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Amenemhet I was the first ruler of the
12th Dynasty, and some Egyptologists
believe that recovery from the First Intermediate Period into the Middle Kingdom
only really began with his rule. He was almost certainly not of royal blood, at
least if he is the same Vizier that functioned under his predecessor, Mentuhotep
IV. Perhaps either Mentuhotep IV had no heir, or he was simply a weak leader.
This vizier, named Amenemhet, recorded an inscription when Mentuhotep IV sent
him to Wadi Hammamt. The inscription records two omens. The first tells us of a
gazelle that gave birth to her calf atop the stone that had been chosen for the
lid of the King's sarcophagus. the second was of a ferocious rainstorm
that, when subsided, disclosed a well 10 cubits square and full of water. Of
course that was a very good omen in this barren landscape.
Many Egyptologists believe that Amenemhet's inscription implies that a great
ruler will come to the throne of Egypt upon the death of Mentuhotep IV, who will
lead the country into prosperity. It is fairly certain that Amenemhet the
vizier was predicting his own rise to the throne as Amenemhet I. However, we are
told that he had at least two other competitors to the throne.
One was called Inyotef, and the other a Segerseni from Nubia.
It would appear that he quickly dealt with these obstacles. We
believe that he ruled Egypt for almost 30 years. Peter A.
Clayton places his reign between the years of 1991 and 1962 BC
while the Oxford History of Ancient Egypt gives him a reign
lasting from 1985 through 1956 BC. Dodson has his reign
lasting from 1994 until 1964 BC.
Left: Image of Amenemhet I from his
mortuary complex at el-lisht
Amenemhet I's Horus name, Wehem-mesut, means "he who repeats births", and
almost certainly was chosen to commemorate the new dynasty and a return to the
values and prosperity of a united Egypt. Amenemhet (Amenemhat) was his birth
name and means "Amun is at the Head". He was called Ammenemes I by the
Greeks. His throne name was Sehetep-ib-re, which means "Satisfied is the
Heart of Re".
Neferu, who was the principal wife of Senwosret
I, the kings mother, Nefret, and a principal wife,
Nefrytatenen
Amenemhet was probably the son of a woman named Nofret (Nefret),
from Elephantine
near modern Aswan, and a priest called Senusret, according to
an inscription at Thebes. So his origins are probably southern
Egypt. We know of three possible wives including Neferytotenen
(Nefrutoteen, Nefrytatenen), who may have been the mother of
Amenemhet I's successor, Senusret
I, Dedyet, who was may also have been his sister, and
Sobek'neferu, Neferu). It is fairly clear that Amenemhet established Egypt's first co-regency
with his son, Senusret I, in about the older kings 20th year of rule. He was not
only seeking to assure the succession of his proper heir, but also providing the
young prince valuable training under his tutelage. Senusret was given several
active roles in Amenemhet I's government, specifically including matters related
to the military matters.
We know of several pieces of literature that probably date from his reign,
some of which appears to support his reign with fables of kingship. One, the
Discourse of Neferty, has a ruler emerging named Ameny, who was foretold by a
prophet in the Old Kingdom (Neferty). Neferti was a Heliopolis sage who seems
familiar to us from Djedi in the Papyrus Westcar. He is
summoned to the court of Snofru, during who's reign the story
is suppose to have taken place. This tale has Ameny delivering Egypt from chaos, but
it should be noted that it is the chaos of the late 11th
Dynasty, not the First
Intermediate Period.
Then a king will come from the South,
Ameny, the justified, my name,
Son of a woman of Ta-Seti, child of Upper Egypt,
He will take the white crown,
he willjoin the Two Mighty Ones (the two crowns)
Asiatics will fall to his sword,
Libyans will fall to his flame,
Rebels to his wrath, traitors to his might,
As the serpent on his brow subdues the rebels for him,
One will build the Walls-of-the-Ruler,
To bar Asiatics from entering Egypt...
We do not know what year this literature dates to within Amenemhet I's reign.
But
while there are other text that refer to the chaos before the arrival of new
kings, the references to Asiatics and the Walls-of-the-Ruler are new.
Amenemhet I set about consolidating the country in a very purposeful manner.
He moved his capital north to the capital he apparently established named Amenemhet-itj-tawy, which means, "Amenemhet the Seizer of the Two
lands". It was located south of Memphis, on the edge of the
Fayoum Oasis,
though the city ruins have not yet been discovered. This gave him a more central
control of Egypt, as well as placing him nearer to problem areas in the Delta.
It also signaled the end of an old era and new beginnings. This move was perhaps
only carried out a short time after he took the throne.
Many Egyptologists
believe that the move was made at the very beginning of his reign, while a few
believe it may have been much later, around the time of his twentieth year as
ruler. However, he did begin a tomb at Thebes, and then abandoned it for a
pyramid at el-Lisht, near the new capital. It appears that the work on the tomb
at Thebes may have taken between three and five years to complete. Also, there
are very few of his monuments located near Thebes, suggesting that he soon moved
away.
His pyramid at el Lisht is instructional, for it seems to portray a
return to some of the values of the Old Kingdom, while still embracing the
Theban concepts of the region of his birth. Egyptologists who believe Amenemhet I may have waited until his twentieth year to make the move to his new city base
their evidence on an inscription found on the foundation blocks of the pyramid's
mortuary temple. It records Amenemhet's royal jubilee, and also that year one of
a new king had elapsed, suggesting that the pyramid was started very late in the
king's reign. Therefore, considerable debate remains over the timing of his
move.
He also reorganized the administration of the country, keeping the nomarchs
who had supported him, while weakening the regional governors by appointing new
officials at Asyut, Cusae and Elephantine. An inscription records that he also
divided the nomes (provinces) into different sets of towns and
redistributed the territories by reference to the Nile flood.
We see a steady march during Amenemhet I's rule back to a more
centralized government, together with an increase in
bureaucracy. Another move, both to dilute the
army's power and to raise personnel for coming conflicts, was his reintroduction
of conscription.
Undoubtedly, in the Discourse of Neferty,
Asiatics refer to the people who were causing trouble on the Egypt's eastern
frontier. One of Amenemhet I's earliest campaigns were against these
Asiatics, though the scale of these operations is unknown. He drove these people back, and indeed did build the
Walls-of-the-Ruler, as series of fortifications along Egypt's northeastern
frontier. However, even as late as his 24th year of rule, we
still find inscriptions recording expeditions against these
"and-dweller". None of these fortifications has ever
been found, though the remains of a canal in the region may
date from the period. Apparently, in the midst of the Asiatic
campaign, he also found time to crush a few unrepentant local
governors (nomarchs).
In Nubia, Amenemhet I first pushed his army southward to
Elephantine, where he consolidated his rule and seems to have
been satisfied for a number of years. This expedition was
apparently lead by Khnemhotpe I, governor of the Oryx nome,
who traveled up the Nile with 20 boats. But by year 29 of
his rule, the king appears to have no longer been happy with
the lose trading and quarrying network with Nubia that we find
in the Old Kingdom. The new policy was one of conquest and
colonization with the principle aim of obtaining raw
materials, especially gold. An inscription at the northern
Nubian site of Korosko about half way between the first and
second cataracts (rapids) states that the people of Wawat
(northern Nubia) were defeated in his 29th year, and he
apparently drove his army as far south as the second
cataract. In order to protect Egypt and fortify captured territory in Nubia, he founded
a fortress at Semna and Quban in the region of the second Nile Cataract, which would begin
a string of future 12th Dynasty fortresses. Along with protecting his newly
acquired territory and the gold mines in Wadi Allaqi, he also created a stranglehold over economic contacts with
Upper Nubia and further south. We also know that he constructed a fortress at
Mendes named Rawaty.
From a foreign relations standpoint, we also know that
diplomatic and commercial relations were renewed, after a long
absence, with Byblos and the Aegean world.
Amenemhet I took part in a number of building projects.
Besides his fortresses, we know he built at Babastis,
el-Khatana and Tanis. He undertook important building works at
Karnak, from which a few statues and granite naos survive. He
may have even established the original temple of Mut to the
south of the Temple of
Amun. He also worked at Koptos (Coptos), where
he partly decorated the temple of Min, at
Abydos, where he
dedicated a granite altar to Osiris, at
Dendera, where he
built a granite gateway to Hathor and at Memphis, where he
built a temple of Ptah. Also
a little north of Tell el-Dab'a, he apparently began a small
mudbrick temple at Ezbet Rushdi, that was later expanded by Senusret
III.
Religiously, being from southern Egypt, Amenemhet I's
allegiance was probably to the god Amun, and in fact, we find
from this period forward the rise of Amun, at the expense of
Montu, god of war, as the supreme deity of Thebes.
It is also notable that we find an increase in the mineral
wealth of the royal family. We find a huge increase in the
jewelry caches found in several 12th Dynasty royal burials. It
is obvious from several sources of evidence that even the
standard of living form middle class Egyptians was on the
increase, though their level of wealth was proportional to
their official offices.
Amenemhet I appears to have been a very wise leader, setting about to correct
the problems of the First Intermediate Period, protecting Egypt's boarders from
invasion and assuring a legitimate succession. Yet he was murdered in an
apparent harem plot while his co-regent was leading a campaign in Libya.
Again, we find two literary works, the Tale of Sinuhe and the Instructions of Amenemhet
I, reflecting this king's tragic end. One literary work
from the time of Senusret I presents the account of Amenemhet
I's murder, supposedly provided by the king himself from
beyond the grave:
"It was after supper, when night had fallen, and
I had spent an hour of happiness. I was asleep upon my
bed, having become weary, and my heart had begun to follow
sleep. When weapons of my counsel were wielded, I had become
like a snake of the necropolis. As I came to, I awoke
to fighting, and found that it was an attack of the
bodyguard. If I had quickly taken weapons in my hand,
I would have made the wretches retreat with a charge! But
there is none mighty in the night, none who can fight alone;
no success will come without a helper. Look, my injury
happened while I was without you, when the entourage had not
yet heard that I would hand over to you when I had not yet
sat with you, that I might make counsels for you; for I did
not plan it, I did not foresee it, and my heart had not
taken thought of the negligence of servants."
Apparently, his foresight
in creating the co-regency with his son proved successful, for Senusret I
succeeded his father and their seems to have been little or no disruption in the
administration of the country.
References:
| Title |
Author |
Date |
Publisher |
Reference
Number |
| Chronicle of the Pharaohs
(The Reign-By-Reign Record of the Rulers and Dynasties
of Ancient Egypt) |
Clayton, Peter A. |
1994 |
Thames and Hudson Ltd |
ISBN 0-500-05074-0 |
| Complete Valley of the
Kings, The (Tombs and Treasures of Egypt's Greatest
Pharaohs) |
Reeves, Nicholas; Wilkinson,
Richard H. |
1966 |
Thames and Hudson Ltd |
IBSN 0-500-05080-5 |
| History of Ancient Egypt, A |
Grimal, Nicolas |
1988 |
Blackwell |
None Stated |
| Monarchs of the Nile |
Dodson, Aidan |
1995 |
Rubicon Press |
ISBN 0-948695-20-x |
| Oxford History of Ancient
Egypt, The |
Shaw, Ian |
2000 |
Oxford University Press |
ISBN 0-19-815034-2 |
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