memphis and saqqara
23-25 April 1999
 
Ramses II and the New Kingdom Sphinx at Memphis.

The Step Pyramid of Djoser at Saqqara.

Wall carvings decorate the mastabas of
ancient Egyptian nobility.
Memphis, the capital of the Old Kingdom, was
a magnificent city and important both as a commercial hub as well as a
cult center for the god Ptah, creator of the universe. The temple of
Ptah
was Memphis’ most impressive building. Unfortunately it was destroyed a
long time ago like all other temples dating back to that time as they were
then made of mud-bricks. Memphis today is a pleasant open air museum, the
main attraction being a colossal statue of Ramses II as a young king and a
New Kingdom sphinx.
Two kilometers from Memphis in the bleak
golden dunes of the desert lies the necropolis of Saqqara, the burial
grounds for the Old Kingdom pharaohs and nobles.
The Step Pyramid of Djoser is the largest
funeral complex in Saqqara. It was constructed for the pharaoh in 2650 BC
by his architect and vizier Imhotep who was also renowned as a writer and
physician. Standing 60 meters high, the Step Pyramid was not only the
first pyramid to be built but also the first stone building to be ever
constructed. The earliest dynasties built their tombs below the ground and
had them covered with mastabas, mounds made of mud-brick and
plaster. The Step Pyramid was primarily a series of six mastabas made of
small blocks of stone laid like bricks set on top of the other and
covered in shiny white limestone. A 28-meter shaft leads into the burial
chamber which is now blocked.
The pyramid is surrounded by a vast
rectangular complex enclosed in a limestone wall. Within is the Heb Sed
court, now completely rebuilt, which was the site for the five-day Heb Sed festival held in Memphis every 30 years of the pharaoh’s reign.
Symbolizing the renewal of the king’s vitality, all the rituals were
performed twice, once as the King of the South, and thereafter as the King of
the North. Officials from all over Egypt came to witness this ceremony and
show their allegiance to the pharaoh.
The Pyramid of Unas, in Saqqara, is small
but noteworthy for its burial chamber in which are hieroglyphic
inscriptions known as the Pyramid Texts. They are the first written
versions of the ancient funeral ritual chants from which the Book of the
Dead was later derived from.
Apart from the pyramids, Saqqara has a
number of tombs or mastabas built by the Egyptian nobility. The mastaba of
Mereruka is the largest mastaba in Saqqara with around 32 rooms. The
decorations on the walls consist of lively scenes of hunting, farming,
dancing and funerary rituals. Other mastabas of interest are those of
Ptah-hotep and Ti.
the pyramids of giza

The Great Pyramid of Khufu.
The Pyramids of Giza, one of the seven
wonders of the ancient world, are the only ones to have survived through
time. Pyramids, or Houses of Eternity, as they were called were built as
huge, impregnable tombs designed to protect the mummy and provide
accommodation for the visiting ka. For the Egyptians to have
conceived the idea of the pyramids was creative, but to have executed them
was heroic. It took superb skill and organization to cut rock with the
simplest of tools and to move massive blocks into place with mere muscle.
Built during 2500 BC, the pyramid complex
of Khufu, Khafre and Menkaure consists of nine main pyramids and a number
of mastabas, valley temples and mortuary temples in which rituals and
offerings were made to the dead. In ancient times the pyramids were
covered in shiny, polished limestone and painted in vivid designs and
colour like all their other monuments.
The Great Pyramid of Khufu is the oldest
and largest pyramid in the group. Built with around 2.3 million limestone
blocks, each block weighs an average of 2.5 tonnes. Originally 147 meters
high, the loss of its limestone covering and capstone has lowered it to
137 meters. A long, narrow and low corridor leads through the magnificent
47-meter long Great Gallery into the main undecorated king’s chamber. The
sarcophagus lies empty, the mummy was never found.
The Egyptians had
studied the skies, identified many of the fixed stars and were able to
calculate the movement of the others. When they laid out the pyramids, they
determined the axis with the stars, aligning it with the three stars of
the Orion, the constellation of Osiris. The Great Pyramid of Khufu is laid
out such that its slopes face the north, south, east and west exactly. A
dismantled solar boat was found in the boat bit outside the pyramid. It is
now housed in a special museum at the site. A second solar boat, perfectly preserved,
still lies under the sand.
Standing in front of Khafre’s pyramid is
the Sphinx which is over 20 meters tall and 60 meters long. The sphinx,
half lion and half human was considered to be an embodiment of Hermakhis,
a manifestation of the sun god. Tradition suggests that Khafre found an
outcrop of rock and had the sphinx carved on it, the face fashioned in his
own image. A stele put up by Thutmose IV between its two paws tells the
story of how Thutmose IV had dreamt that if he were to clear the sands
surrounding the Sphinx he would be crowned king, a dream which came true.
After sunset, a sound and light show is
held every evening. The setting is spectacular and cannot fail to impress.
As the pyramids turn colour in the setting sun and the stars pin up the
sky, the sphinx accompanied with music and a laser show recounts the story
of the pyramids and the ancient Egyptians.
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