Khafre (Chephren) in Tour Egypt
KHAFRE, THE 4TH KING OF EGYPT'S 4TH DYNASTY
BY JIMMY DUNN.
As with many of the very earliest Pharaoh's, even though
they may have left some of the grandest of all monuments in
Egypt, they left little in the way of inscriptions, and so
we know very little about them. Khafre (Chephren), the
builder of the second pyramid on the famous Giza Plateau
near Cairo is a fine example. His birth name was Khafre,
which means "Appearing like Re". He is also sometimes
refereed to as Khafra, Rakhaef, Khephren or Chephren by the
Greeks, and Suphis II by Manetho. He was possibly a younger
son of Khufu (Cheops) by his consort, Henutsen, so he was
required to wait out the reign of Djedefre, his older
brother, prior to ascending to the throne of Egypt as the
fourth ruler of the fourth Dynasty. However, there is
disagreement on this matter.
There are rumors of a problem with the succession of Khafre.
Some authorities maintain that Djedefre may have even stole
the throne, perhaps as a younger brother of Khafre, and that
Khafre may have even murdered him. Much of this speculation
originates from the fact that Djedefre broke with the Giza
burial tradition, electing instead to locate his tomb
(pyramid) at Abu Rawash. However, there is little real
evidence to support such a conclusion, and in fact, Khafre
continued Djedefre’s promotion of the cult of the sun god Re
by using the title " the Son of the Sun" for himself and by
incorporating the name of the god in his own.
We know of several of Khafre's wives, including Meresankh II
(the daughter of his brother, Kawab) and his chief wife,
Khameremebty I. His sons include Nekure (Nikaure),
Sekhemkare and Menkaure, who succeeded him and married
Khameremebty II, Khafre's daughter and Menkaure's sister.
Identifying him with Suphis II, Manetho gives his reign as
lasting 66 years, but this certainly cannot be
substantiated. Modern Egyptologists believe he may have
ruled Egypt for a relatively long period, however, of
between the 24 years ascribed to him by the Turin Royal
Cannon papyrus (which was apparently confirmed by an
inscription in the mastaba tomb of Prince Nekure), and 26
years. He is thought to have ruled Egypt from about 2520 to
2494 BC.
It is clearly evident from the fine mastaba tombs of the
nobles in his court that Egypt was prosperous while Khafre
held the throne. Carved on the walls of the tomb of Prince
Nekure, a "king's son", was a will to his heirs. It is the
only one of its kind known from this period, and in it he
leaves 14 towns to his heirs, of which at least eleven are
named after his father, Khafre. Though his legacy was
divided up among his five heirs, 12 of the towns were
earmarked to endow the prince's mortuary cult.
We do know that Khafre participated in some foreign trade,
or at least diplomacy, for objects dating from his reign
have been found at Byblos, north of Beirut, as well as at
Tell Mardikh (Ebla) in Syria. He apparently also had diorite
quarried at Tashka in Nubia and probably sent expeditions
into the Sinai.
Though there are few inscriptions left for us to completely
understand the era of Khafre's rule, he did leave behind
some of the most important treasures ancient Egypt has to
offer. Besides his pyramid complex at Giza, most
Egyptologists believe he also built the Great Sphinx and
that it is his face that adorns this huge statue, which sits
just beside his valley temple. In addition, the life size
diorite statue of Khafre found in his valley temple and now
located in the Egyptian Antiquities Museum is one of the
most magnificent artifacts ever discovered.
Like his father Khufu, Khafre was depicted in fold tradition
as a harsh, despotic ruler. Though as late as the New
Kingdom, Ramesses II seems to have had no qualms about
taking some of the casing from his pyramid at Giza for use
in a temple at Heliopolis, by Egypt's Late Period, the cults
of the fourth dynasty kings had been revived, and Giza
became a focus of pilgrimage.
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