Khafre
Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.
- Also spelled:
- Khafra
- Greek:
- Chephren
- Flourished:
- 25th century bce
- Flourished:
- c.2600 BCE - c.2551 BCE
- Title / Office:
- king (2575BC-2465BC), Egypt
- Notable Family Members:
- father Khufu
Khafre (flourished 25th century bce) was a king of the 4th dynasty of ancient Egypt who ruled c. 2472–c. 2448 bce and built the second of the three Pyramids of Giza.
Khafre was the son of King Khufu and succeeded the short-lived Redjedef, probably his elder brother. He married his sister Khamerernebti, Meresankh III, and perhaps two other queens. Although many of his relatives were hastily buried in cheap tombs, his own pyramid was almost as vast as the Great Pyramid of his father. Khafre’s valley temple, linked to the pyramid by a causeway, was constructed of great monolithic blocks of granite and contained remarkable statues of the king carved from diorite taken from a remote quarry in the Nubian Desert. Near the causeway is located the Great Sphinx (see sphinx), which many consider to bear Khafre’s features.