MENTUHOTEP II


Meaning of MENTUHOTEP II in English

also called Nebhapetre, king of Egypt's 11th dynasty (ruled 20081957 BC) who, starting as the ruler of southernmost Egypt in about 2008, reunified the country by defeating his rivals and ushered in the period known as the Middle Kingdom. At his accession, Mentuhotep, then called Sankhibtawy (He Who Causes the Heart of the Two Lands to Live), controlled Upper Egypt from Aswan to This, an ancient city about 90 miles (145 km) north of Thebes, his capital. He inherited a realm that had already spent some 60 years in intermittent warfare with the Heracleopolitan kingdom, which ruled Middle and Lower Egypt, as each state sought to control the whole country. In the 14th year of his reign, Mentuhotep launched a drive against Heracleopolis. Nothing is known of the course of the war, but the Thebans were aided by a change of rulers in the enemy capital, and, by 1968 at the latest, Mentuhotep had captured Heracleopolis and reunited Egypt. In subsequent years, fighting continued in the north and against the Bedouin, who habitually raided the delta, and northern Nubia was annexed later in the reign. To consolidate the unification, Mentuhotep received the submission of Middle Egypt's local governors, most of whom he left in office, thereby establishing the feudal character of the early Middle Kingdom. Thebes became the national capital, and Mentuhotep's loyal supporters received the key government posts; he also accepted partisans of the defeated Heracleopolitans who demonstrated loyalty to the new order. Reunification was followed by great expansion in trade and building. Mentuhotep built temples with reliefs of his victories at numerous Upper Egyptian sites, but little survives from them. At Thebes he built a magnificent temple and tomb complex. The hills around the monument were honeycombed with the tombs of his officials and soldiers who perished in the wars. He died about 1957, leaving a reunited and prosperous kingdom to his successor, Sankhkare Mentuhotep III. Tradition accorded Mentuhotep II an honoured place with Egypt's other unifiers, the founders of the 1st and 18th dynasties.

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