Tuesday, May 5, 2026

Pharaoh Sneferu

 



by

 

Damien F. Mackey

 

 

 

“Snofru soon became a legendary figure, and literature in later periods credited him with a genial personality”.

 

“Cheops ... is portrayed in [Papyrus Westcar] as the traditional legendary oriental monarch, good-natured …”.

 

Nicolas Grimal

 

 

 

Introduction

 

Throughout various articles now I have concluded that the ancient Egyptian dynasty that oppressed the Israelites at the time of Moses consisted of only four rulers, with the other names being duplicates, or triplicates. These rulers were, in order:

 

1.       The “new king” of Exodus 1:8, who began the Oppression of Israel;

2.       Moses, presumed son of 1., who ruled briefly and who then abdicated;

3.      “Chenephres” of tradition, married to “Merris’ of tradition, the Egyptian foster-mother of Moses; and, lastly, a

4.      Female Pharaoh.

 

And I have further concluded that the life of the historical Moses actually spans two kingdoms (Old and ‘Middle’), conventionally speaking, and five dynasties (4th; 5th; 6th; 12th and 13th).

 

As was the case with Joseph, son of Jacob, the life of Moses starkly reveals the inadequacies of the received Egyptian dynastic history and completely reforms it.

 

Here we are concerned only with Egypt’s so-called 4th dynasty, the Giza pyramid and Sphinx building dynasty.

 

Fourth Dynasty of Egypt

 

My re-setting of ancient Egypt via Moses necessitates an alteration to the first part of the Fourth Dynasty king list (1-4):

 

1 Sneferu

2 Khufu

3 Djedefre

4 Khafre

 

Four kings now needing to become three.

 

While kings 2-4 here now become fairly straightforward, 1. Sneferu (Snofru) I have found to be something of an outlier.

 

2. Khufu (Cheops), whose daughter Meresankh married 4. Khafre (Chephren), is clearly the oppressive “new king” of Exodus 1:8, the dynastic founder, with Meresankh being “Merris”, the traditional (Artapanus) foster-mother of Moses, who married “Chenephres”, 4. Khafre (Chephren).

 

That leaves 3. Djedefre, the presumed son of Khufu, as the brief-reigning Moses.

 

Sneferu (Snofru)

 

1.                   Sneferu, a long-reigning king, can thus immediately be ruled out as Moses.

 

Arguments could be mounted for Sneferu (“a genial personality”) to have been Cheops, “good-natured” (though tell that to the Israelites groaning under his oppression), or Sneferu, who was likewise (as was Khafre) associated with a Meresankh.

 

Previously I had written on this, following Nicolas Grimal (A History of Ancient Egypt, 1992):

 

Meresankh (“Merris”)

 

P. 170

 

Snofru is also associated with a Meresankh, though she is considered to be his mother.

P. 67 [She was] one of Huni’s concubines. There is no definite proof of this ....

 

Meresankh will become something of a golden thread, linking the traditional “Merris” of Moses’ childhood to the 4th Dynasty …. 

 

Likenesses to Cheops

 

This (somewhat semi-legendary) ruler, Sneferu, seems to me to connect well with Cheops in various ways. For instance (the pages are taken from N. Grimal’s A History of Ancient Egypt):

 

Great “legendary” reputation – good natured

 

P. 67

 

.... Snofru soon became a legendary figure, and literature in later [?] periods credited him with a genial personality. He was even deified in the Middle Kingdom, becoming the ideal king who later Egyptian rulers … sought to emulate when they were attempting to legitimize their power.  

 

P. 70

 

Cheops ... is portrayed in [Papyrus Westcar] as the traditional legendary oriental monarch, good-natured, and eager to be shown magical things, amiable towards his inferiors and interested in the nature of human existence.

Cult figure

 

P. 67

 

Snofru’s enviable reputation with later rulers, which according to the onomastica was increased by his great popularity with the people, even led to the restoration of Snofru’s mortuary temple at Dahshur. P. 69 ... cult among Middle Kingdom miners in the Sinai.

P. 165 There is even evidence of a Twelfth Dynasty cult of Snofru in the region of modern Ankara.

 

P. 70

 

Cheops was not remembered as fondly as Snofru, although his funerary cult was still attested in the Saite (Twenty-Sixth) Dynasty and he was increasingly popular in the Roman period. According to Papyrus Westcar, he liked to listen to fantastic stories of the reigns of his predecessors.

 

Like his potential alter ego Cheops,

P. 67 [Snofru’s] reign  ... appears to have been both glorious and long-lasting (perhaps as much as forty years).

 

Snofru built

... ships, fortresses, palaces and temples ...

Three pyramids.

 

If Snofru were Cheops, as I am thinking, then Snofru’s three pyramids - built perhaps early in his reign - would have been the perfect preparation for his later masterpiece, the Great Pyramid at Giza:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sneferu

Under Sneferu [Snofru], there was a major evolution in monumental pyramid structures, which would lead to Khufu's Great Pyramid, which would be seen as the pinnacle of the Egyptian Old Kingdom's majesty and splendour, and as one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World”.

 

Less positive picture of the king   

 

P. 71

 

... it is difficult to accommodate within this theory [building immoderation = unpopularity] the fact that Snofru’s reputation remained untarnished when he built more pyramids than any of his successors.

 

Pp. 69-70

 

[Cheops’] pyramid transforms him into the very symbol of absolute rule, and Herodotus’ version of events chose to emphasise his cruelty:

https://www.sacred-texts.com/cla/hh/hh2120.htm

 

124. ... Cheops became king over them and brought them to every kind of evil: for he shut up all the temples, and having first kept them from sacrificing there, he then bade all the Egyptians work for him. So some were appointed to draw stones from the stone-quarries in the Arabian mountains to the Nile, and others he ordered to receive the stones after they had been carried over the river in boats, and to draw them to those which are called the Libyan mountains; and they worked by a hundred thousand men at a time, for each three months continually. Of this oppression there passed ten years while the causeway was made by which they drew the stones, which causeway they built, and it is a work not much less, as it appears to me, than the pyramid; for the length of it is five furlongs and the breadth ten fathoms and the height, where it is highest, eight fathoms, and it is made of stone smoothed and with figures carved upon it. For this, they said, the ten years were spent, and for the underground chambers on the hill upon which the pyramids stand, which he caused to be made as sepulchral chambers for himself in an island, having conducted thither a channel from the Nile.

 

For the making of the pyramid itself there passed a period of twenty years; and the pyramid is square, each side measuring eight hundred feet, and the height of it is the same. It is built of stone smoothed and fitted together in the most perfect manner, not one of the stones being less than thirty feet in length.

 

Moreover:

 

126. Cheops moreover came, they said, to such a pitch of wickedness, that being in want of money he caused his own daughter to sit in the stews, and ordered her to obtain from those who came a certain amount of money (how much it was they did not tell me); but she not only obtained the sum appointed by her father, but also she formed a design for herself privately to leave behind her a memorial, and she requested each man who came in to her to give her one stone upon her building: and of these stones, they told me, the pyramid was built which stands in front of the great pyramid in the middle of the three, each side being one hundred and fifty feet in length. ….