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Other Antefs and Mentu-hoteps |
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The hunter king was buried in a tomb marked only by a pyramid of unbaked
brick, very humble in its character, but containing a mortuary chapel in which
the monument above described was set up. An inscription on the tablet declared
that it was erected to the memory of Antef the Great, Son of the Sun, King of
Upper and Lower Egypt, in the fiftieth year of his reign.
Other Mentu-hoteps and
other Antefs continued on the line of Theban kings, reigning quietly and
ingloriously, and leaving no mark upon the scroll of time, yet probably
advancing the material prosperity of their country, and preparing the way for
that rise to greatness which gives Thebes, on the whole, the foremost place in
Egyptian history. Useful projects occupied the attention of these monarchs.
One
of them sank wells in the valley of HammamÃąt, to provide water for the caravans
which plied between Coptos and the Red Sea. Another established military posts
in the valley to protect the traffic and the Egyptian quarrymen. Later on, a
king called Sankh-ka-ra launched a fleet upon the Red Sea waters, and opened
direct communications with the sacred land of Punt, the region of odoriferous
gums and of strange animals, as giraffes, panthers, hunting leopards,
cynocephalous apes, and long-tailed monkeys. There is some doubt whether "Punt"
was Arabia Felix, or the Somauli country. In any case, it lay far down the Gulf,
and could only be reached after a voyage of many days.
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