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In the New Kingdom, Memphis became a centre for the education of royal princes and the sons of the nobility.
Amenhotep II, born and raised in Memphis, was made the setem — the high priest over Lower Egypt — during the reign of his father.
His son, Thutmose IV received his famed and recorded dream whilst residing as a young prince in Memphis.
During his exploration of the site, Karl Richard Lepsius identified a series of blocks and broken colonnades in the name of Thutmose IV to the east of the Temple of Ptah.
They had to belong to a royal building, most likely a ceremonial palace.

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