the complex served not only as the king’s tomb and temple but also
as his palace in the afterlife.
GREAT SPHINXBeside the causeway and dominating the valley
temple of Khafre rises the Great Sphinx (FIG. 3-11). Carved from a
spur of rock in an ancient quarry, the colossal statue—the largest in
the ancient Near East—represents a pharaoh, probably Khafre (origi-
nally complete with the pharaoh’s ceremonial beard and uraeus head-
dress), although some scholars believe it portrays Khufu and was
carved before construction of Khafre’s complex began. Whoever it
portrays, the sphinx—a lion with a human head—was associated with
the sun god and therefore was an appropriate image for a pharaoh.
The composite form suggests that the pharaoh combines human intel-
ligence with the immense strength and authority of the king of beasts.
The Old Kingdom 61
3-10Model of the
Fourth Dynasty pyramid
complex, Gizeh, Egypt.
Harvard University
Semitic Museum,
Cambridge. 1) Pyramid
of Menkaure, 2) Pyramid
of Khafre, 3) mortuary
temple of Khafre,
4) causeway, 5) Great
Sphinx, 6) valley temple
of Khafre, 7) Pyramid of
Khufu, 8) pyramids of
the royal family and
mastabas of nobles.
Like Djoser’s pyramid
(FIG. 3-5), the Great
Pyramids were not
isolated tombs but parts
of funerary complexes
with a valley temple,
a covered causeway,
and a mortuary temple
adjoining the pyramid.
1
4
5
8
7
6
3
2
3-11Great Sphinx
(with Pyramid of Khafre
in the background at
left), Gizeh, Egypt,
Fourth Dynasty,
ca. 2520–2494 bce.
Sandstone, 65 240 .
Carved out of the
Gizeh stone quarry,
the Great Sphinx is the
largest statue in the
Near East. The sphinx is
associated with the sun
god, and joins the body
of a lion with the head
of a pharaoh.