Intef the Elder

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Tenurec. 2150 BC
SuccessorMentuhotep I?
Dynastyancestor of the 11th Dynasty
Burialuncertain, possibly a tomb at Dra' Abu el-Naga'
Intef
Nomarch
of the 4th nome of Upper Egypt
Intef the Elder seated (center), on what is perhaps his funerary stele CG 20009[1]
Egyptian name
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Tenurec. 2150 BC
SuccessorMentuhotep I?
Dynastyancestor of the 11th Dynasty
Burialuncertain, possibly a tomb at Dra' Abu el-Naga'
MotherIku(i)[2]
Childrenpossibly Mentuhotep I

Intef, whose name is commonly accompanied by epithets such as the Elder, the Great (= Intef-aa) or born of Iku (fl.c. 2150 BC), was a nomarch residing at Thebes during the First Intermediate Period and later considered a founding figure of the 11th Dynasty, which eventually reunified Egypt.[3]

Intef the Elder was not a king but rather a provincial governor, known as a nomarch, ruling from the city of Thebes c. 2150 BC. He would have most likely served as nomarch during the reign of one of the Pharaohs of either the 8th, 9th or 10th dynasties, or possibly during the rule of the Herakleopolitan dynasty.[2][3] Intef the Elder would have controlled the territory from Thebes to Aswan in the south, and not farther north than to Coptos, which was then controlled by another nomarch.[3]

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