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Mentuhotep III

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Successor
  
Accede date
  
1995 BC

Grandmother
  
Iah

Predecessor
  
Died
  
1998 BC

Parents
  
Mentuhotep II, Tem

Grandfather
  
Intef III

Mentuhotep III Head of a King Possibly Seankhkare Mentuhotep III Middle Kingdom

Reign
  
2010 BC – 1998 BC (11th dynasty)

Similar
  
Mentuhotep IV, Intef III, Mentuhotep II, Iah

Sankhkare Mentuhotep III (also Montuhotep III) of the Eleventh dynasty was Pharaoh of Egypt during the Middle Kingdom. He was assigned a reign of 12 years in the Turin Canon.

Contents

Mentuhotep III Osiriphorm Statue Of Mentuhotep IIi Photograph by Everett

Reign

Mentuhotep III Possibly Mentuhotep III Egyptian sculpture in the Metropol Flickr

Mentuhotep III succeeded his father Mentuhotep II to the throne. It is believed that, following his father's long 51 years of reign, Mentuhotep III was relatively old when he acceded to the throne and reigned for 12 years. Despite its short duration, Mentuhotep's reign is known for his expedition to Punt and architectural innovations.

Name

Mentuhotep III Head of a King Possibly Seankhkare Mentuhotep III Flickr

Mentuhotep III's titulary is very similar to the third and final one of his father. Mentuhotep III is known to have had at least two praenomen: the well known Sankhkare and also


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"He who embellishes the Soul of Re"

Expedition to Punt

Mentuhotep III httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Mentuhotep III sent an expedition to the Land of Punt during the 8th year of his reign, something that had not been done since the Old Kingdom. An inscription in the Wadi Hammamat describes the expedition as being 3000 men strong and under the command of the steward Henenu. As they left Coptos in direction of the Red Sea, they dug 12 wells for future expeditions and cleared the region of rebels. They returned from Punt with incense, gum and perfumes, and quarried the Wadi Hammamat for stones.

Monuments

Mentuhotep III Mentuhotep III at Wadi ElShatt ElRigal My Egypt Pinterest Photos

Sankhkare Mentuhotep was responsible for several building projects in the 12 years of his reign. His own mortuary temple was begun in Deir el-Bahari, but never completed. The temple was located a short distance from his father's mortuary temple. A causeway would have led up to a temple platform. Inscriptions show that the king was buried in a chamber cut into the rock-face.

Mentuhotep III Head of a King Possibly Mentuhotep III Paul Hudson Flickr

Sankhkare Mentuhotep also had a mud-brick temple erected at Thoth Hill in Western Thebes. The temple was built on the site of an older archaic temple. It was dedicated to the god Montu-Ra. This temple may have been destroyed by an earthquake towards the end of the 11th dynasty.

Family

Mentuhotep III was the son and successor of Mentuhotep II. One of the wives of Mentuhotep II, Tem, was given the title Mother of the Dual King and based on that title she is almost certainly the mother of Mentuhotep III. Mentuhotep III's family is mostly a mystery. It is currently believed that he fathered his successor Mentuhotep IV with one of his harem wives, Imi. This is however still debated Mentuhotep IV's mother is known to have been Queen Imi. If he was the son of Mentuhotep III, Imi must have been the wife of Mentuhotep III.

References

Mentuhotep III Wikipedia