Pyramids
Up Giza Great Sphinx

 

 

Giza
Great Sphinx
Egypt

There are about forty significant pyramids in Egypt and many minor ones.  They are, as you know, tombs.  But what you probably don't know is that they were part of grand funeral complexes.  Cities for the dead that mirrored the cities of the living.  Each might be 5 miles long and one mile wide, contain many support buildings, subsidiary pyramids, temples, causeways, docks and funerary temples.  Imagine returning to Washington, DC, 5,000 years from today.  What would remain?  The Washington Monument?  The Lincoln memorial?  A few other monuments? But buildings, shopping malls, bridges...they would just be small piles of brick and mortar rubble.  If you dug, you might find remnants of subways, sewer systems, cable runs and basements, but little else...just like the Pyramid complexes of Egypt today.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 See any difference in the Pyramids above? The farthest of the three is a different shape.  The sides slope up at one angle and suddenly change to a flatter slope.  It is the Rhomboidal Pyramid of Snefru (about 4600 years old).  It was under construction when the owner died so they changed the construction scheme to finish it as quickly as possible.  


 

 

 

The only  know image of Snefru (from the Cairo Museum). Snefru, 4th Dynasty, remembered as the humane and kind pharaoh, actually built both large pyramids above.  But why two?  Was he the first case of a split personality?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hold your mouse over this picture to see the genius of the man in the green jacket (Paul I).
You might have to wait a few seconds.

The early tombs (Mastabas or house of the dead prince) were part of the much larger after life complex.  The body was buried deep under the mastaba, the square construction of mud bricks (later stones without mortar) pictured to the right.  This mastaba was part of the funerary complex of Zoser.  (Some mastabas are 7000 years old.)




The below ground layout of the mastaba is shown to the left with the actual steps leading down pictured below.
No one knows why the great architect and doctor Imhotep decided to stack six mastabas on top of each other to form the first Step Pyramid of Zoser, but here you have it.  How old?  5000 years, plus or minus a few centuries.  
Carol at the Zoser car park.  The man behind her is stealing that car.

 

The history of the Pyramids in one thousand year increments.
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

0001 BC, horses were invented.

1001 AD, pretty girls were invented.

2001 AD, cars and roads were invented, but girls were lost.

 

 

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