Khaba (2603-2599)

Cartouche of Khaba
King Khaba was the fourth king during the third Dynasty. Egyptologists discovered his named sliced into the walls of Sahure's tomb. The name was as well found at the stone roll in Naqada. The pyramid at "Zawiet el-Aryan", in the desert of Giza, is believed to be his resting place. Even less is known about Sekhemkhet's possible successor, Khaba. In the Turin King-list, this king, whose name has been learned as "erased", is credited with a reign of a mere 6 years. The fact that his name was marked as "erased" in the Turin King-list may maybe indicate some dynastic problems. It may also be that the composer of the Turin King-list was incapable to read the name. Khaba is conceived to have built his funerary monument in Zawyet el-Aryan, about 7 kilometers north of Saqqara. It was left incomplete at an early stage of its constructing

Khaba credibly died before the finishing of his monument and the work on the site was left for all potential. The construction is a square with a 78,5 m long side at the base, and located on the highest part of the area high the cultivated Nile valley. With only 200 metres to the flood lain in the valley it's the pyramid in Egypt that is placed best the cultivated land. With the intended five steps it would have been about 45 meters in height if it hade been completed but today only 17 metres remain previous the sand. Under ground huge galleries (very alike looking those from the pyramid of Sekhemkhet) were hewn out but the burial bedroom did not contain anything, not even a sarcophagus, when it was entered in the late 1800s.

Facts that indicates that it was built in the middle or at the end of the dynasty is the increasing ability of the Egyptians to manage to handle larger and larger stones, culminating during the end of the Old Kingdom. Khaba's memorial is built with stones of bigger size (for the pyramid's core) than Djoser's, indicating it's younger. The construction has also an almost complete orientation North-South that most elder repositories (including substructures) don't have. It's disputed to put Khaba as the founder of the third dynasty and the reigns of his and Sekhemkhet's were brief ones and generally judged to be after king Djoser's. The traditional episode of kings for the dynasty set is among most Egyptologists: Sahnakht-Djoser-Sekhemkhet-Khaba-Huni brought with those who are only known from names in king lists or fragmentise and have left no repositories to history.

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