Built during a time
when Egypt was one of the richest and most powerful civilizations in the world,
the pyramids—especially the Great Pyramids of Giza—are some of the most
magnificent man-made structures in history. Their massive scale reflects the
unique role that the pharaoh, or king, played in ancient Egyptian society.
Though pyramids were built from the beginning of the Old Kingdom to the close
of the Ptolemaic period in the fourth century A.D., the peak of pyramid
building began with the late third dynasty and continued until roughly the
sixth (c. 2325 B.C.). More than 4,000 years later, the Egyptian pyramids still
retain much of their majesty, providing a glimpse into the country’s rich and
glorious past.
THE PHARAOH IN
EGYPTIAN SOCIETY
During the third and fourth dynasties of the Old Kingdom,
Egypt enjoyed tremendous economic prosperity and stability. Kings held a unique
position in Egyptian society. Somewhere in between human and divine, they were
believed to have been chosen by the gods to serve as mediators between them and
the people on earth. Because of this, it was in everyone’s interest to keep the
king’s majesty intact even after his death, when he was believed to become
Osiris, god of the dead. The new pharaoh, in turn, became Horus, the falcon-god
who served as protector of the sun-god, Ra.
Did You Know?
“The pyramid's smooth, angled sides
symbolized the rays of the sun and were designed to help the king's soul ascend
to heaven and join the gods, particularly the sun god Ra.”
Ancient Egyptians believed that when the king died, part of
his spirit (known as “ka”) remained with his body. To properly care for his
spirit, the corpse was mummified, and everything the king would need in the
afterlife was buried with him, including gold vessels, food, furniture and
other offerings. The pyramids became the focus of a cult of the dead king that
was supposed to continue well after his death. Their riches would provide not
only for him, but also for the relatives, officials and priests who were buried
near him.
THE EARLY PYRAMIDS
From the beginning of the Dynastic Era (2950 B.C.), royal
tombs were carved into rock and covered with flat-roofed rectangular structures
known as “mastabas,” which were precursors to the pyramids. The oldest known
pyramid in Egypt was built around 2630 B.C. at Saqqara, for the third dynasty’s
King Djoser. Known as the Step Pyramid, it began as a traditional mastaba but
grew into something much more ambitious. As the story goes, the pyramid’s
architect was Imhotep, a priest and healer who some 1,400 years later would be
deified as the patron saint of scribes and physicians. Over the course of
Djoser’s nearly 20-year reign, pyramid builders assembled six stepped layers of
stone (as opposed to mud-brick, like most earlier tombs) that eventually
reached a height of 204 feet (62 meters); it was the tallest building of its
time. The Step Pyramid was surrounded by a complex of courtyards, temples and
shrines, where Djoser would enjoy his afterlife.
After Djoser, the stepped pyramid became the norm for royal
burials, although none of those planned by his dynastic successors were
completed (probably due to their relatively short reigns). The earliest tomb
constructed as a “true” (smooth-sided, not stepped) pyramid was the Red Pyramid
at Dahshur, one of three burial structures built for the first king of the
fourth dynasty, Sneferu (2613-2589 B.C.) It was named for the color of the
limestone blocks used to construct the pyramid’s core.
THE GREAT PYRAMIDS OF
GIZA
No pyramids are more celebrated than the Great Pyramids of
Giza, located on a plateau on the west bank of the Nile River, on the outskirts
of modern-day Cairo. The oldest and largest of the three pyramids at Giza,
known as the Great Pyramid, is the only surviving structure out of the famed
seven wonders of the ancient world. It was built for Khufu (Cheops, in Greek),
Sneferu’s successor and the second of the eight kings of the fourth dynasty.
Though Khufu reigned for 23 years (2589-2566 B.C.), relatively little is known
of his reign beyond the grandeur of his pyramid. The sides of the pyramid’s
base average 755.75 feet (230 meters), and its original height was 481.4 feet
(147 meters), making it the largest pyramid in the world. Three small pyramids
built for Khufu’s queens are lined up next to the Great Pyramid, and a tomb was
found nearby containing the empty sarcophagus of his mother, Queen Hetepheres.
Like other pyramids, Khufu’s is surrounded by rows of mastabas, where relatives
or officials of the king were buried to accompany and support him in the
afterlife.
The middle pyramid at Giza was built for Khufu’s son Khafre
(2558-2532 B.C). A unique feature built inside Khafre’s pyramid complex was the
Great Sphinx, a guardian statue carved in limestone with the head of a man and
the body of a lion. It was the largest statue in the ancient world, measuring
240 feet long and 66 feet high. In the 18th dynasty (c. 1500 B.C.) the Great
Sphinx would come to be worshiped itself, as the image of a local form of the
god Horus. The southernmost pyramid at Giza was built for Khafre’s son Menkaure
(2532-2503 B.C.). It is the shortest of the three pyramids (218 feet) and is a
precursor of the smaller pyramids that would be constructed during the fifth
and sixth dynasties.
Approximately 2.3 million blocks of stone (averaging about
2.5 tons each) had to be cut, transported and assembled to build Khufu’s Great
Pyramid. The ancient Greek historian Herodotus wrote
that it took 20 years to build and required the labor of 100,000 men, but later
archaeological evidence suggests that the workforce might actually have been
around 20,000. Though some popular versions of history held that the pyramids
were built by slaves or foreigners forced into labor, skeletons excavated from
the area show that the workers were probably native Egyptian agricultural
laborers who worked on the pyramids during the time of year when the Nile River
flooded much of the land nearby.
THE END OF THE
PYRAMID ERA
Pyramids continued to be built throughout the fifth and
sixth dynasties, but the general quality and scale of their construction
declined over this period, along with the power and wealth of the kings
themselves. In the later Old Kingdom pyramids, beginning with that of King Unas
(2375-2345 B.C), pyramid builders began to inscribe written accounts of events
in the king’s reign on the walls of the burial chamber and the rest of the
pyramid’s interior. Known as pyramid texts, these are the earliest significant
religious compositions known from ancient Egypt.
The last of the great pyramid builders was Pepy II
(2278-2184 B.C.), the second king of the sixth dynasty, who came to power as a
young boy and ruled for 94 years. By the time of his rule, Old Kingdom prosperity
was dwindling, and the pharaoh had lost some of his quasi-divine status as the
power of non-royal administrative officials grew. Pepy II’s pyramid, built at
Saqqara and completed some 30 years into his reign, was much shorter (172 feet)
than others of the Old Kingdom. With Pepy’s death, the kingdom and strong
central government virtually collapsed, and Egypt entered a turbulent phase
known as the First Intermediate Period. Later kings, of the 12th dynasty, would
return to pyramid building during the so-called Middle Kingdom phase, but it
was never on the same scale as the Great Pyramids.
THE PYRAMIDS TODAY
Tomb robbers and other vandals in both ancient and modern
times removed most of the bodies and funeral goods from Egypt’s pyramids and
plundered their exteriors as well. Stripped of most of their smooth white
limestone coverings, the Great Pyramids no longer reach their original heights;
Khufu’s, for example, measures only 451 feet high. Nonetheless, millions of
people continue to visit the pyramids each year, drawn by their towering
grandeur and the enduring allure of Egypt’s rich and glorious past.
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