The term Middle Egypt
describes the area between Asyut and Memphis, therefore, somewhat confusingly, the northern
part of Upper Egypt of the traditional
terminology ; both limits are geographically well defined and historically
significant. Asyut
became the southernmost area of the Herakleopolitan kingdom during the 1st
Intermediate Period. The boundary between the southern and northern
administrative regions remained in its vicinity until the end of the New Kingdom.
The area is characterized by the provincial tombs of the late Old kingdom and the 1st Intermediate Period cut in the
cliffs on the edge of the desert plateau. Ihnasya El-medina was the residence
of the Herakleopolitans, while in the 12th Dynasty the capital was further
north, at Itjtawy, somewhere near El-Lisht. During the Middle kingdom the
Faiyum gained in importance, never to lose it. El-‘Amarna became the royal
residence for a few years in the 18th Dynasty. During the 3rd Intermediate and
late periods Middle Egypt was the meting ground of the delta and the south. In
late antiquity it prospered and traded extensively with the oases : although
smaller and less spectacular than their southern contemporaries, many temples
testify to the renewed vitality of Middle Egyptian towns.
Source: Baines and Malek, Atlas of Ancient Egypt
Source: Baines and Malek, Atlas of Ancient Egypt
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