He also coordinated the building of two temples found nearby, which could mean that he was behind the building all four great monuments. This theory seemed to have been debunked when the King Khafre’s causeway was found. Causeways traditionally lead east from the pyramid, but Khafre’s led Southeast, in an odd pathway that seemed to be avoiding something, assumed to be the Sphinx, which would have been in the way of the causeway had it led East. Others argue that it was the doing of King Khufu, King Khafre’s father, since he coordinated the building of the world’s largest monument for a prolonged period of time, his pyramid. He was also a feared dictator, so he was known for going to all lengths to ensure his buildings were built to his liking. From a Southern point of view, the point of view of people coming from Memphis, the Sphinx looks like a two-dimensional hieroglyphic protecting Khufu’s pyramid, and because two-dimensional drawing and architecture was a large part of Ancient Egyptian art, many archeologists concluded that it was solid evidence that King Khufu was the mastermind behind the Sphinx. The only confirmed likeness of Khufu, found in the Cairo museum, shows that there are similarities between the facial features of…