Djedefre
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Red granite head of Djedefre from Abu Rawash, Musée du LouvrePharaoh of EgyptReign10 to 14 years, ca. 2575 BC, 4th DynastyPredecessorKhufuSuccessorKhafra
- Nomen: Djedefre
Sȝ Rˁ ḏd.f Rˁ
The son of Ra, he endures like Ra
- Horus name: Hor-Kheper
Ḥr-ḫpr
Embodyment of Horus - Nebty name: Kheper-im-nebti
Ḫpr-m-nb.tj
Embodied in the Two Ladies - Golden Horus: Bikju-nebu
Bjk.jw-nb.w
The most golden falcon
Abydos King List
Djedefre
Ḏd.f Rˁ
He endures like Ra
Saqqara Tablet
Djedefre
Ḏḏ.f Rˁ
He endures like Ra
-
Consort(s)Hetepheres II, KhentetkaChildrenSetka, Baka, Hernet, Neferhetepes, Hetepheres ?, Nikaudjedefre ?FatherKhufuBurialPyramid of Djedefre, Great Sphinx of Giza ?[3]MonumentsPyramid of Djedefre
Djedefre (also known as Djedefra and Radjedef) was an ancient Egyptian king (pharaoh) of 4th dynasty during the Old Kingdom. He is well known under his Hellenized name form Ratoises (by Manetho). Djedefre was the son and immediate throne successor of Khufu, his mother is not known for sure. He was the king who introduced the royal title Sa-Rê (meaning “Son of Ra”) and who as the first connected his cartouche name with the sun god Ra.
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[edit] Family
He married his (half-) sister Hetepheres II. He also had another wife, Khentetka with whom he had (at least) three sons, Setka, Baka and Hernet, and one daughter, Neferhetepes. These children are attested to by statuary fragments found in the ruined mortuary temple adjoining the pyramid. Various fragmentary statues of Khentetka were found in this ruler's mortuary temple at Abu Rawash.[4] Abu Rawash actually sits at an elevation higher than the rest of Giza, making it the highest, albeit not the tallest, pyramid. Some historians claim that the "pyramid" at Abu Rawash isn't even a pyramid at all; instead, it may be a "sun temple." Archaeologist Vassil Dobrev has claimed that it may not even be Djedefre's. Excavations by the French team under Michel Valloggia have recently added another potential daughter, Hetepheres, as well as a son, Nikaudjedefre, to this list.
Statue of Setka inscribed with his name and titles, Musée du Louvre.
Djedefre married his brother Kawab's widow, Hetepheres II, who was sister to both of them, and perhaps married a third brother of theirs, Khafre, after Djedefre's death.[5] Another queen, Khentetka is known to us from statue fragments in the Abu Rowash mortuary temple.[6] Known children of Djedefre are:
- Hornit (“Eldest King's Son of His Body”) known from a statue depicting him and his wife.[7]
- Baka (“Eldest King's Son”) known from a statue base found in Djedefre's mortuary temple, depicting him with his wife Hetepheres.[8]
- Setka (“Eldest King's Son of His Body; Unique Servant of the King”) known from a scribe statue found in his father's pyramid complex.[9] It is possible that he ruled for a short while after his father's death; an unfinished pyramid at Zawiyet el-Arian was started for a ruler whose name ends in ka; this could have been Setka or Baka.[5]
- Neferhetepes (“King's Daughter of His Body; God's Wife”) is known from a statue fragment from Abu Rowash. She was possibly the mother of a pharaoh of the next dynasty, either Userkaf or Sahure.[9]
The French excavation team led by Michel Vallogia found the names of two other possible children of Djedefre in the pyramid complex:
- Nikaudjedefre (“King's Son of His Body”) was buried in Tomb F15 in Abu Rowash; it is possible that he wasn't a son of Djedefre but lived later and his title was only honorary.[9]
- Hetepheres (“King's Daughter of His Body”) was mentioned on a statue fragment.[7]
[edit] Reign
Red granite head of Djedefre, Musée du Louvre.
The Turin King List credits him with a rule of eight years, but the highest known year referred to during this reign appears to be the Year of his 11th cattle count. The anonymous Year of the 11th count date presumably of Djedefre was found written on the underside of one of the massive roofing-block beams which covered Khufu's southern boat-pits by Egyptian work crews.[10] Miroslav Verner notes that in the work crew's mason marks and inscriptions, "either Djedefra's throne name or his Golden Horus name occur exclusively."[11] Verner writes that the current academic opinion regarding the attribution of this date to Djedefre is disputed among Egyptologists: Rainer Stadelman, Vassil Dobrev, Peter Janosi favour dating it to Djedefre whereas Wolfgang Helck, Anthony Spalinger, Jean Vercoutter and W.S. Smith attribute this date to Khufu instead on the assumption "that the ceiling block with the date had been brought to the building site of the boat pit already in Khufu's time and placed in position [only] as late as during the burial of the funerary boat in Djedefra's time.[11]
The German scholar Dieter Arnold, in a 1981 MDAIK paper noted that the marks and inscriptions of the blocks from Khufu's boat pit seem to form a coherent collection relating to the different stages of the same building project realised by Djedefra's crews.[12] Verner stresses that such marks and inscriptions usually pertained to the breaking of the blocks in the quarry, their transportation, their storage and manipulation in the building site itself.[13]: "In this context, the attribution of just a single inscription--and what is more, the only one with a date--on all the blocks from the boat pit to somebody other than Djedefra does not seem very plausible."[14]
Verner also notes that the French-Swiss team excavating Djedefra's pyramid have discovered that this king's pyramid was really finished in his reign. According to Vallogia, Djedefre's pyramid largely made use of a natural rock promontory which represented circa 45% of its core; the side of the pyramid was 200 cubits long and its height was 125 cubits.[15] The original volume of the monument of Djedefra, hence, approximately equalled that of Menkaura's own pyramid.[16] Therefore, the argument that Djedefre enjoyed a short reign because his pyramid was unfinished is somewhat discredited.[17] This means that Djedefre likely ruled Egypt for a minimum of eleven years if the cattle count was annual or 21 years if it was biennal; Verner, himself, supports the shorter 11 year figure and notes that "the relatively few monuments and records left by Djedefra do not seem to favour a very long reign" for this king.[17]
[edit] Pyramid complex
Djedefre continued the move north in the location of pyramids by building his (now ruined) pyramid at Abu Rawash, some 8 km to the north of Giza. It is the northernmost part of the Memphite necropolis.
Some believe that the sphinx of his wife, Hetepheres II, was the first sphinx created. It was part of Djedefre's pyramid complex at Abu Rawash. In 2004, evidence that Djedefre is responsible for the building of the Sphinx at Giza in the image of his father was reported by the French Egyptologist Vassil Dobrev.[18]
While Egyptologists previously assumed that his pyramid at the heavily denuded site of Abu Rawash—some 5 miles north of Giza—was unfinished upon his death, more recent excavations from 1995 to 2005 have established that it was indeed completed.[19] The most recent evidence rather indicates that his pyramid complex was extensively plundered in later periods while "the king's statues [were] smashed as late as the 2nd century AD."[19]
Due to the poor condition of Abu Rawash, only small traces of his mortuary complex have been found; his pyramid causeway proved to run from north to south rather than the more conventional east to west while no valley temple has been found.[20] Only the rough ground plan of his mud-brick mortuary temple was traced—with some difficulty--"in the usual place on the east face of the pyramid."[20]
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Hetepheres II From
Hetepheres II
Pharaoh DjedefreIssueDuaenhor
Kaemsekhem
Mindjedef
Meresankh III
NeferhetepesFatherKhufuMotherMeritites I?Burialtomb G 7000X near the Great Pyramid of GizaReligionAncient Egyptian religion
Hetepheres II was a Queen of Ancient Egypt during the 4th dynasty.
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[edit] Biography
Hetepheres
in hieroglyphs
[edit] Birth and family
Queen Hetepheres II may have been one of the longest-lived members of the royal family of the Fourth dynasty of Egypt, which lasted from ca. 2723 to 2563 BC. She was a daughter of Khufu[1] and was either born during the reign of her grandfather Sneferu or during the early years of her father's reign. She was named after her grandmother, Hetepheres I and she had an aunt named Hetepheres A. A fragmentary titulature found in the tomb of Meritites I may indicate that she was the mother of Hetepheres II.
Titles of Hetepheres II:
[edit] Marriages
During the reign of Khufu, Hetepheres II married her brother, the Crown Prince Kawab,[2] with whom she had at least one child, a daughter named Meresankh III. After the death of her first husband, she married another of her brothers, Djedefra who later succeeded Khufu as king of Egypt.
She was widowed a second time when Djedefre died. The marriage of her daughter, Meresankh III, to her late second husband's successor Khafra made Hetepheres II the mother-in-law of the new king. She also out-lived her third husband and her own daughter, Meresankh III. A mark of her affection for Meresankh III may be seen in the fact that Hetepheres II had her own mastaba in the eastern cemetery of Giza converted into a tomb for her daughter's use. Hetepheres II herself was probably buried in tomb G7350 even though she possessed a joint tomb with her first husband, Kawab (G7110 and 7120 respectively).[3]
While marriage within the royal family was common, multiple marriages to this extent was not. It has been suggested the subsequent marriages were more to maintain her position at court and were honorary in nature.[4] She never produced an heir to the throne and was never given the title of King's Mother.[5]
Hetepheres finally died early in the reign of Shepseskaf, the son and successor of Menkaura, and had thus witnessed the reigns of at least five and perhaps six (if she was born during the reign of Sneferu) pharaohs of the fourth Dynasty.
[edit] Children
[edit] Children of Hetepheres II and Kawab
Hetepheres II depicted as a sphinx, possibly the first, from Abu Rawash pyramid of Djedefre - Cairo Museum
(Manuel de Codage: kAapr). He may be the father of Rawer and Minkhaf. His tomb was located in Giza: G 7660.[6]
[edit] Children of Hetepheres II and Djedefre
[edit] References
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