The
Turin Canon, a king list redacted during the early
Ramesside period, records Amenemhat IV on Column 6, Row 1, and credits him with a reign of 9 years, 3 months and 27 days.
Coregency at
Cairo. The left figure, flexing his arm across his chest in order to bring a sign "ankh" (life) to the face of his partner, is Amenemhat III. The king on the right is Amenemhat IV. Amenemhat IV first came to power as a junior coregent of his predecessor
Amenemhat III, whose reign marks the apex of the Middle Kingdom period. The coregency is well attested by numerous monuments and artefacts where the names of the two kings parallel each other.
Byblos During his reign, important trade relations must have existed with the city of
Byblos on the coast of modern-day
Lebanon, where an obsidian and gold chest as well as a jar lid bearing Amenemhat IV's name have been found.
Mersa Gawasis Two fragments of a stela depicting Amenemhat IV and dating to his regnal year 7 were found at
Berenice on the Red Sea. In 2010, a report on continuing excavations at
Wadi Gawasis on the
Red Sea coast notes the finding of two wooden chests and an ostracon inscribed with a
hieratic text mentioning an expedition to the fabled
Land of Punt in Regnal year 8 of Amenemhat IV, under the direction of the royal scribe Djedy.
Nilometer In
Nubia, three
nilometer records are known from
Kumna that are explicitly dated to regnal years 5, 6, and 7, showing that Egyptian presence in the region was maintained during his lifetime. It is "the only intact temple still existing from the Middle Kingdom" according to
Zahi Hawass, former Secretary-General of Egypt's
Supreme Council of Antiquities (SCA). The foundations of the temple, administrative buildings, granaries, and residences were uncovered by an Egyptian archaeological expedition in early 2006. It is possible that Amenemhat IV built a temple in the northeastern
Fayum at Qasr el-Sagha. Amenemhat IV is responsible for the completion of a shrine at the
temple of Hathor in the Sinai and may also have undertaken works in
Karnak where a pedestal for a sacred barque inscribed with the names of Amenemhat III and Amenemhat IV was found in 1924. Frente de la esfinge de Amenemhat IV, British Museum.jpg|alt=|Small
gneiss sphinx inscribed with the name of Amenemhat IV that was reworked in
Ptolemaic times, now on display at the
British Museum. Egyptian Museum - Damaged statue in front - sitting figure.jpg|alt=|Statue of an Middle Kingdom pharaoh, possibly Amenemhat IV, from Herakleopolis Magna that was recarved and reinscribed for
Ramesses II, now in the garden of the
Egyptian Museum Head of a King, possibly Amememhat IV MET 08.200.2 02.jpg|alt=|The head of an undetermined Twelfth Dynasty king (MET 08.200.2), perhaps of Amenemhat IV or Sobekneferu ==Royal Court==