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View Full Version : Egypt uncovers 'missing' pyramid of a pharaoh


Alonzo
06-05-2008, 04:20 PM
SAQQARA, Egypt - Egyptian archaeologists have uncovered the "missing pyramid" of a pharaoh and a ceremonial procession road where high priests carried mummified remains of sacred bulls, Egypt's antiquities chief said Thursday.

Zahi Hawass said the pyramid — of which only the base remains — is believed to be that of King Menkauhor, an obscure pharaoh who ruled for only eight years more than 4,000 years ago.

In 1842, German archaeologist Karl Richard Lepsius mentioned Menkauhor's pyramid among his finds at Saqqara, calling it the "Headless Pyramid" because its top was missing, Hawass said.

But the desert sands covered Lepsius' discovery, and no archaeologist since was able to find it.

"We have filled the gap of the missing pyramid," Hawass told reporters on a tour of the discoveries at Saqqara, the necropolis and burial site of the rulers of ancient Memphis, the capital of Egypt's Old Kingdom, south of Cairo.

Only the pyramid's base — or the superstructure as archeologists call it — was found after a 25-foot-high mound of sand was removed over the past year and a half by Hawass' team.

The base was in a 15 foot-deep pit dug out by workers, with heaps of huge rocks marking its entrance and walls. A burial chamber also was discovered.

Hawass said the style of the pyramid and of a gray granite sarcophagus lid found in the burial chamber indicates the pyramid was from the Fifth Dynasty, a period that began in 2,465 B.C. and ended in 2,325 B.C.

The period spanned approximately 140 years of the Old Kingdom. That would put it about two centuries after the completion of the Great Pyramid of Giza, believed to have been finished in 2,500 B.C.

Archaeologists have not found a cartouche — a pharoah's name in hieroglyphs — of the pyramid's owner. But Hawass said that, based on the estimated dating of the pyramid, he was convinced it belonged to Menkauhor.

The second discovery Hawass announced Thursday was a part of a ceremonial procession road, dating back to the Ptolemaic period, which ran for about 300 years before 30 B.C.

It runs alongside Menkauhor's pyramid, leading from a mummification chamber toward the Saqqara Serapium, a network of underground tombs where sacred bulls were interred, discovered by French archaeologist August Mariette in 1850.

A high priest would carry the mummified bulls' remains down the road — the only human allegedly allowed to walk on it — to the chambers where the bulls would be placed in sarcophagi in the Serapium, about a third of a mile away, he said.

Ancient Egyptians considered Apis Bulls to be earthy incarnations of the city god of Memphis and connected with fertility and the sun-cult.

A bull would be chosen for its deep black coloring and would be required to have a single white mark between the horns. Selected by priests and honored until death, it was mummified and buried in the Serapium's underground galleries.

The sprawling archaeological site at Saqqara is most famous for the Step Pyramid of King Djoser — the oldest of Egypt's over 100 pyramids, built in the 27th century B.C.

http://d.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/p/ap/20080605/capt.7fc882e4eb0c49dab1a5f4b45f76e53f.mideast_egyp t_missing_pyramid_nn105.jpg?x=400&y=257&sig=UWjD78WOIaeOlulTuKjUXA--

http://d.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/p/ap/20080605/capt.593bf55436b14c3081e48ec9bea9fc88.mideast_egyp t_missing_pyramid_nn104.jpg?x=400&y=193&sig=hoWvjlocB8O6tYcoQDHmDg--

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080605/ap_on_re_mi_ea/egypt_missing_pyramid;_ylt=AhCKD2Vcp5N10142.yR6jl4 LewgF

That guy in the first photo pops up in everything Egyptian.

Wndrtch
06-05-2008, 05:23 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080605/ap_on_re_mi_ea/egypt_missing_pyramid;_ylt=AhCKD2Vcp5N10142.yR6jl4 LewgF

That guy in the first photo pops up in everything Egyptian.

LOL! I remember he did a show one time, where the climactic ending was to unveil a newly discovered mummy. I think it was suposed to be Inhotep (sorry to jafar00, if I butchered that) or someone important like that. Suposedly all this gold an stuff was supposed to be there, because they didn;t see signs that the tomb was invaded.

After two hours, they got to, and opened the sarcophogus, and there was nothing but the mummy. It had been raiding long ago. Hawass, God love him, got really excited about the mummy and kept going on about how well preserved it was.

He had an authentic "Heraldo" moment! LOL!

PostmodernProphet
06-05-2008, 05:55 PM
of which only the base remains

/looks around suspiciously....has David Copperfield been around longer than we suspected?....

cronic
06-05-2008, 08:11 PM
That sh1t is cool.. id love to go there and see it in person

jafar00
06-06-2008, 07:52 AM
That sh1t is cool.. id love to go there and see it in person

When it gets a bit cooler, I'll see if I can head down there and take some pics :)

Trish
06-06-2008, 03:17 PM
I wonder if they have any idea why the top of this pyramid is gone while others have stayed in place. Very interesting story.

Professor
06-06-2008, 03:38 PM
He had an authentic "Heraldo" moment! LOL!

:madlaugh:

jafar00
06-06-2008, 07:52 PM
I wonder if they have any idea why the top of this pyramid is gone while others have stayed in place. Very interesting story.

Here's the interesting the. The Pyramids at Giza were built on very solid bedrock foundations, and used to be clad in different stones like Alabaster, Limestone, and another stone that eludes my memory at the moment.

The other pyramids that failed were built on sandy foundations.

The Giza Pyramids are quite an astounding piece of engineering. Even to today, if you go inside and look at the burial chambers, you will be amazed at how smooth the massive stones are that make up the chamber and how perfectly they were seamlessly joined.

Wndrtch
06-06-2008, 07:57 PM
Here's the interesting the. The Pyramids at Giza were built on very solid bedrock foundations, and used to be clad in different stones like Alabaster, Limestone, and another stone that eludes my memory at the moment.

The other pyramids that failed were built on sandy foundations.

The Giza Pyramids are quite an astounding piece of engineering. Even to today, if you go inside and look at the burial chambers, you will be amazed at how smooth the massive stones are that make up the chamber and how perfectly they were seamlessly joined.

My understanding too is that the builders/workers were not slaves. They were everyday Egyptians that worked on the Pyramids to honor their God-King.

cronic
06-06-2008, 11:03 PM
When it gets a bit cooler, I'll see if I can head down there and take some pics :)

Just send me a plane ticket friend..( round trip please ) I will come take some pics with ya..

Waffletush
06-07-2008, 01:56 AM
Just send me a plane ticket friend..( round trip please ) I will come take some pics with ya..

I've been inside the Great Pyramid of Giza (aka Pyramid of Khufu) among other places in Egypt. :)