Khufu: Difference between revisions
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'''Khufu''' was the second [[pharaoh]] of the fourth dynasty of [[Ancient Egypt]] who ruled for twenty three years, between 2589 and 2566 BCE. He | [[Image:Great Pyramid at Giza.jpg|thumb|230px|Great Pyramid at Giza]] | ||
'''Khufu''' was the second [[pharaoh]] of the fourth dynasty of [[Ancient Egypt]] who ruled for twenty three years, between 2589 and 2566 BCE. He is famous for ordering the construction of the Great Pyramid at Giza, his tomb and one of the [[Seven Wonders of the Ancient World]]. The Greeks named him ''Cheops''. The name ''Khufu'' is a shortened version of the egyptian phrase ''Khnum-kuefui'' which means "Khnum protects me", being [[Khnum]] the name of the local god of [[Elephantine]], an [[island]] near the first Nile cataract. | |||
Very little is known about Khufu's life and reign. He was the son and successor of [[Sneferu]] and queen [[Hetepheres I]] and he had at least three wives. His main wife was Meritites I, who bore him a son named Kewab and a daughter, [[Hetepheres II]]. Queen Henutsen, another of his wives, seems to be the mother of Khafre (the ruler associated with the Second Pyramid at Giza) and of prince Khufukhaf. | Very little is known about Khufu's life and reign. He was the son and successor of [[Sneferu]] and queen [[Hetepheres I]] and he had at least three wives. His main wife was Meritites I, who bore him a son named Kewab and a daughter, [[Hetepheres II]]. Queen Henutsen, another of his wives, seems to be the mother of Khafre (the ruler associated with the Second Pyramid at Giza) and of prince Khufukhaf. | ||
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The only surviving representation of Khufu is a tiny [[ivory]] statuette (7.5 cm high), which portrays him seated on a throne holding a flail in his right hand and wearing the red crown of [[Lower Egypt]]. The statuette was found at the temple of [[Khentimentiu]] at [[Abydos]] by [[Flinders Petrie]] and it is now at display in the Egyptian Museum in [[Cairo]]. | The only surviving representation of Khufu is a tiny [[ivory]] statuette (7.5 cm high), which portrays him seated on a throne holding a flail in his right hand and wearing the red crown of [[Lower Egypt]]. The statuette was found at the temple of [[Khentimentiu]] at [[Abydos]] by [[Flinders Petrie]] and it is now at display in the Egyptian Museum in [[Cairo]]. | ||
Khufu's sucessor was Radjedef, who killed his brother Kewab, the rightful heir to the egyptian throne. | |||
== Bibliography == | |||
*Nicholas Grimal (1992) ''A History of Ancient Egypt'' ISBN 0631193960 | |||
*Ian Shaw (2003) ''The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt'' ISBN 0192804588 | |||
{{start box}} | |||
{{succession box| | |||
title = [[Pharaoh]]| | |||
years = | | |||
before = [[Sneferu]]| | |||
after = [[Radjedef]]}} | |||
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[[Category:CZ Live]] | [[Category:CZ Live]] | ||
[[Category:History Workgroup]] | [[Category:History Workgroup]] |
Revision as of 16:41, 29 March 2007
Khufu was the second pharaoh of the fourth dynasty of Ancient Egypt who ruled for twenty three years, between 2589 and 2566 BCE. He is famous for ordering the construction of the Great Pyramid at Giza, his tomb and one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World. The Greeks named him Cheops. The name Khufu is a shortened version of the egyptian phrase Khnum-kuefui which means "Khnum protects me", being Khnum the name of the local god of Elephantine, an island near the first Nile cataract.
Very little is known about Khufu's life and reign. He was the son and successor of Sneferu and queen Hetepheres I and he had at least three wives. His main wife was Meritites I, who bore him a son named Kewab and a daughter, Hetepheres II. Queen Henutsen, another of his wives, seems to be the mother of Khafre (the ruler associated with the Second Pyramid at Giza) and of prince Khufukhaf.
Although it appears that Khufu wasn't as popular as his father and his grandfather Djoser, his funerary cult was still practised in the time of the twenty-sixth dynasty and even during the roman period.
The only surviving representation of Khufu is a tiny ivory statuette (7.5 cm high), which portrays him seated on a throne holding a flail in his right hand and wearing the red crown of Lower Egypt. The statuette was found at the temple of Khentimentiu at Abydos by Flinders Petrie and it is now at display in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo.
Khufu's sucessor was Radjedef, who killed his brother Kewab, the rightful heir to the egyptian throne.
Bibliography
- Nicholas Grimal (1992) A History of Ancient Egypt ISBN 0631193960
- Ian Shaw (2003) The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt ISBN 0192804588