15][16][17] Mentuhotep II had many wives who were buried with him in or close to his mortuary temple:[18]

  • Tem (tm) who might have been Mentuhotep II's chief wife as she bore the titles ofḥmt-nswt "King's wife",ḥmt-nswt mryt.f "King's wife, his beloved" andwrt-ḥts-nbwj "Great one of the hetes-sceptre of the two Lords". She gave Mentuhotep II two children, one of whom was certainlyMentuhotep III since Tem was also calledmwt-nswt, ""King's mother" andmwt-nswt-bjtj, "Dual king's mother". Apparently she died after her husband and was buried by her son in Mentuhotep's temple.[19] Her tomb was discovered in 1859 byLord Dufferin[20] and fully excavated in 1968 byD. Arnold.[21]
  • Neferu II ("The beautiful") was called "King's wife" andḥmt-nswt-mryt.f, "King's wife, his beloved". She might have been Mentuhotep II's sister since she also bore the titles ofsȝt-nswt-šmswt-nt-ẖt.f, "Eldest king daughter of his body",jrjt-pˁt, "hereditary princess" andḥmwt-nbwt, "mistress of all women". She was buried in the tombTT319 of Deir el-Bahri.
Sarcophagus of Kawit, photograph by E. Naville, 1907.[22]
  • Kawit (kȝwj.t) was one of Mentuhotep II's secondary wives. She bore the titles ofḥmt-nswt mryt.f "King's wife, his beloved" andẖkrt-nswt, "King's embellishment". She was a "Priestess of the goddessHathor". It has been suggested that she wasNubian.[23][24] She was buried under the terrace of Mentuhotep II's mortuary temple where E. Naville uncovered her sarcophagus in 1907.
  • Sadeh,Ashayet,Henhenet andKemsit were all Mentuhotep II's secondary wives. They bore the title ofḥmt-nswt mryt.f "King's wife, his beloved" andẖkrt-nswt-wˁtit "Unique embellishment of the King". They were priestesses of Hathor[25] and each of them was buried in a single pit dug under the terrace of Mentuhotep II's temple.[26][27] Note that an alternative theory holds that Henhenet was one of Intef III's secondary wives, possibly the mother of Neferu II. Henhenet might have died in childbirth. On the interior decoration of Ashayet's coffin she included her household with images that included racial markers in the coloring of her black skin and yellow skin for her three female scribes. Kemsit is also shown in a painting in her tomb with black skin. The artists apparently was commissioned to show the Nubian origin of these queens.[28]
  • Mwyt, a five-year-old girl buried with Mentuhotep II's secondary wives. She is most likely one of his daughters.

Reign

[edit]
Mentuhotep II, wearing theDeshret, on a painted relief carving from his mortuary temple in Deir el Bahri, Londres

Mentuhotep II is considered to be the first ruler of theMiddle Kingdom of Egypt. TheTurin Canon credits him with a reign of 51 years.[5] Many Egyptologists have long considered tworock reliefs, showing Mentuhotep II towering over smaller figures labeled king "Intef", to be conclusive evidence that his predecessor Intef III was his own father; this is, however, not entirely certain, as these reliefs may have had other propagandistic purposes, and there are other difficulties surrounding Mentuhotep's true origin, his three name-changes, and his frequent attempts to claim descent from various gods.[29]

Early reign

[edit]
Mentuhotep II, wearing theHedjet, on a painted relief carving from his mortuary temple in Deir el Bahri, Londres

When he ascended the Theban throne, Mentuhotep II inherited the vast land conquered by his predecessors from thefirst cataract in the south to Abydos andTjebu in the north.Mentuhotep II's first fourteen years of reign seem to have been peaceful in the Theban region as there are no surviving traces of conflict firmly datable to that period. In fact, the general scarcity of testimonies from the early part of Mentuhotep's reign might indicate that he was young when he ascended the throne, a hypothesis consistent with his 51 years long reign.

Reunification of Egypt

[edit]

In the 14th year of his reign, an uprising occurred in the north. This uprising is most probably connected with the ongoing conflict between Mentuhotep II based inThebes and the rival10th Dynasty based atHerakleopolis who threatened to invade Upper Egypt. The 14th year of Mentuhotep's reign is indeed namedYear of the crime of Thinis. This certainly refers to the conquest of the Thinite region by the Herakleopolitan kings who apparently desecrated the sacred ancientroyal necropolis of Abydos in the process. Mentuhotep II subsequently dispatched his armies to the north. The famous tomb of the warriors atDeir el-Bahari (MMA 507) discovered in the 1920s, contained the linen-wrapped, unmummified bodies of 60 soldiers all killed in battle, their shroud bearing Mentuhotep II's cartouche. Due to its proximity to the Theban royal tombs, the tomb of the warriors is believed to be that of heroes who died during the conflict between Mentuhotep II and his foes to the north.[30]Merikare, the ruler of Lower-Egypt at the time may have died during the conflict, which further weakened his kingdom and gave Mentuhotep the opportunity to reunite Egypt. The exact date when reunification was achieved is not known, but it is assumed to have happened shortly before year 39 of his reign.[6] Indeed, evidence shows that the process took time, maybe due to the general insecurity of the country at the time: commoners were buried with weapons, the funerary stelae of officials show them holding weapons instead of the usual regalia[30] and when Mentuhotep II'ssuccessor sent an expedition to Punt some 20 years after the reunification, they still had to clear theWadi Hammamat of rebels.

Cylinder seal of Mentuhotep II,Musée du Louvre.

Following the reunification, Mentuhotep II was considered by his subjects to be divine, or half divine. This was still the case during the late12th Dynasty some 200 years later:Senusret III andAmenemhat III erected stelae commemoratingopening of the mouth ceremonies practiced on Mentuhotep II's statues.[31]

Military activities outside Egypt

[edit]

Mentuhotep II launched military campaigns under the command of his vizier Khety south intoNubia, which had gained its independence during theFirst Intermediate Period, in his 29th and 31st years of reign. This is the first attested appearance of the termKush for Nubia in Egyptian records. In particular, Mentuhotep posted a garrison on the island fortress of Elephantine so troops could rapidly be deployed southwards.[30] There is also evidence of military actions against Canaan. An inscription was found atGabal El Uweinat close to the borders of modernLibya,Sudan andChad, naming the king and attesting at least trade contacts to this region.[32]

Officials

[edit]

The king reorganized the country and placed a vizier at the head of the administration. Theviziers of his reign wereBebi andDagi. Histreasurer wasKheti who was involved in organising thesed festival for the king. Other important officials were the treasurerMeketre and theoverseer of sealersMeru. Hisgeneral wasIntef.

Reorganization of the government

[edit]

Throughout the First Intermediate Period and until Mentuhotep II's reign, thenomarchs held important powers over Egypt. Their office had become hereditary during the6th Dynasty and the collapse of central power assured them complete freedom over their lands. After the unification of Egypt however, Mentuhotep II initiated a strong policy of centralization, reinforcing his royal authority by creating the posts ofGovernor of Upper Egypt andGovernor of Lower Egypt who had power over the local nomarchs.[33]

Mentuhotep's third titulary from his temple of Montu at Tod.

Mentuhotep also relied on a mobile force of royal court officials who further controlled the deeds of the nomarchs.[34] Finally, the nomarchs who supported the 10th Dynasty, such as the governor of Asyut, certainly lost their power to the profit of the king. In the meantime, Mentuhotep II started an extensive program of self-deification emphasizing the divine nature of the ruler.[34]

Titulary

[edit]

Mentuhotep II's self-deification program is evident from temples he built where he is represented wearing the headgear of Min and Amun. But perhaps the best evidence for this policy is his three titularies: his second Horus and Nebty names wereThe divine one of the white crown while he is also referred to as theson of Hathor at the end of his reign.

Mentuhotep II changed his titulary twice during his reign:[8] the first time in his 14th regnal year, marking the initial successes of his campaign againstHerakleopolis Magna to the north. The second time on or shortly before his 39th year of reign, marking the final success of that campaign, and his reunification of all of Egypt. More precisely, this second change may have taken place on the occasion of thesed festival celebrated during his 39th year on the throne.[35]

First titularySecond titularyThird titulary
Horus name
S29S34F34
N16
N16

Seankhibtawy

S.ˁnḫ-ib-tȝwy

"He who invigorates the heart of the two lands"

R8S2

Netjerihedjet
Nṯrj-ḥḏt
"The divine one of the white crown"
F36N16
N16

Sematawy
Smȝ-tȝ.w(j)
"He who unifies the two lands"
Nebty name
R8S2

Netjerihedjet
Nṯrj-ḥḏt
"The divine one of the white crown"
F36N16
N16

Sematawy
Smȝ-tȝ.w(j)
"He who unifies the two lands"
Golden Horus name
N29G5
S12
S9

Biknebuqashuty
Bjk-nbw-qȝ-šwtj
"The Golden Falcon, lofty in plumes"
Prenomen
ra
nb
P8

Nebhepetre
Nb-ḥpt-Rˁ
"The Lord of the rudder is Re"
Nomen
mn
n
T
wHtp
tp

Mentuhotep
Mn-ṯw-ḥtp
"Montu is satisfied"

In general, the titularies of Mentuhotep II show a desire to return to the traditions of the Old Kingdom. In particular he adopted the complete five-fold titulary after his reunification of Egypt, seemingly for the first time since the 6th Dynasty, though known records are sparse for much of the First Intermediate Period that preceded him. Another proof that Mentuhotep II paid great attention to the traditions of the Old Kingdom is his second Nomen, sometimes found as

<
O10nbO28n
tO49
G39
Y5
V13
Htp
>

Sematawy, Nebet-Iunet, Mentuhotep
sȝ Ḥw.t-Ḥr nb(.t) jwn.t Mnṯw-ḥtp
"The son of Hathor, the lady ofDendera, Mentuhotep"

This reference to Hathor rather than Re is similar to the titulary ofPepi I. Finally, in later king lists, Mentuhotep was referred to with a variant of his third titulary

<
ra
nb
P8
>
<
Y5
n
U33Z7Htp
t
pZ7G7
>

Monuments

[edit]

Mentuhotep II commanded the construction of many temples though few survive to this day. In doing so, Mentuhotep followed a tradition started by his grandfatherIntef II: royal building activities in the provincial temples of Upper Egypt began under Intef II and lasted throughout the Middle Kingdom.[36] Most of the temple remains are also located in Upper Egypt, more precisely in Abydos, Aswan, Tod, Armant,Gebelein, Elkab, Karnak andDenderah.[37]

Abydos

[edit]

At Abydos, a well preserved funerary chapel called theMahat chapel was found in 2014.

Mortuary Temple of Mentuhotep II inhieroglyphs
G25Aa1Q1Z1
Z1
Z1
<
N5nbP8
>

3ḫ-swt-nb-ḥpt-Rˁ AkhsutnebhepetRe
"Transfigured are the places of Nebhepetre"
G25stt
Z2
M17Y5
N35
G7O24

3ḫ-swt-Jmn Akhsutamun
"Transfigured are the places ofAmun"[38]

Mortuary temple of Mentuhotep II

[edit]
I Mentuhotep's mortuary temple, 1) Bab el-Hosan cache, 2) Lower pillared halls, 3) Upper hall, 4) core building, maybe a pyramid and between 3) and 4) is the ambulatory, 5) Hypostyle Hall, 6) Sanctuary.

Mentuhotep II's most ambitious and innovative building project remains his large mortuary temple atDeir el-Bahri. The many architectural innovations of the temple mark a break with the Old Kingdom tradition of pyramid complexes and foreshadow theTemples of Millions of Years of the New Kingdom.[39] As such, Mentuhotep II's temple was certainly a major source of inspiration for the nearby, but 550-year later temples ofHatshepsut andThutmose III.

However, the most profound innovations of Mentuhotep II's temple are not architectural but religious. First, it is the earliest mortuary temple where the king is not just the recipient of offerings but rather enacts ceremonies for the deities (in this case Amun-Ra).[40]Second, the temple identifies the king withOsiris. Indeed, the decoration and royal statuary of the temple emphasizes the Osirian aspects of the dead ruler, an ideology apparent in the funerary statuary of many later pharaohs.[41]

Finally, most of the temple decoration is the work of local Theban artists. This is evidenced by the dominant artistic style of the temple which represents people with large lips and eyes and thin bodies.[42] At the opposite, the refined chapels of Mentuhotep II's wives are certainly due to Memphite craftsmen who were heavily influenced by the standards and conventions of the Old Kingdom. This phenomenon of fragmentation of the artistic styles is observed throughout the First Intermediate Period and is a direct consequence of the political fragmentation of the country.[42]

Situation

[edit]

The temple is located in the cliff atDeir el-Bahri on the west bank of Thebes. The choice of this location is certainly related to the Theban origin of the 11th Dynasty: Mentuhotep's predecessors on the Theban throne are all buried in close by saff tombs. Furthermore, Mentuhotep may have chosen Deir el-Bahri because it is aligned with the temple of Karnak, on the other side of Nile. In particular, the statue of Amun was brought annually to Deir el-Bahri during theBeautiful Festival of the Valley, something which the king may have perceived as beneficial to this funerary cult.[39] Consequently, and until the construction of the Djeser-Djeseru some five centuries later, Mentuhotep II's temple was the final destination of the barque of Amun during the festival.[43][44]

Discovery and excavations

[edit]

In the early 19th century, the ruins of the temple of Mentuhotep II were completely covered with debris. They consequently went unnoticed until the second half of the century, in spite of extensive excavations performed on the nearbyMortuary Temple of Hatshepsut.Thus it was only in 1859, that Lord Dufferin and his assistants, Dr. Lorange andCyril Clerke Graham, started to excavate the southwest corner of thehypostyle hall of Mentuhotep's temple. Clearing the immense mass of debris, they soon discovered the plundered grave of Queen Tem, one of Mentuhotep's wives. Realising the potential of the site, they then gradually worked their way to the sanctuary, where they found the granite altar of Mentuhotep with a representation of Amun-Re and various other finds such as the grave of NeferuTT319. Finally, in 1898, Howard Carter discovered the Bab el-Hosan[45] cache in the front court, where he uncovered the famous black seated statue of the king.[46]

Cross-section of Mentuhotep II mortuary temple by E. Naville

The next important excavation works took place from 1903 to 1907 under the direction of HenriÉdouard Naville, who worked there on behalf of the Egypt Exploration Fund. He was the first to undertake a systematic exploration of the temple.About ten years later, between 1920 and 1931,Herbert E. Winlock further excavated the temple for the Metropolitan Museum of Art. However, his results were published only in the form of preliminary reports in summary form.[47] Finally, from 1967 to 1971, Dieter Arnold conducted research on the site on behalf of theGerman Archaeological Institute. He published his results in three volumes.[48]

A column fragment with Mentuhotep's third horus nameSematawy on it

Foundational offerings

[edit]

Under the four corners of the temple terrace, H. Winlock discovered four pits during his 1921–1922 excavations. These pits were dug into the ground before the construction of the temple for the purpose of foundation rituals. Indeed, when H. Winlock discovered them, they still contained many offerings: a cattle skull, pitchers and bowls filled with fruits, barley and bread and a mud brick bearing Mentuhotep II's name.[49]

Further excavations of the pits undertaken in 1970 by Dieter Arnold revealed more food offerings such as bread and beef ribs, but also some bronze objects, a faience scepter and sheets of fabric. The sheets were marked in red ink at the corner, seven with the name of Mentuhotep II and three with that ofIntef II.[50]

Architecture

[edit]

Causeway and courtyard

[edit]

Similarly to the mortuary complexes of the Old Kingdom, Mentuhotep II's mortuary complex comprised two temples: the high temple of Deir el-Bahri and a valley temple located closer to the Nile on cultivated lands. The valley temple was linked to the high temple by a 1.2 km long and 46 m wide uncovered causeway. The causeway led to a large courtyard in front of the Deir el-Bahri temple.

The courtyard was adorned by a long rectangular flower bed, with fifty-fivesycamore trees planted in small pits and sixtamarisk plus two sycamore trees planted in deep pits filled with soil.[51] This is one of the very few archaeologically documented temple-gardens of ancient Egypt that are known enough about to reconstruct its appearance.[52] The maintenance of such a garden more than 1 km from the Nile into the arid desert must have required the constant work of many gardeners and an elaborate irrigation system.

Seated statues of Mentuhotep II next to the causeway

Left and right of the processional walkway were at least 22 seated statues of Mentuhotep II wearing, on the south side, theWhite Crown of Upper Egypt and on the north side theRed Crown of Lower Egypt. These were probably added to the temple for the celebration of Mentuhotep II'sSed festival during his 39th year on the throne.[53] Some headless sandstone statues are still on site today. Another was discovered in 1921 during Herbert Winlock's excavations and is now on display at theMetropolitan Museum of Art.[54]

Front part of the temple

[edit]

West of the causeway is the main temple, which consisted of two parts. The front part of the temple is dedicated to Montu-Ra, a merger of the sun godRa with the Theban god of warMontu, particularly worshipped during the 11th Dynasty. A ramp aligned with the central axis of the temple led to the upper terrace. The ramp that is visible today was constructed in 1905 byÉdouard Naville over the remains of the original ramp, which only is visible in two places as the lowest two layers of the lateral limestone cladding.[55]The eastern front part of the temple, on both sides of the rising ramp, consists of two porticos with a double row of rectangular pillars, which make the temple look like a saff tomb, the traditional burial of Mentuhotep II's 11th-Dynasty predecessors.[56]

The ruins of the ambulatory

On the temple terrace, a 60-metre-wide, 43-metre-deep and 5-metre-high podium supports the upper hall surrounding anambulatory and the core building. The ambulatory, separated from the upper hall by a 5-cubit-thick wall, comprised a total of 140 octagonal columns disposed in three rows.[57] For most of these columns, only the base is still visible today.[58]

The courtyard of the ambulatory was completely filled by the core building, a massive 22 m large and 11 m high construction. This edifice, located at the center of the temple complex, was excavated in 1904 and 1905 by Edouard Naville. He reconstructed it as a square structure topped by a small pyramid, a representation of the primeval mount which possibly resembled the superstructures of the royal tombs at Abydos. This reconstruction, supported by H. E. Winlock, was contested by D. Arnold, who argued that, for structural reasons, the temple could not have supported the weight of a small pyramid. Instead, he proposed that the edifice was flat-roofed.[59]

Reconstruction of Mentuhotep II's mortuary temple byÉdouard Naville. The presence of a pyramid is debated.

Rear part of the temple

[edit]

Behind the core edifice was the center of the cult for the deified king. The rear part of the temple was cut directly into the cliff and consisted of an open courtyard, a pillared hall with 82 octagonal columns and a chapel for a statue of the king.[60] This part of the temple was dedicated toAmun-Ra.

The open courtyard is flanked on the north and south sides by a row of five columns and on the east side by a double row totalling sixteen columns. At the center of the open courtyard lies a deepdromos leading to the royal tomb. Archaeological finds in this part of the temple include a limestone altar, a granite stele and six granite statues ofSenusret III.[61] To the west, the courtyard leads to the hypostyle hall with its ten rows of eight columns each, plus two additional columns on both sides of the entrance. The hypostyle hall is separated from the courtyard by a wall and, being also higher, is accessed via a small ramp.[62]

On the west end of the hypostyle hall lies the holiest place of the temple, a sanctuary dedicated to Mentuhotep and Amun-Ra leading to a smallspeos which housed a larger-than-life statue of the king. The sanctuary itself housed a statue of Amun-Re and was surrounded on three sides by walls and on one side by the cliff. The inner and outer faces of these walls were all decorated with painted inscriptions and representations of the kings and gods in high relief.[63] Surviving relief fragments show the deified king surrounded by the chief deities of Upper and Lower Egypt, Nekhbet, Seth, Horus and Wadjet, and on a par with them.[64] The gods present the king with bundles of palm branches, the symbol of Millions of Years. This relief is a manifestation of the profound religious changes in the ideology of kingship since the Old Kingdom:

In the Old Kingdom, the king had been the lord of the pyramid complex, [...] now he is reduced to a human ruler dependent on the gods' goodwill. His immortality is no longer innate; it has to be bestowed on him by the gods.[65]

Royal tomb

[edit]
Corridor leading to Mentuhotep II's tomb

As mentioned above, the open courtyard of the rear part of the temple presents a dromos in its center. This dromos, a 150 m long straight corridor, leads down to a large underground chamber 45 m below the court which is undoubtedly the tomb of the king. This chamber is entirely lined with red granite and has a pointed roof. It contained analabaster chapel in the form of an Upper-Egyptian Per-wer sanctuary.[66]This chapel was once closed by a double door now missing. It contained a wooden coffin and ointment vessels which left traces in the ground. Most of the grave goods that must have been deposited there are long gone as a result of the tomb plundering. The few remaining items were a scepter, several arrows, and a collection of models including ships, granaries and bakeries.[67]

Gallery

[edit]
  • Head statue of Mentuhotep II originally in Thebes, now on display in the Museo Gregoriano Egiziano, Vatican.
    Head statue of Mentuhotep II originally inThebes, now on display in theMuseo Gregoriano Egiziano, Vatican.
  • Painted sandstone statue of Mentuhotep II, discovered by H. Winlock
    Painted sandstone statue of Mentuhotep II, discovered by H. Winlock
  • Relief Fragment of Pharaoh Mentuhotep II - 11th Dynasty
    Relief Fragment of Pharaoh Mentuhotep II - 11th Dynasty
  • Relief Fragments from a Large Figure of Mentuhotep II
    Relief Fragments from a Large Figure of Mentuhotep II
  • Mentuhotep II receives offering, Musée du Louvre.
    Mentuhotep II receives offering,Musée du Louvre.
  • Cylinder seals of Mentuhotep II, Musée du Louvre.
    Cylinder seals of Mentuhotep II,Musée du Louvre.
  • Mentuhotep II's cartouche on the Abydos king list.
    Mentuhotep II's cartouche on theAbydos king list.
  • Aerial view of Mentuhotep II's mortuary temple at Deir el-Bahari.
    Aerial view of Mentuhotep II's mortuary temple atDeir el-Bahari.
  • Shade-bearer of Neferu, Mentuhotep II's royal wife, in the typical regional artistic style of the 11th Dynasty.
    Shade-bearer of Neferu, Mentuhotep II's royal wife, in the typical regional artistic style of the 11th Dynasty.
  • Model of granary from Mentuhotep II's tomb
    Model of granary from Mentuhotep II's tomb

References

[edit]
  1. ^Stewart, John (2006). African States and Rulers (Third ed.). London: McFarland. p. 81.ISBN 0-7864-2562-8.
  2. ^Alan H. Gardiner:The royal canon of Turin.
  3. ^"Ancient Egypt - Dynasty XI".www.narmer.pl.
  4. ^Peter Clayton:Chronicle of the Pharaohs: The Reign-by-Reign Record of the Rulers and Dynasties of Ancient Egypt, Thames & Hudson, p. 72. 2006.ISBN 0-500-28628-0
  5. ^ab"The Ancient Egypt Site".www.ancient-egypt.org.
  6. ^abGrajetzki,The Middle Kingdom, p. 19
  7. ^Franke, Detlef (1988). "Zur Chronologie des Mittleren Reiches Teil II: Die sogenannte "Zweite Zwischenzeit" Altägyptens".Orientalia. Nova Series (in German).57 (3). Gregorian Biblical Press: 133.ISSN 0030-5367.JSTOR 3793107.
  8. ^abVandersleyen, Claude (1994). "La titulature de Montouhotep II". In Bryan, Betsy Morrell; Lorton, David (eds.).Essays in Egyptology in honor of Hans Goedicke (in Italian). San Antonio, Texas: Van Siclen Books. pp. 317–320.ISBN 093317540X.OCLC 34552368.
  9. ^abCallender, Gae (2003) [2000]. "The Middle Kingdom Renaissance (c.2055–1650 BC)". In Shaw, Ian (ed.).The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt. Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press.ISBN 9780191604621.
  10. ^"History of Parasitology".Cairo University Parasitology Department. Retrieved2 June 2022.
  11. ^"Statue of King Mentuhotep II in the Jubilee Garment (c. 2051-2000 B.C.) From Thebes, Deir el-Bahri".Research Gate. Retrieved2 June 2022.
  12. ^Clere, J.J.; Vandier, J.Textes de la premiere periode intermediaire et de la XIeme dynasty. Bibliotheca Aegyptiaca X. Vol. 1.Complete Stele on p. 21
  13. ^Gauthier, Henri (1906). "Quelques remarques sur la XIe dynastie".BIFAO (5): 39.
  14. ^Tyldesley, Joyce (2006).Chronicle of the Queens of Egypt. London, UK: Thames & Hudson. pp. 66-68.ISBN 0-500-05145-3.
  15. ^Wildung, D.About the autonomy of the arts of ancient Sudan. In M. Honegger (Ed.), Nubian archaeology in the XXIst Century. Peeters Publishers. pp. 105–112.
  16. ^Lobban, Richard A. (9 December 2003).Historical Dictionary of Ancient and Medieval Nubia. Scarecrow Press.ISBN 978-0-8108-6578-5.
  17. ^Crawford, Keith W. (1 December 2021)."Critique of the "Black Pharaohs" Theme: Racist Perspectives of Egyptian and Kushite/Nubian Interactions in Popular Media".African Archaeological Review.38 (4):695–712.doi:10.1007/s10437-021-09453-7.ISSN 1572-9842.S2CID 238718279.
  18. ^Dodson, Aidan Marc; Hilton, Dyan (February 2010) [September 2004].The complete royal families of ancient Egypt. London, UK: Thames and Hudson.
  19. ^Roth, Silke (2001).Die Königsmütter des Alten Ägypten von der Frühzeit bis zum Ende der 12. Dynastie. Wiesbaden, DE: Otto Harrassowitz.
  20. ^"Ancient Egypt and Archaeology Web Site - deir_el_bahri_068".
  21. ^Arnold, Dieter (1974).Der Tempel des Königs Mentuhotep von Deir el-Bahari. Mainz, DE: Philipp von Zabern.3 vols.
  22. ^"Sarcophagus of Kawit".Wikimedia Commons.
  23. ^Wendrick, Willike (2010).Egyptian Archaeology. Wiley-Blackwell. p. 151.ISBN 978-1-4051-4988-4 – via Google Books.
  24. ^Török, László (2008).Between Two Worlds: The Frontier Region Between Ancient Nubia and Egypt 3700 BC–500 AD. Brill. p. 83.ISBN 978-90-04-17197-8.
  25. ^Callender. Shaw, Ian (ed.).The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt. p. 141.
  26. ^"Sarcophagus of Henhenet".Metropolitan Museum.
  27. ^"Shrine of Henhenet".Metropolitan Museum.
  28. ^Arnold, Dieter (2008).Tombs of the Queens of Mentuhotep. Grimaldi Forum. p. 97.ISBN 978-2757201909.
  29. ^Callender, In: Ian Shaw (edit.),Oxford History of Ancient Egypt, p. 139.
  30. ^abcCallender, In: Ian Shaw (edit.),Oxford History of Ancient Egypt, p. 140.
  31. ^M. Collier, B. Manley and R. Parkinson;How to Read Egyptian Hieroglyphs: A Step-by-Step Guide to Teach Yourself
  32. ^Joseph Clayton, Aloisia de Trafford; Mark Borda:A hieroglyphic inscription found at Jebel Uweinat mentioning Yam and Tekhebet. In:Sahara : preistoria e storia del Sahara, 19, 2008, ISSN 1120-5679, pp. 129–134
  33. ^Callender, In Ian Shaw (edit.),Oxford History of Ancient Egypt, p. 140-141.
  34. ^abCallender, In: Ian Shaw (edit.),Oxford History of Ancient Egypt, p. 140-141.
  35. ^, Callender, In Ian Shaw (edit.),Oxford History of Ancient Egypt, p. 141.
  36. ^Callender, In: Ian Shaw (edit.):The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt p.127
  37. ^Grajetzki,The Middle Kingdom, p. 20-21
  38. ^Dieter ArnoldMentuhotep. vol. 2, p.90.
  39. ^abCallender, In: Ian Shaw (edit.):The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt, p. 142–143
  40. ^Byron Esely Shafer (Editor),Temples of Ancient Egypt, p.74, Cornell University Press; 2nd Revised edition,ISBN 0-8014-3399-1[1]
  41. ^"Search results for "osiride statue" - Wikimedia Commons".commons.wikimedia.org.
  42. ^abCallender, In: Ian Shaw (edit.):The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt p. 144
  43. ^Byron Esely Shafer (Editor),Temples of Ancient Egypt, p.95, Cornell University Press; 2nd Revised edition,ISBN 0-8014-3399-1[2]
  44. ^After Hatchepsut's reign, the barque of Amun visited all the royal cult complexes on the west bank that were still in activity.
  45. ^"Discovery of Bab el-Hosan". Archived fromthe original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved2012-05-02.
  46. ^"Mentuhotep II, The Gateof the Horseman".ib205.tripod.com.
  47. ^D. Arnold:Mentuhotep. vol. 1, p. 70f.
  48. ^D. Arnold:Der Tempel des Königs Mentuhotep in Deir el-Bahari. 3 vols.
  49. ^Dieter Arnold: The Temple of Mentuhotep at Deir el-Bahri, p. 49 ff, Dieter Arnold: Dictionary of Egyptian architecture p. 95f
  50. ^Dieter. Arnold,Mentuhotep vol 3, p. 52
  51. ^Winlock quote after Dieter Arnold,The Temple of Mentuhotep at Deir el Bahari 1979 p. 21ff
  52. ^Robichon-Varille quote after Dieter Arnold,The Temple of Mentuhotep at Deir el Bahari 1979 p. 21
  53. ^Byron Esely Shafer (Editor),Temples of Ancient Egypt, p. 75, Cornell University Press; 2nd Revised edition,ISBN 0-8014-3399-1
  54. ^T. Kühn,Der königliche Tempel- und Grabbezirk Mentu-hotep II. in Deir el-Bahari p. 21
  55. ^Dieter Arnold,Mentuhotep vol. 1, p. 16f
  56. ^Dieter Arnold,Mentuhotep vol. 1, p. 11
  57. ^Similar to the column ofIntef II in Karnak
  58. ^Dieter Arnold,Mentuhotep. vol. 1, p. 16f
  59. ^Dieter Arnold:Mentuhotep vol. 1, p. 27ff.; Dieter Arnold:Lexikon der Baukunst p. 159, and Höveler-MüllerAm Anfang war Ägypten p. 142.
  60. ^Byron Esely Shafer (Editor),Temples of Ancient Egypt, p. 74, Cornell University Press; 2nd Revised edition,ISBN 0-8014-3399-1[3]
  61. ^Dieter Arnold:Mentuhotep. vol. 1, p. 33.
  62. ^Dieter Arnold,Mentuhotep vol. 1, p. 34f.
  63. ^Dieter Arnold,Mentuhotep vol. 3, p. 15
  64. ^Dieter Arnold,Mentuhotep vol. 3, p. 33f
  65. ^Dieter Arnold, Byron Esely Shafer (Editor),Temples of Ancient Egypt, p.74-75, Cornell University Press; 2nd Revised edition,ISBN 0-8014-3399-1[4]
  66. ^Dieter Arnold,Encyclopedia of Ancient Egyptian Architecture, I B Tauris editions,ISBN 1-86064-465-1
  67. ^Dieter Arnold,Mentuhotep vol. 1, p. 44

Further reading

[edit]
  • Gae Callender:The Middle Kingdom Renaissance, In: Ian Shaw (edit.):The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2000,ISBN 0-19-815034-2, pp. 148–183
  • W. Grajetzki,The Middle Kingdom of Ancient Egypt: History, Archaeology and Society, Duckworth, London 2006ISBN 0-7156-3435-6, 18–23
  • Habachi, Labib 1963. King Nebhepetre Menthuhotp: his monuments, place in history, deification and unusual representation in the form of gods. Mitteilungen des Deutschen Archäologischen Instituts, Abteilung Kairo 19, 16–52.

External links

[edit]

Media related toMentuhotep II at Wikimedia Commons

Preceded byPharaoh of Egypt
Eleventh Dynasty
Succeeded by
Period
Dynasty
  • Pharaohs
    • male
    • female
  • uncertain
Protodynastic
(pre-3150 BC)
Lower
Upper
Early Dynastic
(3150–2686 BC)
I
II
Old Kingdom
(2686–2181 BC)
III
IV
V
VI
1st Intermediate
(2181–2040 BC)
VII/VIII
IX
X
Period
Dynasty
  • Pharaohs
    • male
    • female
  • uncertain
Middle Kingdom
(2040–1802 BC)
XI
Nubia
XII
2nd Intermediate
(1802–1550 BC)
XIII
XIV
XV
XVI
Abydos
XVII
Period
Dynasty
  • Pharaohs  (male
  • female)
  • uncertain
New Kingdom
(1550–1070 BC)
XVIII
XIX
XX
3rd Intermediate
(1069–664 BC)
XXI
High Priests of Amun
XXII
XXIII
XXIV
XXV
Late toRoman Period(664 BC–313 AD)
Period
Dynasty
  • Pharaohs
    • male
    • female
  • uncertain
Late
(664–332 BC)
XXVI
XXVII
XXVIII
XXIX
XXX
XXXI
Hellenistic
(332–30 BC)
Argead
Ptolemaic
Roman
(30 BC–313 AD)
XXXIV
Dynastic genealogies
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