Pixel Paradox Egyptian Screensavers

Home | Cheops | Chephren | Mycerinus | Sphinx | Tombs | Solarboat | Tourism

How were the Pyramids Built? Lifting the Stone Blocks


Gateway to Egypt Holiday
****************
Tutankhamun Connections

 *
Tutankhamun's Tomb at Luxor Hotel

 *
Famous Egyptians
 *
Egypt Legends
 *
Egyptian Gods
 *
Egypt Cult Centers
 *
Egypt's Creation Myths
 *

Egyptian Screensavers

 *
2007 Pictures
of Egypt at
Egypt-Dreaming.com

*
Egypt Wallpapers
 *
Cell Phone Images
 *
Ancient Egyptian Games

*
AAA Encyclopedia of Artifacts, Antiquities and Arcane Knowledge
*
Collecting Amelia Peabody First Edition

*



The World of Kensea Media

Writings of
 *
Fantasy and Science Fiction Screensavers
 *
Meditation Screensavers
 *
Dancing Dung Beetles Reading Room



Look up any page at The World of Kensea Media


Figure one, Drawing of Cheops, showing passages and gallery.

Pyramid Construction Theory
Article by Daniel Gerardo (reprinted with his permission)

Introduction
The pyramids, a monument of human strength and intelligence, have caused awe and curiosity among men at all times.

Cheops's Pyramid - also called the Great Pyramid -, which was raised on the Gizeh plateau during the ancient Egyptian Empire, is the masterpiece of builders.

The construction techniques applied for carrying out this work and the explanation of the reasons for its unique inner layout are both vast and debatable matters.

n this article I shall refer to two issues which have attracted the attention of archaeologists from Borchardt's time to our days:
a) the method used for lifting the blocks of stone;
b) the purpose of the Grand Gallery.

Traditionally, the two questions have been analysed separately without ever gathering enough evidence in either case. I shall briefly outline the existing scientific views on each one of them and will then formulate a different approach whose uniqueness lies in the fact that the two are assumed to be related.

The Purpose of the Grand Gallery
Flinders Petrie was the first archaeologist to express the opinion that the Grand Gallery had been used for storing the three granite blocks blocking the upward corridor - where they had been placed after the Pharaoh´s funeral (see Fig. 1).

Figure one, Drawing of Cheops, showing passages and gallery.

Figure 1. The Architecture of the Pyramid of Cheops

Borchardt shares this idea, yet he points out that it can explain neither the slots carved in the lower part of the third row of stones on the side-walls of the gallery, nor the blocks mounted on each one of the twenty-eight holes carved in the wall benches at regular intervals (see Fig. 2).

He also believes that the blocks of stone on the floor of the gallery might have hindered the funeral
procession, and postulates that they were placed on a wooden platform mounted on the side-wall slots which was supported by logs embedded in the bench holes.

He completes his hypothesis with the theory of the successive stages of the construction, based on the assumption that during the building process three changes were made in the layout plan.

Figure 2 Drawing of The Grand Gallery

Figure 2. Drawing of the Grand Gallery

This might cast a new light on the existence of three chambers in the pyramid.

According to Lauer, the second layout plan provided that the intermediate chamber would act as a chapelle ardente, while the gallery would be built as a dead-end hall for storing the large granite blocks which would obstruct the whole upward corridor.

In the end, this idea might have been discarded by the builders. The upper- and antechambers were furnished with a built-in blocking system which provided sufficient safety for the upper storey, so the builders may have deemed it unnecessary to obstruct the whole upward corridor and thus limited the number of blocks to three.

The remaining granite stones were used for building the upper chamber. They mounted a scaffolding akin to the one formulated by Borchardt - and consistent with the various details found in the gallery - in order to raise the blocks of stone to the upper chamber.

The technique for lifting the blocks.(continued)

Related Pages:

The Pyramids of Giza | The Pyramid Complex and Sphinx | The Pharaohs Who Built Them | Where are the Pyramids | Composition of Blocks | How Blocks were Lifted | Virtual Tour Inside The Great Pyramid | Solarboat Museum | Tourist Attractions | Perfume Oils- From Pharaoh to France | The Sphinx | The Red and Bent Pyramids at Abusir | Names of the Pyramids | The Sun Temple of Niuserre and Other Fifth Dynasty Pharaohs | Saqqara Pyramids | New Grand Egyptian Museum at Giza

Related Books:

The Orion Mystery | The Complete Pyramids| Egyptian Art in the Age of the Pyramid | When the Pyramids Were Built: Egyptian Art in the Old Kingdom | The Pyramids: The Mystery, Culture and Science of Egypt's Great Monuments | The Message of the Sphinx | Pyramids by Tyldesley | The Pyramids of Egypt: Pocket Guide

Download Bejeweled at Pixelparadox Games

Gifts Delivered USA - send gifts to USA without international shipping charges
Gifts Delivered
U.S.A.

Google
Web KenseaMedia


 
The Eye of Horus from the Tomb of Sennedjem

Take a Deluxe Tour of  Egyptian Historic Sites and Museums

Edfu and Esna | Medinet Habu | Tombs at Luxor | Deir el Bahri
Ramesseum | Abydos - Dendera | Giza Pyramids | Saqqara | Abu Simbel
Bent Pyramid | Ancient Pyramid Names | Sphinx | Giza Excavations and Tombs

Luxor Temple | Karnak | Luxor Museum | Cairo  Museum | Tutankamun's Tomb
Grand Egyptian Museum at Cairo

 

Sights Around Cairo | Quick Tour of Egypt | Backtrack with Suzie | Gateway to Egypt  | Tutankhamun's Tomb at Luxor Hotel

Planning a Trip to Egypt?  Here are some recommended Guides and Tour Agencies

Tour Agencies:  Holiday Tours | Ma'at Tours

Private Tour Guides in Egypt: Hossam Rashwan | Eman Hemida | Ahmed Salama | John Gabril

Visit Egyptholiday.com : Nile Cruise | Trip Diary 2007 | Tips for Do It Yourself Trip Planning

Egypt-Dreaming.com: A Thousand Pictures of Egypt
The Picture Gallery of Joan's & Ken's Egypt Revealed Tour of 2007

Egyptian ScreensaversEgyptian Wallpapers | Egyptian Games | Games of Egypt Arcade Games
Egypt Legends | Egypt Gods | Creation Myths | Cult Centers
Discovery of the Tomb of Tutankhamun | Daily Life in Ancient Egypt - Mehenkwetre's Tomb | Egyptian Afterlife
Joan's and Ken' s Egypt Holiday 
Virtual Tour of Egypt
All Things Egyptian
Dungbeetle Reading Room   
e-books online (age 12 to 80)
Suzie Manley's Egypt   
Tales of Mystery and Magic
Famous Egyptians
Backtrack  Egyptian History
World of Kensea Media  
Computer Art Gallery
Making of Michael Manley 
Giftmice Gifts Online
AAA Encyclopedia
Antiquities, Ancient Artifacts, and
Arcane Knowledge
Collecting Amelia's
Guide to Collecting  Elizabeth Peters First Editions
Visit Danzania - Land of Wonder - Your Next Port of Call for Comedy
Kensea Media for Excellence in Graphics
 © 2004  Joan L. James and Pixelparadox   Privacy Policy

Click here to email

SafeSurf Rated All Ages