Snefru King
(2613 - 2589 BC) 
Dynasty 4
After  the founding of the 4th Dynasty by  Snefru c. 2613 BC, more historical  records and portraits of royalty have  survived. Snefru married the  previous king Huni's daughter, Hetepheres,  who was to find great fame  as the mother of Khufu (p. 49). Manetho says  (according to Eusebius)  that the dynasty consisted of 17 kings of  Memphis who reigned for a  total of 448 years (the Africanus version  gives only 8 kings and 277  years). The kings of the 3rd Dynasty were  also Memphite, but it is  specifically said of the 4th Dynasty that,  although of Memphis, they  were of a different royal line. It would  appear that Snefru's marriage  to Fluni's daughter brought the two lines  together, but it was a  sufficient break in Manetho's eyes to constitute a  new dynasty. He  identifies the first king as Soris (= Snefru) who  reigned for 29 years,  although present opinion is more in favour of  about 24 years. Snefru  was a son of Huni, probably by a minor wife  called Meresankh. By  marrying Hetepheres, who presumably carried the  royal blood as the  daughter of a more senior queen, he consolidated his  claim to the  throne. Snefru was probably therefore Hetepheres'  half-brother. Huni is  the last king of the 3rd Dynasty in both the Royal  Canon of Turin and  the later Saqqara List.
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| Snefru Pharaoh Statue | 
There are records, principally from the Palermo  Stone, of Snefru's  expeditions beyond the boundaries of Egypt - to the  Lebanon to fetch the  great cedar logs needed for temple doors and great  ships, and to Sinai  for turquoise. Although there is evidence as early  as the 1st Dynasty of  expeditions to Sinai, Snefru seems to have  become particularly  associated with the area, and was worshipped there  as a god according to  a much later inscription left in the Wadi  Maghara. Snefru also appears  on two contemporary reliefs near each  other in the Wadi, here given his  full titles and noted as Smiter of  Barbarians'; he is shown in the  already age-old attitude of doing just  this.
Snefru  moved the royal burial ground yet again,  not back to Memphis as might  perhaps be expected, but to a new site at  Dahshur, 28 miles (45 km)  north of Meydum. What governed the choice is  not known, but he built two  pyramids for himself there, and several  kings of the later 12th Dynasty  were to follow his choice of site.
 Posted in:  Ancient Egyptian Pharaohs,Dynasty 4,Snefru Pharaoh
 Posted in:  Ancient Egyptian Pharaohs,Dynasty 4,Snefru Pharaoh
 
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