|
|

 The Great Pyramids of
Giza
It's 756 feet long on each side, 450
high and is composed of 2,300,000 blocks of stone, each averaging 2 1/2 tons in
weight. Despite the makers' limited surveying tools no side is more than 8
inches different in length than another, and the whole structure is perfectly
oriented to the points of the compass.
Until the 19th century it was the
tallest building in the world and, at the age of 4,500 years, it is the only
one of the famous "Seven Wonders of the Ancient World" that still
stands. It is the Great Pyramid of Khufu, at Giza, Egypt.
Some of the earliest history of the
Pyramid comes from a Greek traveller named Herodotus of
Halicanassus. He visited Egypt around 450 BC and included a description of the
Great Pyramid in a history book he wrote. Herodotus was told by his
Egyptian guides that it took twenty-years for a force of 100,000 oppressed
slaves to build the pyramid. Stones were lifted into position by the use of
immense machines.
In 1638 a English mathematician, John
Greaves, visited the pyramid. He discovered a narrow shaft, hidden in the
wall, that connected the Grand Gallery with the descending passage. Both
ends were tightly sealed and the bottom was blocked with debris. Some
archaeologists suggested this route was used by the last of the Pharaoh's men
to exit the tomb, after the granite plugs had been put in place, and by the
thieves to get inside. Given the small size of the passageway and the amount of
debris it seems unlikely that the massive amount of treasure, including the
huge missing sarcophagus lid, could have been removed this way.
Some have suggested that the pyramid was
never meant as a tomb, but as an astronomical observatory.
Richard Proctor, an astronomer,
did observe that the descending passage could have been used to observe the
transits of certain stars. He also suggested that the grand gallery, when open
at the top, during construction, could have been used for mapping the sky.
Most archaeologists, though, accept the
theory that the great pyramid was just the largest of a tradition of tombs used
for the Pharaohs of Egypt.
So what happened to Khufu's mummy
and treasure? Nobody knows. Extensive explorations have found no other chambers
or passageways. Still one must wonder if, perhaps in this one case, the King
and his architects out smarted both the ancient thieves and modern
archaeologists and that somewhere in, or below, the last wonder of the ancient
world, rests Khufu and his sacred gold.
|
|