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Mentuhotep II campaigned in Lower Nubia, where he may have been preceded by the Inyotefs. His mortuary complex in Thebes contained some of the earliest known depictions of Amon-Re, the dynastic god of the Middle Kingdom and the New Kingdom. Mentuhotep II was himself posthumously deified and worshiped, notably in the Aswān area. In administration, he attempted to break the power of the nomarchs, but his policy was unsuccessful in the longer term. Mentuhotep II’s successors, Mentuhotep III (1957–45 bce) and Mentuhotep IV (1945–38 bce), also ruled from Thebes. The reign of Mentuhotep IV corresponds to seven years marked “missing” ...(100 of 34953 words)