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The pyramids
of Egypt fascinated travellers and conquerors in ancient
times and continue to inspire wonder in the tourists,
mathematicians, and archeologists who visit, explore,
measure and describe them. Tombs of early Egyptian kings were
bench-shaped mounds called mastabas. Around 2780
B.C., King Djoser's architect, Imhotep, built the first
pyramid by placing six mastabas, each smaller than the
one beneath, in a stack to form a pyramid rising in
steps. This Step Pyramid stands on the west bank of the
Nile River at Sakkara near Memphis. Like later pyramids,
it contains various rooms and passages, including the
burial chamber of the king.
The transition
from the Step Pyramid to a true, smooth-sided pyramid
took placed during the reign of King Snefru, founder of
the Fourth Dynasty (2680-2560 B.C.). At Medum, a step
pyramid was built, then filled in with stone, and covered
with a limestone casing. Nearby at Bahshur, construction
was begun on a pyramid apparently planned to have smooth
sides. About halfway up, however, the angle of incline
decreases from over 51 degrees to about 43 degrees, and
the sides rise less steeply, causing it to be known as
the Bent Pyramid. The change in angle was probably made
during construction to give the building more stability.
Another great pyramid was built at Dahshur with its sides
rising at an angle of somewhat over 43 degrees, resulting
in a true, but squat looking pyramid.
The largest
and most famous of all the pyramids, the Great Pyramid at
Giza, was built by Snefru's son, Khufu, known also as
Cheops, the later Greek form of his name. The pyramid's
base covered over 13 acres and its sides rose at an angle
of 51 degrees 52 minutes and were over 755 feet long. It
originally stood over 481 feet high; today it is 450 feet
high. Scientists estimate that its stone blocks average
over two tons apiece, with the largest weighing as much
as fifteen tons each. Two other major pyramids were built
at Giza, for Khufu's son, King Khafre (Chephren), and a
successor of Khafre, Menkaure (Mycerinus). Also located
at Giza is the famous Sphinx, a massive statue of a lion
with a human head, carved during the time of Khafre.
Pyramids did
not stand alone but were part of a group of buildings
which included temples, chapels, other tombs, and massive
walls. Remnants of funerary boats have also been
excavated; the best preserved is at Giza. On the walls of
Fifth and Sixth Dynasty pyramids are inscriptions known
as the Pyramid Texts, an important source of information
about Egyptian religion. The scarcity of ancient records,
however, makes it difficult to be sure of the uses of all
the buildings in the pyramid complex or the exact burial
procedures. It is thought that the king's body was
brought by boat up the Nile to the pyramid site and
probably mummified in the Valley Temple before being
placed in the pyramid for burial.
There has been
speculation about pyramid construction. Egyptians had
copper tools such as chisels, drills, and saws that may
have been used to cut the relatively soft stone. The hard
granite, used for burial chamber walls and some of the
exterior casing, would have posed a more difficult
problem. Workmen may have used an abrasive powder, such
as sand, with the drills and saws. Knowledge of astronomy
was necessary to orient the pyramids to the cardinal
points, and water-filled trenches probably were used to
level the perimeter. A tomb painting of a colossal statue
being moved shows how huge stone blocks were moved on
sledges over ground first made slippery by liquid. The
blocks were then brought up ramps to their positions in
the pyramid. Finally, the outer layer of casing stones
was finished from the top down and the ramps dismantled
as the work was completed.
Most of the
stone for the Giza pyramids was quarried on the Giza
plateau itself. Some of the limestone casing was brought
from Tura, across the Nile, and a few of the rooms were
cased with granite from Aswan. Marks of the quarry
workers are found on several of the stone blocks giving
names of the work gangs such as
"craftman-gang". Part-time crews of laborers
probably supplemented the year-round masons and other
skilled workers. The Greek historian Heroditus reported
in the fifth century B.C. that his Egyptian guides told
him 100,000 men were employed for three months a year for
twenty years to build the Great Pyramid; modern estimates
of the number of laborers tend to be much smaller.
Pyramid
building was at its height from the Fourth through the
Sixth Dynasties. Smaller pyramids continued to be built
for more than one thousand years. Scores of them have
been discovered, but the remains of others are probably
still buried under the sand. As it became clear that the
pyramids did not provide protection for the mummified
bodies of the kings but were obvious targets for grave
robbers, later kings were buried in hidden tombs cut into
rock cliffs. Although the magnificent pyramids did not
protect the bodies of the Egyptian kings who built them,
the pyramids have served to keep the names and stories of
those kings alive to this day.
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