Known rulers of the Twelfth Dynasty are as follows:
Amenemhat I This dynasty was founded by
Amenemhat I, who may have been
vizier to the last king of
Dynasty XI,
Mentuhotep IV. His armies campaigned south as far as the
Second Cataract of the
Nile and into southern
Canaan. As a part of his militaristic expansion of Egypt, Amenemhat I ordered the construction of multiple military forts in Nubia. He also reestablished diplomatic relations with the Canaanite state of
Byblos and Hellenic rulers in the
Aegean Sea. He was the father of Senusret I.
Senusret I ,
Amenemhat II or
Senusret II, with the white crown of
Upper Egypt (left), the other with the red crown of
Lower Egypt. Wood, from
el-Lisht, ca. 1919–1885 BCE,
12th dynasty, Middle Kingdom (Egyptian Museum, main floor, room 22, JE44951, and
Metropolitan Museum of Art, 14.3.17). For the first ten years of his reign,
Senusret I possibly ruled as a coregent alongside his father, Amenemhat I. He continued his fathers campaigns into Nubia, expanding Egyptian control to the
Third Cataract of the Nile. He also sent an expedition into the
Levant. Senusret III's military career contributed to his prestige during the New Kingdom, as he was regarded as a warrior king and even revered as a god in Nubia. Upon his death, she became the heir to the throne because her older sister,
Neferuptah, who would have been the next in line to rule, died at an early age. Sobekneferu was the last king of the twelfth dynasty. There is no record of her having an heir. She also had a relatively short nearly four-year reign and the next dynasty began with a shift in succession, possibly to unrelated heirs of Amenemhat IV. ==Ancient Egyptian literature refined==