- Khaba
Pharaoh Infobox | HorusHiero=
N28-G29
Horus="Khaba"
Alt=
Name= Khaba |
ImageSize=150
Predecessor=Sekhemkhet
Successor=Huni
Dynasty=3rd Dynasty
Reign=2643–2637 BC
Monuments =Layer Pyramid
Caption=Dolomite bowl bearing the name of the pharaoh Khaba inscribed within aserekh . On display at theMuseum of Fine Arts, Boston .Khaba was a
Pharaoh ofAncient Egypt 'sOld Kingdom and is generally considered to have reigned near the end of the Third Dynasty. He is thought to be the successor toSekhemkhet . Khaba is believed to have reigned a relatively brief four years between2643 BC to2637 BC [Clayton, Peter A. Chronicle of the Pharaohs: The Reign-by-Reign Record of the Rulers and Dynasties of Ancient Egypt. p38. Thames & Hudson. 2006. ISBN 0-500-28628-0] , although these dates are highly conjectural, based on what scant evidence exists of this early king.Khaba is commonly associated with the
Layer Pyramid , located atZawyet el'Aryan , about 2 km south ofGiza . It is an unfinished pyramid whose construction is typical of Third Dynasty masonry and would have originally risen about 42-45m in height (it is now about 20m). While there were no inscriptions directly relating the pyramid to this king, he is attested in four or perhaps five sites and eight alabaster bowls inscribed with the king's serekh were discovered nearby inMastaba Z-500 located just north of the pyramid. [ [http://touregypt.net/featurestories/khaba.htm Khaba] ]This king is mentioned in the
Turin King List as "erased", which may imply that there were dynastic problems during his reign, or that the scribe working on this list was unable to fully decipher the name from the more ancient records being copied from. It has also been suggested that Khaba may be the Horus name of the last king of the Third Dynasty,Huni , and that the two kings are the same person.Khaba's name, typically displayed within a "
serekh " rather than the more typicalcartouche form established by the end of this dynasty, was written using the sign of a rising sun that had the sound value of "kha", and aSaddle-billed Stork that had the sound value of "ba". His name translates as "The Soul Appears." [Peter Clayton, Chronicle of the Pharaohs, Thames and Hudson Ltd, 2006 paperback, p.38]References
External links
* [http://xoomer.virgilio.it/francescoraf/hesyra/dyn3-Khaba.htm Horus KHABA]
* [http://egyptphoto.ncf.ca/Pyramid%20of%20Khaba.htm The Pyramid of Khaba -The Layer Pyramid]
* [http://www.nemo.nu/ibisportal/0egyptintro/3egypt/index.htm Egyptian History: Khaba]
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