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   » » Wiki: Itjtawy
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Itjtawy or It-Towy ("Seizer of the "), also known by its full name Amenemhat-itjtawy ("Amenemhat seizes the Two Lands"), was an royal city established by .

(2025). 9780500772409, Thames & Hudson.

As yet, Itjtawy’s exact location remains . Circumstantial evidence suggests that the site lies beneath cultivated fields east of the pyramids of Amenemhat I and Senusret I at .
There is evidence that Amenemhat, the founder of the 12th Dynasty who ruled approximately 1991 to 1962 BC, established Itjtawy during his 20, replacing Thebes as the capital of Egypt. However, the earliest known mention of Itjtawy is dated to the pharaoh’s regnal year 30 (ten years later its presumed foundation), and is represented by the double-dated stela CG 20516 now in .

Relocation of the capital may have been a strategic move. The site for Itjtawy – hundreds of miles down the from Thebes – may have been chosen for its proximity to the source of Asiatic incursions into Egypt, in order to help prevent further attacks.

(2025). 9780192804587, Oxford University Press. .

Since the determinative sign for Itjtawy is that of a fortified enclosure instead of the conventional city hieroglyph, Egyptologist Steven Snape suggested that Itjtawy was a "disembedded capital", a small center comprising administrative buildings and a , inhabited only by the administrative staff who ran those buildings; the major economic and cultural centers remained pre-existing cities such as and Thebes.

Itjtawy retained its capital status during the 12th and 13th dynasties at least until the rule of , the last pharaoh of the period who is attested by objects from outside of . It is believed that at this point the invasion of by populations from occurred, which led to the fall of the Middle Kingdom into the Second Intermediate Period; the pharaohs of the 13th Dynasty thus abandoned Itjtawy and retreated back to Thebes in the south.Daphna Ben Tor: Sequences and chronology of Second Intermediate Period royal-name scarabs, based on excavated series from Egypt and the Levant, in: The Second Intermediate Period (Thirteenth-Seventeenth Dynasties), Current Research, Future Prospects edited by Marcel Maree, Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta, 192, 2010


See also
  • List of ancient Egyptian towns and cities

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