Sunday, January 31, 2010

Egyptian Mummy Identified as Legendary Hatshepsut

hatshepsut_mymmy_from_phillydotcom.jpg
The mummy of Egypt’s most famous—and most provocative—female pharaoh was identified this week. Queen Hatshepsut, who ruled Egypt for two decades in the 15th century B.C., was most likely obese and diabetic judging from her mummy, scientists said.
Her mummy had actually been discovered in 1903, but was deemed unimportant and laid in storage until the Discovery Channel funded a $5 million DNA lab at the Egyptian Museum in Cairo.
Hatshepsut is probably best known for her habit of wearing men’s clothes, sometimes with a ceremonial beard (to emphasize her authority, some Egyptologists say), but she was also a skillful ruler under whom the Egyptian empire expanded and erected numerous monuments. 
More powerful than Cleopatra or Nefertiti, Hatshepsut was widely depicted in carvings and hieroglypics, but after her death her successor (stepson Thutmose III) systematically defaced nearly all images or mentions of the queen. She was recently the subject of a blockbuster exhibit at New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Cats, worshiped as divine by the Egyptians, also had a scientific breakthrough this week. DNA analysis of more than a thousand domestic and wild felines showed that they all evolved from a “single wild ancestor”–Felis silvestris–who prowled Middle Eastern deserts up to 131,000 years ago. Domestication, though, didn’t happen until only 10,000 years ago, about the same time agriculture developed in the region.
Quite possibly, experts say, grain stores attracted rodents which, in turn, attracted cats. But it is unlikely that we domesticated them as in the case of cows or dogs; rather, they chose to domesticate themselves in order to continue access to easy and abundant prey.

The Story of France with Pharaoh Ramesses

There are so many things that one can draw Truth and lessons from, but we do not seem to spend time thinking about them.

Pharaoh
Pharaoh Ramesses II
This is the closest picture taken of Pharaoh Ramesses II
Here’s the story of France with Pharaoh Ramesses

When Francisco Mitra became the president of France in 1981
France requested from the Egyptian government to host the mummy of Pharaoh For the purpose of running laboratory and archeological examinations on the mummy of the most notorious dictator ever lived on earth
Upon arrival, a very royal attendants were there including the French president himself and all ministers who bowed in honor for the mummy
When the ceremony ended, the mummy was carried to a specially-designed section at the Archeology Centre of France
Were it started to be tested by the greatest French archeological and anatomical scientists in order to discover more about such a great mummy
The scientists were headed by Professor Maurice Bucaille
Scientists were trying to restore the mummy while Professor Maurice was mainly concerned with how did this mummy die!
The final report of the scientists was released late at night which states that the remaining salt in the mummy is an overt evidence that it was drawn in the sea, and the body was rescued very shortly where it was immediately embalmed to be saved
An amazing thing was still confusing Professor Maurice is that how could this body possibly be safer than any other mummy despite being taken out of the sea up until this time
Professor Maurice was writing his final report on what he thought would be a new discovery about saving Pharaoh’s body immediately after his death and embalming it
And there, someone whispered to him that Muslims claim to know something about the drowning of this mummy
Yet the Professor firmly denied such thing saying that it’s impossible to discover this without the development of science and without using his high-tech and complicated laboratories   and computers
To his surprise, he was told that Muslims believe in a book called “Quran” and this Quran narrates the story of Pharaoh’s drowning and ensures the safety of his body after his death as to be a Sign to mankind.
The Professor couldn’t believe his own ears and started to wonder:
How can a book existed 1400 years ago speak about the mummy that was only found 200 years ago, in 1898??!!
How can that be possible while the ancient Egyptian heritage was discovered only a few decades ago and no one knew about it before??!!
The Professor sat down pondering on what he was told
about the book of Muslims while his Holy Book narrates only the drowning of Pharaoh without saying anything about his body
“Is it possible that this mummy in front of me is the one who was chasing Moses??!!”
“Is it possible that Muhammad knew this 1400 years ago??!!”
The Professor couldn’t sleep that night till they brought him the Old Testament where he read: “the sea drowned Pharaoh and his army, no one else was left alive” He was surprised that the Holy Book didn’t mention about the destiny of the body and that it will be saved
When the scientists were done with the mummy, France retuned it to Egypt, but Professor Maurice couldn’t rest for a moment since he was told that Muslims know about the safety of the body. So, he decided to travel and meet anatomy Muslim scientists and there he spoke about his discovery of the safety of the mummy after its death in the sea and so on.
One of the Muslim scientists stood up and simply opened the Quran and pointed to the Professor at one verse:
“This day shall We save you in your body, that you may be a Sign to those who come after you! But verily, many among mankind are neglectful of Our Signs”
(Quran 10:92)
The Professor was struck when he read that and immediately stood in front of the crowd and said loudly: “I believe in Islam, I believe in Quran”
Then he went back to France with a different face he traveled with.
In France, he dedicated 10 years investigating the scientific discoveries and comparing them with the Quran and trying to come up with one scientific contradiction with the Quran. Finally he quoted one verse from the Quran to be his conclusion:
“No falsehood can approach it (this book) from before or behind it: it is sent down by One Full of Wisdom, Worthy of all praise”
(Quran 41:42)

As a result of all years of his research, Professor Maurice wrote a book that shook all Europe, especially the scientists there
“Quran, Torah, Bible and Science:
A Study of the Holy Books in the Light of Modern Science”
All copies were sold out at a very short time
I personally visited the Cairo Museum where the mummy is preserved and there you get astonished at the scenery of thousands of people from all over the world visiting the place everyday , unfortunately, many of the tourists there would think: “Woow, look at that! Amazing!! So nice to see people of all times!! Without realizing the intended lesson that Allah has kept this body a Sign to all mankind of anyone who denies Allah and His messengers.
In another chapter in the Quran:
“When Moses came to them with Our clear Signs, they said: This is nothing but sorcery faked up: never did we hear the like among our fathers of old!
Moses said: “My Lord knows best who it is that comes with guidance from Him and whose end will be best in the Hereafter: certain it is that the wrong-doers will not prosper.
“Pharaoh said: “O Chiefs! No god do I know for you but myself: therefore, O Haman! Light me a (kiln to bake bricks) out of clay, and build me a lofty palace, that I may mount up to the god of Moses: but as far as I am concerned, I think (Moses) is a lair!”
And he was arrogant and insolent in the land, beyond reason, – he and his hosts: they thought they would not have to return to Us!
So We seized his and his hosts, and We flung them into the sea: now behold what was the end of those who did wrong!
And We made them (but) leaders inviting to the Fire; and on the Day of Judgment no help shall they find.
In this world We made a curse to follow them: and on the Day of Judgment they will be among the loathed (and despised).”
(Quran 28: 36-42)

So now,
“Has not the time arrived for the Believers that their hearts in all humility should engage in the remembrance of Allah and the Truth which has been revealed to them, and that they should not become like those to whom was given Revelation aforetime, but long ages passed over them and their hearts grew hard? For many among them are rebellious transgressors.
Know you (all) that Allah gives life to the earth after its death! Already have We shown the Signs plainly to you, that you may learn wisdom.
For those who give in charity, men and women, and loan to Allah a Beatiful Loan, it shall be increased manifold (to their credits), and they shall have (besides) a liberal reward.
And those who believe in Allah and His messengers- they are the Sincere (lovers of Truth), and the Witnesses (who testify), in the eyes of their Lord: they shall have their Reward and their Light.
But those who reject Allah and deny Our Signs,- they are the companions of Hell-Fire ”
Quran 57: 16-19
Pharaoh Ramesses II
Pharaoh Ramesses II
Pharaoh Ramesses IIPharaoh Ramesses II

The Death of Ramses II

When King Ramses II was 92 years old, In his reign in Year 67, he was finally united with his beloved Amon. His tomb in the Valley of the Kings (KV7) was completed long before his death. Unfortunately for us, very little was left that the plundering tomb robbers hadn't stolen. Using the magnificent tomb of the relatively minor Tutankhamon as a point of comparison, we can imagine that it must have been absolutely splendid. Ramses mummy was removed and hidden by the Valley priests at the beginning of the Third Intermediate Period, and the discover of KV5 was in a cache at Deir el-Bahari in 1881.

The new discover for KV5:

In 1989, an old tomb that had been deemed unimportant by Howard Carter in 1902 was rediscovered. It was KV5, now known to be the tomb of many of the sons of King Ramses II. It contains over 110 corridors and chambers dug hundreds of feet into the hillside. It is one of the largest tombs in all of Egypt, and is currently under excavation.

Daily hundreds of tourists stream past the remains and temples that once were either surrounded by the hustle and bustle of daily Ancient Egyptian activity, or echoed the silent communication between the Gods and humankind. Three thousand years have slipped over the desert, and day by day new discoveries appear.
The massive stone monuments, vibrating sympathetically with their celestial counterparts, have been covered and uncovered by those sands over the years. But late at night, when the humans sleep, and the nocturnal animals roam, Sirius rises in the east. And the wind whispers the name of King Ramses II.

Cartouche of Ramses II

The temple in the city of Sohag of Upper Egypt, in the north side of the temple of Seti I. Any one can go to Sohag city from the capital by train or by air.

Egypt Under Ramses II

Discover the legal documents and the papyruses that have come down to us from the age of King Ramses, it is clear that his reign was one of peace and prosperity. Women participated in government, and several became pharaoh at different times during the New Kingdom. Even the humblest workers could seek redress at the highest court if they felt they were being treated unjustly. There were, however, exceptions to the rule in this land of Maat, the Goddess of Justice. Evidently certain priests began to abuse their authority.

In Ancient Egypt, religion was all-important। As Egypt became larger and larger, some of the priests began to take advantage of their growing power. The profession of scribe, a sort of combination lawyer, civil servant, academician and tax collector, was highly respected, but there were also those within the profession that used their position unethically.

With regard to the Egyptians, perpetuation of the empire depended not only on repelling invaders (as Ramses too spent his fair share of time doing), but also on maintaining the magical link with the celestial world. The themes that can be found in the temples of Ramses' day can be found throughout Egyptian history: "King Ramses is received by Amon and presented with the Key of Life," "Ramses presents a statuette of Maat to Horus, demonstrating that rules of judicial in his kingdom," "Ramses is protected by Hathor, Amon,..." A tremendous empire needs tremendous temples to sustain this magical consciousness.
One of the greatest wonders of Ancient Egypt under Ramses II, and in general, is not made of stone. It is the simple truth that this great civilization existed in harmony, with very little internal strife, in a structure that is analogous to a giant extended family, the king and queen representing the parents in this analogy, the nobles the older brothers and sisters, and the citizens the children whom feel with the happy Childhood.
The analogy could be taken further to show the wise initiates as grandparents,.. . This fact about Ancient Egypt, which in some methods reaches a peak under king Ramses II, is rarely presented in our days versions of history.

Ramesseum (General view of the main ruins)
Ramesseum (General view of the main ruins)
This is another cause, in addition to the magical ones alluded to above, that the temples and monuments of ancient Egypt contain phrases and statements that to us, may seem like bragging or boasting. As West says, when Ramses II claims he has built a monument to his father, Amon, and states that there has been no other like it before, "the king was no more boasting than was Christ in the Gospels when he declared, I am the way, the truth and the life".
The topic of the Religion of ancient Egypt is complex and requires serious study to understand, but it doesn't require much effort to see that modern perspectives of the ancient ways are unfortunately colored, if not completely opaqued, by prejudice against conceptions of universe and deity that do not agree with those which are currently accepted. Remains, Temples and Statues.

Saturday, January 30, 2010

Family, Life and Childhood of Ramses II

The son of King Ramses I was Seti I, and was the pharaoh who truly restored Egypt power to the greatness and harmony it had enjoyed before the Amarna period (which in the capital moved in the reign of Ankhenaten). He instituted a major building program and a clearly defined foreign policy abroad. He assumed the title "repeater of births," which indicated the beginning of a new and legitimate era.

The efforts of Seti secured the eastern borders with Syria and the western borders with Libya. Later, foreshadowing the famous battle of Kadesh led by his son Ramses II, Seti attempted for once and all to restore Egyptian dominance in Most importantly, Setis 13-year reign represents one of the most important periods in the history of Ancient Egypt, architecture and culture. The quality of the reliefs the temples and his tomb are unique in all of Egyptian art.

Seti continued on the great building project his father began in Karnak that his son Ramses would later complete: the Hypostyle Hall in the Temple of Amon. He built the magnificent temple at Abydos, the city sacred to Osiris. It is in this temple that the "Royal List of Abydos" is found. This is one of the important sources of Egyptian history and chronology.

Beyond this temple is the massive and mysterious "Osirion" or "Tomb of Osiris।" historians also attribute this to Seti, although there is evidence that it is much older. Setis finest work was his tomb in the Valley of the Kings (KV17), the discover of KV17 by Belzoni in 1817. It is the longest, deepest and most beautiful of all of the tombs in the Valley.
Valley of The Kings

Seti married within his own military "caste." King Ramses mother was Queen Tuya. She outlived her husband by many years. She was queen-mother in until her death in Year 22 or 23 of the reign of King Ramses II, and statues of her appear frequently in Ramses temples and constructions. She appears on the facade at Abu Simbel, and in statue at the Ramesseum and at Ramses Delta capital, Piramesse. A beautiful portrait of Tuya was appeared in 1972 during a reclearance of her large tomb in the Valley of the Queens.
At 10 years of age, Seti recognized Ramses as "Eldest Kings Son," even though there were no other sons, for Ramses older brother died young. He was carefully trained as future king. He was named after his grandfather, a military man, the vizier and friend of Pharaoh Horemheb. Ramses, too, was trained in the martial techniques, and by his mid-teens he is seen as a participant of Setis Libyan campaign in the inscribed portrayals at Karnak. He rode alongside his father, learning directly from the pharaoh, but also learned from the masters of the various techniques and sciences: the inscriptions refer to the youth as overseer in the cutting of obelisks in the granite quarries of Aswan and working on his fathers many building projects. Again and again, inscriptions from the epoch around the empire refer to Ramses as an astute young leader.
One of the first sources of Ramses early years is found at Abydos, the dedication stele he set up in his father Setis temple. After his fathers death, Ramses had sailed to Abydos, the sacred shrine and ancient burial site of Osiris, and found that his fathers massive temple project was left unfinished and the burial sites of the earlier kings lay in ruins. Ramses immediately summoned the Court and reinitiated the project, making it clear that he would fulfill Setis wishes. On the stele he describes his youth.
King Seti himself made me great, while I was a child, until I reignedI was installed as eldest son, as hereditary prince upon the throne of Geb [the earth god or the world god] [He, Seti, said] "Crown him as king, that I may see his beauty while I live with him"He equipped me with women, a royal harem, as beautiful as those of the palace, those of the South and North were under my feet.
By the age of 15, Ramses had already married his two principal wives, Nefertari and Istnofret. Nefertari was always the Chief wife, until her death in Year 24 of Ramses reign. Her famous tomb is the most beautiful of all in Upper Egypt. The paintings inside her tomb are extraordinary, and have recently been completely restored. At Nefertaris death, Istnofret took her place. Apparently, she lived until Year 34.
These two wifes bore Ramses most important children. The first son of Ramses, Crown Prince Amenhirkhopshef, as well as at least three other sons and two daughters, were born unto Nefertari. Istnofret bore Merneptah, who would eventually succeed his father. She also bore a son named for his father, and Khaemwaset, who is often referred to today as the first archeologist. In his lifetime, as High Priest of Memphis, he was venerated as a great magician and restorer of ancient monuments.
One example of his restoration projects is the pyramid of King Unas at Saqqara, which contains the famous "Pyramid Texts." Over the course of his life, Ramses had eight principal wives. Following pharaonic custom, Ramses included several family members in his harem. One of his sisters and three of his daughters eventually became royal wives.
The power of Egypt forced the Hittites's king send his daughter to be wed to Ramses at the conclusion of the Hittite wars, and another one of his daughters came to join her 7 years later. There were also a number of Syrian and Babylonian royal ladies in Ramses harem. Ramses fathered over 100 children. He outlived twelve of his heirs. Merneptah, Ramses thirteenth son, became pharaoh when he was in his sixties.

Rameses had his name cartouched and writings about him made so deep in the surface of temples, that any successor would not be able to remove them.

Ramses II Childhood:


As a boy Ramses II knew royalty was his future. When he was only about 10, he became heir to the throne of the 19th dynasty of Egypt by order of his father, Pharaoh Seti I. Ramses later married Nefertari. At about age 25, Ramses became Egypt’s pharaoh, or ruler, when his father died.


Ancient Egyptians thought of their pharaohs as gods in human form. Ramses’ cartouche (car−TOOSH), or symbol, shows his throne name. Part of it means "One Chosen by [the sun god] Re."

By the time Ramses came to power, the great Sphinx and the pyramids at Giza had already been standing for more than a thousand years near the banks of the Nile River. To remind people of his godlike status, Ramses built large statues and temples. One of his massive works was the city of Pi−Ramses, or House of Ramses. He placed obelisks, or tall stone pillars, everywhere and decorated the palace with brightly colored tiles.

Before Ramses ever became pharaoh, the Hittites, an enemy people, had taken control of the Egyptian city of Kadesh. During Ramses’ fifth year as pharaoh, he fought to get the city back. In battle, the Hittites caught Ramses and most of his troops in a surprise attack. According to Ramses’ accounts−−inscribed on stone temple walls all over Egypt−−he bravely charged the enemy, holding them off until more Egyptian soldiers arrived. The conflict ended in a draw, but Ramses declared victory. The Egyptians and the Hittites signed a treaty 16 years later, and Ramses also married a Hittite princess. A peaceful period then began, and many Egyptians prospered under Ramses’ rule.


Ramses II Family:

Ramses II married about 200 wives and fathered over 100 children. As a young man he co-ruled Egypt with his father, Seti I. He also successfully led Egypt in a series of wars against the Hittites and greatly expanded Egyptian territory.


The 19th Dynasty ended in political turmoil. Small wonder, with 59 daughters and 79 sons! Talk about a succession crisis! Ramses II outlived his first 12 sons, and was succeeded by his 13th. This son had a reasonably successful reign, but the dynasty stumbled along to end with an assortment of short and unremarkable claimants to the throne.

The original Prince Khaemwaset was one of the more famous sons of Ramses II as he became High Priest of Ptah but this Prince Khaemwaset although he also became a priest of Ptah did not rise to the same heights as his namesake.


Tomb of Ramses II's Sons:

The search for the tomb of Ramses II sons is on:

All of the other tombs in the vicinity were already excavated.


KV5 was only cursorily explored, then lost again.

Burton’s maps showed KV5’s entrance in the southern half of a long slope not far from KV6, the tomb of Ramses IX.
KV5

Queen Nefertari, which is located a few hundred feet from her husband’s memorial. Nefertari’s temple looks much alike the one we just visited, but it has more statues, a total of 9, and the sanctuary has three doors leading inside. Most of the statues show the queen as making offerings to various gods of her era.

List of Egyptians Pharaohs

c. 1725 BC – Sobekhotep IV
c. 1695-1685 BC – Ay
c. 1615-1595 BC – Nevbererau I
c. 1560 BC – Taa (Thebes); first engagement between Thebes and Hyksos kings (Apepi) occurred during his reign

c. 1555 BC - Apepi (Hyksos)
1555-1550 BC – Kamose (Theban)
1550-1525 BC – Ahmose
1525-1504 BC – Amenhotep I
1504-1492 BC – Thutmose I
1492-1479 NC – Thutmose II
1473-1458 BC – Queen Hatshepsut
1479-1425 BC – Thutmose III (some co-regency with Hatshepsut)
1427-1400 BC – Amenhotep II
1400-1390 BC – Thutmose IV
1390-1352 BC – Amenhotep III
1352-1336 BC – Amenhotep IV
1336-1327 BC – Tutankhamun
1327-1323 BC - Ay
1323-1295 BC – Horemheb
1295-1294 BC – Ramses I
1294-1279 BC – Sety I
1279-1213 BC – Ramses II
1213-1203 BC – Merenptah
1200-1194 BC – Sety II (yes there is a gap)
1194-1188 BC – Saptah
1188-1186 BC – (queen) Tausret – Sety’s principal queen
1186-1184 BC – Sethnakht
1184-1153 BC – Ramses III – last to send expeditions to Punt
1153-1147 BC – Ramses IV
1147-1143 BC – Ramses V
1143-1136 BC – Ramses VI
1136-1129 BC – Ramses VII
1129-1126 BC – Ramses VIII
1126-1108 BC – Ramses IX
1108-1099 BC – Ramses X
1099-1069 BC – Ramses XI
1069-1043 BC – Smendes – power base at new delta city of Tanis
1043-1039 BC - Amenemnisu
1039-991 BC – Psusennes I
984-978 BC – Osorkon the Elder (Libyan)
978-959 BC – Siamun
959-945 – Psusennes II
945-924 BC – Sheshonq I (Libyan)
924-889 BC – Osorkon I (Libyan)
874-850 BC – Osorkon II (“)
850-825 BC – Takelot II (“)
825-773 BC – Sheshonq III (“)
702-690 BC - Shabitqo
690-664 BC – Taharqo (Nubian)
664-656 BC – Tanutamani
664-610 BC – Psamtek I – reunified Egypt (I know there’s an overlap, I don’t know why)
610-595 BC – Nekau II
595-589 BC – Psamtek II
589-570 BC – Apries; revolt of mercenaries at Elephantine during this time
570-526 BC – Ahmose II
526-525 BC – Psamtek III
525-522 BC – Cambyses
522-486 BC – Darius
486-465 BC – Xerxes
424-405 BC – Darius II
405-359 BC – Artaxerxes II
393-380 BC – Hakor
380-362 BC – Nectanebo I
362-360 BC – Teos
360-343 BC – Nectanebo II
343-338 BC – Artaxerxes III
205-180 BC – Ptolemy V Epiphanes reign
1532-1528 BC – Ahmose’s conquest of Avaris
818-793 BC – Pedubastis I – first local ruler to call himself king
746-716 BC – Nubian ruler Piy launches military expedition into Egypt and takes over Thebes and many towns and cities in northern Upper Egypt
727-720 BC – Tefnakt declares himself king and gains control of western delta and Memphis
672-664 BC – Assyrian records indicate rule of king Nekau I; killed by Nubian King Tanutamani in 664 BC
c. 574-570 BC – Apries makes good use of Egyptian fleet in strategically well-conceived series of campaigns directed against Cyprus and Phoenicia
c. 510-497 BC – Darius completes construction of canal that runs from Pelusiac branch of the Nile thru Adi Tumilat to the Bitter Lakes and the Red Sear 343-342 BC – Artaxerxes III and Persians invade and conquer Egypt’s Nectanebo II (who has 20,000 mercenaries). See ancient egypt List of King's Cartouches

Buildings of Hatshepsut

In the Karnak temple (Thebes), she renovated her father's hall, introduced four great obelisks nearly 100 feet (30 m) tall, and added a fine chapel. At Beni-Hasan, in Middle Egypt, she built a rock-cut temple known in Greek as Speos Artemidos. Her supreme achievement was the splendid temple at Dayr al-Bahri. Designed as a funerary monument for Hatshepsut and her father, it contains reliefs that record the major events of her reign.

Hatshepsut also cut a large tomb for herself in the Valley of the Kings, another strictly pharaonic prerogative. Its burial chamber was intended to lie behind her funerary temple, and she also planned to move her father's mummy into her own tomb. Her attention to Thutmose I was intended to emphasize her legitimate succession directly from him through the agency of Amon-Re, whom she claimed as her actual father.
Queen Hatshepsut's ambition, however, encountered that of the energetic Thutmose III, who had become head of the army। As she and her loyal officials aged, his party grew stronger. The early death of her daughter, whom she married to Thutmose III, may have contributed to her decline. Whether She died naturally or was deposed and slain is uncertain.
Hatshepsut

Hatshepsut had begun construction of a tomb when she was the Great Wife of Thutmose II, but the scale of this was not suitable when she became "king", so a second tomb was built. This was KV20, which was possibly the first tomb to be constructed in the Valley of the Kings. The original intention appear to have been to hew a long tunnel that would lead underneath her mortuary temple, but the quality of the limestone bedrock was poor and her architect must have realized tha this goal would not be possible. See cartouche of Hatshepsut

A large burial chamber was created instead as a result. At some point it was decided to inter her father, Thutmose I from his original tomb in KV38 into a new chamber below her own. Her original red-quartzite sarcophagus was altered to accommodate her father instead, and a new one was made for her. It is likely that when she died (no later than the twenty-second year of her reign) she was interred in this tomb along with her father. See ancient egypt List of Kings Cartouches here.

Akhenaten (Amenhotep IV)

During Akhenaten's rule, from 1353 to 1336 BCE, He moved the capital city of Egypt from Thebes to Amarna, then known as Akhetaten, a city he constructed on what had been just a piece of desert. There he created a new religion and new temples. His influence lived on beyond his death.

Akhenaten
You may know that throughout their history ancient Egyptians worshiped many gods and goddesses. In some ways these deities were a lot like people: they had arguments, could get married and had children. Together, they were believed to control everything from health to rainfall.

Everyday Egyptians kept images of the gods and goddesses in their homes and communicated with them. Making offerings,celebrating religious holidays and preparing complex fun eralswere all a part of Egyptians’ constant interactions with their royal gods.

Akhenaten was born into this world of many gods. At that time, Amun Re was the most important of Egypt’s gods. Amun Re was a mysterious god with many abilities, but he appeared to the people as the sun. A powerful group of priests served Amun-Re.

When Akhenaten became king in 1353 BC he began to make changes. He declared that there was only one god who could be worshiped –the Aten – and he declared that as pharaoh he was the only person who could communicate with this god.

Why did Akhenaten make this huge change?Some people think he wanted to get rid ofthe powerful priests of Amun Re, whose power could challenge the pharaohs. Other people think that Akhenaten was totally dedicated to the Aten, and that he was one of the first people in history to express unique and personal thoughts on spirituality.
The Aten literally meant “the disk of the sun.” Akhenaten searched for a place to build a new city for the Aten. He found it in a spot where the sun appeared to rise from an eastern valley and spread its light over abroad piece of land in front of the Nile river.The new city was named Akhetaten, “horizon of the Aten.” Today, historians call the city Amarna.

The pharaoh lived at Amarna with his family. As a result,all the government officials, artists, builders and families who served the king moved there, too. This was a great huge move.

As the population grew, the city stretched north and south along the Nile, which was the source of water for the wells the people of Amarna dug into the desert. Official royal buildings and the temples of the Aten were concentrated in the heart of the city. Suburbs, where most people lived, surrounded the center of the city.

Cartouche of AkhenatenSurely, daily life went on for the Egyptian people. They farmed, fished and built as they had for hundred of years. The king, his wives and children went about their daily lives, but the family had a new significance in the new religion. Instead of the many statues of gods the people had been used to seeing when worshiping in the past, the king’s family were now Egyptians visible link to god. In sculpture, at important events, and even traveling around the city, the pharaoh family were not only royalty or representatives of gods on earth: they were the people’s only link to god. They also took the place of myths of the gods and their families.

During the rule of Akhenaten’s father, Amenhotep III, the numerous gods of ancient Egypt were worshiped widely, but Amun Re was held above the rest. The priests of Amun Re became so powerful and wealthy that they could even challenge the pharaoh. This wasn’t good for the royal family, and within his reign Amenhotep III made steps to raise other gods up and control the power of the priests. One of the gods he called attention to was the Aten, a solar god who was represented by an image of the sun in the sky.

About the year 1350 BCE, new rules were given by Pharaoh Akhenaten to the people of Egypt, and they came as a shock. The one and only god would be the Aten, which had no human or animal form. It was simply the sun in the sky. Only Akhenaten could know the Aten’s wishes, or ask the Aten for help.

When Akhenaten closed all the gods’ temples, including those of Amun Re, and announced that he was moving to a new city, priests suddenly lost all their power.

When the traditional gods were outlawed, everyday Egyptians lost their connection to the spiritual world. Akhenaten proclaimed that he and his family were the only ones capable of communicating with the Aten. If people wanted to communicate with the god, they would have to look to the pharaoh.

Of course, some people weren’t happy about all these changes, but they had also been trained for generations to think that the pharaoh was a god on Earth. They didn’t challenge his changes.

You may hear people claim that the religion of the Aten was monotheistic, which means a religion with only one god. Certainly the religion of the Aten was much closer to monotheism than the religion of the many gods Egyptian shad worshiped before. But there is one problem: The people had to worship Akhenaten, his wife Nefertiti and their family as the representatives of the Aten. The royal family would, in turn, worship the Aten. This isn’t strictly monotheism as we know it today.

Think of it - what if you had to worship the president,who could then worship god. The Egyptians were used to thinking of their leaders as godly, so it wasn’t as strange to them as it would be to you - but they still remembered the old ways.

In about 1346 BC Akhenaten chose Amarna as the site of a new city to be built for the Aten. All the people whose jobs depended on the pharaoh, from sculptors to builders to government officials, left their homes in Thebes and traveled to Amarna to begin a new life under one god. There, temples were built without roofs, so that the sun could be seen in the sky.

Did Akhenaten really believe in the Aten, or did he just use the Aten to upset Egypt’s power structure and reshape it the way he wanted? Signs show that Akhenaten really did believe in his spiritual connection to the Aten. He composed songs and poems in honor of the god, and sometimes neglected Egypt’s well-being and safety in his pursuit of building the perfect home for the Aten. But all of Akhenaten’s devotion to the Aten couldn’t erase what the people of Egypt had known for hundreds of years.

Soon after Akhenaten’s death, Amarna was abandoned and the capital cities moved to Memphis and Thebes,where the Aten was turned back into just one of many minor gods.

Akhenaten set out to build the Aten a city so amazing, rich and beautiful that it put memories of old gods out of his subjects’ minds. He wanted to create a place worthy of his god, and one that would impress his people with the Aten’s magnificence.

Because the pharaoh was so wealthy, he could hire as many painters, sculptors and artisans as he wanted - and it seems that a virtual army of artists lived in Amarna during the city’s short time. Akhenaten himself developed a new style for showing the human body in art. Instead of the very stiff and straight traditional figures, his were long and curved, with large hips and thin arms. Some people have even wondered if Akhenaten was born with an illness that gave him a strange figure - but now it is believed he was shown in this way as part of the new artistic style.

Family portraits of the royal family, Akhenaten, Nefertiti and their daughters, also changed at this time. In addition to formal, ceremonial pictures, the family was shown playingand relaxing together, holding each other and enjoying age under the rays of the Aten.
On this block from a temple relief, Akhenaten (ack-en-AH-ten), recognizable by his elongated features, holds a duck up toward Aten, the solar disk. Akhenaten believed that light was the only divine power in the universe and thus was the source and sustainer of all creation. The solar disk was the means through which this power came into the world. Akhenaten’s god was not portrayed in human or animal form but through the symbol of the solar disk with rays ending in small human hands, one of which holds an ankh, symbol of life, toward the king’s nose. The sun-disk symbol is a large-scale hieroglyph meaning ‘light”
On this block from a temple relief, Akhenaten (ack-en-AH-ten), recognizable by his elongated features, holds a duck up toward Aten, the solar disk. Akhenaten believed that light was the only divine power in the universe and thus was the source and sustainer of all creation. The solar disk was the means through which this power came into the world. Akhenaten’s god was not portrayed in human or animal form but through the symbol of the solar disk with rays ending in small human hands, one of which holds an ankh, symbol of life, toward the king’s nose. The sun-disk symbol is a large-scale hieroglyph meaning ‘light”
On this block from a temple relief, Akhenaten (ack-en-AH-ten), recognizable by his elongated features, holds a duck up toward Aten, the solar disk. Akhenaten believed that light was the only divine power in the universe and thus was the source and sustainer of all creation. The solar disk was the means through which this power came into the world. Akhenaten’s god was not portrayed in human or animal form but through the symbol of the solar disk with rays ending in small human hands, one of which holds an ankh, symbol of life, toward the king’s nose. The sun-disk symbol is a large-scale hieroglyph meaning ‘light”

With one hand Akhenaten holds the duck firmly by its wings and with the other he wrings its neck before offering it to his god. Although early depictions of Akhenaten often appear strangely exaggerated, his sculptors later in his reign attempted a more naturalistic style, emphasizing transitory motion and a sense of space and atmosphere. Akhenaten’s hands here are grasping and straining to hold on to the struggling duck. Such a scene, capturing a moment in a sacrifice being made by a king, would never have been attempted in another period. Akhenaten’s right hand, however, is twisted so that all five fingers can be seen, a pose that conforms to the Egyptian convention of presenting each part of the body as completely as possible.

The type of relief used here is called sunk relief. Instead of cutting the background away and leaving the figures raised above the surface of the stone (as in raised relief), the artist has cut the outlines of the figures into the surface. Sunk relief in general appears mostly on the outside of buildings, where the outlines are emphasized by shadows cast by Egypt’s brilliant sunlight, but during the Amarna period almost all relief was executed in this technique.

Queen Cleopatra (51-30 B.C)

Queen Cleopatra was seventeen when she took the throne. She died at the age thirty-nine. As a child she witnessed the defeat of her guardian. She and her husband/brother Ptolemy XIV dueled over the throne silently. She married her younger brother. She became involved with Caesar. She bored Caesar's son and named him Caesarion. In 45 BCE, Cleopatra and her son left Alexandra and went to Rome where she stayed in a palace built by Caesar in her honor. Caesar's acts were looked over by the Romans.

In 44 BCE, Caesar was killed. With his death, Rome split and Cleopatra watched in silence and supported a man named Mark Antony. They then became lovers witch angered Rome even more. Senators began calling her a sorceress and accused her of all sorts of different evils. Octavian then declared war on Egypt. Queen Cleopatra and Octavian met in one of the biggest battles in history. See Egypt vacation
The Egyptian defeat was often attributed to the early withdraw of Cleopatra from the scene. Octavian waited a year before claiming Egypt as a Rome province. They easily defeated Mark Antony and brought him alive to queen Cleopatra. He died in her arms and was buried as king. Cleopatra was then captured and taken to the Roman Caesar. She realized her end was close and killed herself. It is believed she killed herself with an asp, a poisonous snake. She was the last Egyptian pharaoh. Pharaohs were very important to the Egyptians. Some were very cruel and some were tolerant. Egyptian pharaohs helped Egypt be the way it is today.

Cartouche of Queen Cleopatra:


Cartouche of Cleopatra

Amenhotep III (1386-1349 B.C.)

King Amenhotep III was ruler in the 18th dynasty। King Amenhotep III was son of Thutmose IV. He married Queen Tiy, the daughter of Yuya. Yuya was not a king but a grandfather of a pharaoh and father of a queen. Amenhotep died in his mid fifties. He maybe died by the sword.

The Colossi of Memnon (known to locals as el-Colossat, or es-Salamat) are two massive stone statues of king Amenhotep III। For the past 3400 years they have stood in the Theban necropolis, across the River Nile from the modern city of Luxor.
The twin statues depict Amenhotep III (fl. 14th century BC) in a seated position, his hands resting on his knees and his gaze turned eastward toward the river and the rising sun. Two shorter figures are carved into the front throne alongside his legs: these are his wife Tiy and mother Mutemwiya. The side panels depict the Nile god Hapy.
Memnon was a hero of the Trojan War, a King of Ethiopia who led his armies with the swords and bows from Africa into Asia Minor to help defend the beleaguered city but was ultimately slain by Achilles. Whether associating the Colossi with his name was whimsy or wishful thinking on the part of the Greeks – they generally referred to the entire Theban Necropolis as the "Memnonium" – the name has remained in common use for the past 2000 years. Egypt travel guide

Cartouche of Amenhotep III:


Cartouche of Amenhotep III

Thutmose III

Thutmose III the son of Thutmose II. When Thutmose II was died in 1504 BC, his heir, Thutmose III, was still a child, and so queen Hatshepsut governeded as a regent. With in a year, she had herself crowned pharaoh, and then mother and son ruled jointly.
When Thutmose III achieved sole rule upon Hatshepsut's death in 1483 BC,he reconquered Syria and Palestine, which had broken away under joint rule, and then continued to expand his empire. His annals in the temple at Kamak chronicle many of his campaigns. Nearly 20 years after Hatshepsut's death, he ordered the obliteration of her name and images.

Thutmose III became pharaoh. However, Hatshepsut was appointed regent because of the boy's young age. A regent is someone who rules for a monarch if they are too young to rule. Hatshepsut and Thutmose III ruled jointly until Hatshepsut declared herself to be pharaoh.
Dressed in men’s attire, Hatshepsut administered the affairs of the nation. Hatshepsut disappeared shortly after Thutmose III led a revolt to reclaim the throne. King Thutmose then destroyed Hatshepsut’s shrines and statues.

Thutmose III was a great warrior pharaoh who spent much of his reign restoring Egyptian power in Syria and Palestine. He was found in Cache. Amenhotep II ruled in the 18th dynasty. He was son of Thutmose IV. He died at the age 45 by a systemic disease. He was found in the Valley of Kings.
Art and architecture however were part of the story. In religion, important developments took place during Thutmose’s co rule with queen Hatshepsut. Later, during his sole rule, religious developments on the one hand reinforced and displayed the divine aspects of kingship even more ostentatiously than before, yet on the other hand they articulated the nature of Amun-Re, the imperial god, who came to be seen as a deity intervening directly in history and even in the lives of individual Egyptians.
Thus, some scholars believe a tension began to set in between royal pretensions and Amun-Re’s evolving personality and cult that was to lead to the innovative but destructive changes initiated by king Akhenaten, the monotheist ruler who was the great-
Literature and historical writing also flourished under Thutmose III. His Annals, set up within the sanctuary of Amun-Re at Karnak itself, are among the most extended of historical narratives to survive from ancient Egypt. They include a particularly elaborate description of the campaign that culminated in the Battle of Megiddo, a text that has fascinated both scholars and military men in recent times. Thutmose’s reign was also characterized by complex religious hymns.

This long, richly documented reign and the pharaoh who was central to it have never been the subject of an extensive monographic treatment in English. Moreover, recent studies of Thutmose III in German and French lack the depth and scope that is intended for the work presented here.
Initiated by Dr. Benedict Davies, and then seen through development by coeditors Professors Eric Cline and David O’Connor, the book consists of essays on virtually every aspect of the reign of Thutmose III written by experts on each topic. This extensive treatment of a pivotal figure in the ancient Mediterranean world during the Late Bronze Age will provide a uniquely comprehensive view of one of Egypt’s greatest pharaohs and will be of interest to a wide audience—specialists in Egypt and the Near East, graduate and undergraduate students, and the wider public as a whole.


Cartouche of Thutmose III

Amenhotep I (1525-1504 B.C.)

According to all appearances, Amenhotep, “the Ammonish’ at the death of his brave father was a child under age, so that his mother, Nofertari, was obliged to assume the guardianship of him, both in the palace and in the empire. When he grew up the young Pharaoh directed his views towards the south, the ancient boundary of which his deceased father had taken pains to fix anew to the advantage of the Egyptian empire. His campaign against the land of Kush, in which the brave warrior Ahmose, the son of Abana, took part in the special employment of captain of the royal ship, had for its object to go beyond the country which his father had re-conquered; “to extend the boundaries of Egypt”. He completely succeeded in his arms, and besides brought home a rich booty in captive negroes and cattle.

King Amenhotep I

A second campaign, for the knowledge of which we are indebted to the inscriptions in the tomb of the other Ahmose with the surname of Pen-Nukheb,1 was directed against the north, where the Libyan people of the Amoo-Kahak had shown themselves hostilely inclined towards the Egyptians. Its result once more appears 500 years later on the tablets of victory of Egyptian history under the abbreviated form Kahak. This people belonged to the great tribe of the “light colored” Thuhen, or, as Greeks designated them in an equally remarkable expression, the Marmarides, whose country in the times of the Greeks and Eomans was known under the name of Marmarica. At that time they inhabited the northern coast of the African continent, to the west of the Egyptian Netherlands. The Greek geographers seem to have well known the old name of Amoo-Kahak, at least Ptolemy mentions the Jobakchoi2 as a tribe in the interior country whose seats lay in the region of the Desert of the Oasis of Jupiter Amon, by the side of the Anagombroi and the Kuaditai. With this mention of the Amoo-Kahak we may remark the first traces of Libyan enmity, which under Mineptah I. assumed such a threatening appearance for the Egyptians, while before that time they seldom gave the Pharaohs the opportunity of extending their campaigns to the western country. However, the Na-Pa-Thuhen or Na-Pa-Thuhi “those from the land of Thuhi” (an expression which is found in the inscriptions, and was the origin of the construction of the name of Naphtuhim in Holy Scripture), considered themselves as of the same race and as cousins of the Egyptians. In Sais, the mysterious seat of Nit, the mother of the gods, armed with bow and arrow, the Egyptian Athene, they worshipped, like the inhabitants of the land, this goddess, whose name they were accustomed to etch into the skin of their bodies. We will take the opportunity later on, in speaking of the twenty-sixth dynasty, to notice the influence which the Marmarides once exercised on the fate of Egypt.

Towards the East Amenhotep I. remained quiet. Like his predecessors he contented himself with protecting his frontiers. In the interior of the country the inscriptions bear witness to his care for building the great temple of the empire at Thebes, and individual places for the gods on the west side of the great Theban plain. After his death divine honors were accorded him.

He had by his consort Aahhotep a son, who was his heir and successor on the throne, and as such bore the name Thutmose I.

Bibleography:
- Ashton, Sally; and Spanel, Donald. "Portraiture," The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt. Ed. Donald Redford. Vol. 3, pp.55-59. Oxford University Press, 2001.

- Borchardt, Ludwig. Altägyptische Zeitmessung (Die Geschichte der Zeitmessung und der Uhren) I. Berlin and Leipzig, 1920.

- Aldred, Cyril. Egyptian Art. Thames and Hudson Ltd., London. 1980.
- v. Beckerath, Jürgen. Chronologie des Pharaonischen Ägypten. Verlag Philipp von Zabern, 1997.

Ramses II (1279-1212 B.C)

King Ramses II (or Ramses 2), the great king in the world, ruled for 67 years during the 13th Century BC. He was a pharaoh of the Nineteenth Dynasty. When the young Ramses came to power, 1300 years had already passed since the time of the Fourth Dynasty, the dynasty which is traditionally associated with the famous pyramids and Sphinx of the Giza (although much evidence suggests that they were constructed many years before even the first historical dynasty).

If, today, In the life of technology, at the end of the twentieth century, one were to ask the average person to name an Egyptian pharaoh, the reply would probably be, "King Tutankhamon." This, of course, is due to the highly unusual discover by one of the great scholars, Howard Carter in 1922 of the child-kings small but almost intact tomb.

Tutankhamon died at age 17. Outside of the contents of king Tut's tomb, little is known of his reign and his life, and he is not considered to be a pharaoh of major importance. Returning to our (name that pharaoh) question, if the average person were to be able to name a second pharaoh, it would almost surely be Ramses II. Even if little importance is currently placed on knowledge of ancient history, legends of this great ruler still live on.

Many may remember him from Shellys famous, if historically inaccurate, poem, "Ozymandias." Some associate him with "Pharaoh" from the Biblical story of the Exodus. A series of best selling novels has recently been written based on the life of Ramses II. Finally, the astute history student will know that Ramses II, popularly known as "Ramses the Great," built more temples, statues and obelisks than any other pharaoh of Ancient Egypt.

Cartouche of pharaoh Ramses IICartouche of pharaoh Ramses II



In an effort to handle the 3000 years of Egyptian history which includes 170 or so pharaohs, Egyptologists have divided Ancient Egypt into Old Kingdom, Middle Kingdom and New Kingdom, with intermediate periods in between. The system of dynasties dates back to the third century BC, when the High Priest of Heliopolis, Manetho, defined the basic Egyptian chronology still in use today.

The pharaohs of the New Kingdom were kings of a massive nation, and many of their tremendous works, temples and fortresses are still extant today as testament. It was a power period for Egypt.

Ramses came to the throne approximately 46 years after the death of Tutankhamon who didn't present any service to Egypt except his remained tomb. Tutankhamons reign marked the end of what is known as the Amarna Interlude, a sixteen-year period of revolution in Ancient Egypt when the religious fanatic Akhenaten mandated that his "personal god," Aten, be the only one worshiped. Akhenaten moved the capital out into a desert city that was abandoned after the traditional religion and government were restored.

After Tutankhamon, a series of three military leaders and government officials in turn assumed the throne. Their primary role was to reestablish the ancient ways and to assure that no foreign countries took advantage of the temporary disorganization. The last of these, Ramses I, was the first of the Nineteenth Dynasty, and the first of the so-called Ramesside Period. He was the grandfather of king Ramses II.

Historically, the New Kingdom pharaohs seem to have experienced more attacks by foreign invaders than their predecessors. The Libyans, the Syrians, the Nubians and the Hittites alternately invaded the borders of Egypt. The most famous war that Ramses undertook, and indeed one of the most famous in ancient times was the Battle of Kadesh.

In Year 4 of King Ramses reign, the Pharaoh was forewarned of an enormous coalition of forces being headed by the Hittites. In the spring of Year 5 Ramses gathered an army of 20,000 men and headed north to contend with the force. The Egyptian forces were divided into four divisions: Amon, Re, Ptah and Seth. The Hittite army was much larger, 37,000 men, plus 2500 chariots, and due to faulty intelligence that King Ramses received, had the element of surprise.

The Hittites power attacked, their chariots cut off Ramses from his men, and confusion reigned among the Egyptians. The young Ramses beseeched Amon for help. According to the inscriptions, Amon himself incarnated in Ramses and the Pharaoh began to rally his troops, single-handedly slaying many Hittites himself.

In fact, Peace was eventually offered by the Hittite king. Today, we know from a variety of sources that the Battle of Kadesh was a historical event. However, it is also clear that the event was considered to be symbolic and didactic, and was included at many temples. It was even used in the education of the youth.

4 years historians have supposed that Merneptah, Ramses son and successor, was the (Pharaoh) referred to in the Bible. This was due to the fact that one of the only known related references to the issue was found on his (Victory) stele: Israel is listed as one of the conquered lands. Currently, however, scholars favor Ramses II as the Biblical (Pharaoh) due to chronological considerations. It is hoped that evidence will be discover in KV5 that will shed additional light on the matter.

Ramses II loved and Focused in building cities and other monuments. He established new capital in Delta called Pi-Ramesses. It is build over the stones of Avaris (the past capital of the Hyksos enemy).

Maybe Bows like those which used in Kadesh battle.

The temple of Ramses II in the city of Sohag in Upper Egypt, On the north side of the temple of Seti I. The tourist can travel to Sohag from Cairo by train or by air.

Khufu

King Khufu, named Cheops by the Greeks. His father is king Sneferu and his mother queen Hetepheres. Khufu had 15 daughters and nine sons, one of them became the successor. He reigned 23 years, some scholars say that he reigned for a long time. The first discover for Khufu reign was in the late of the nineteenth century. The new rediscover made by Dr. Hawas.

Khufu sank his chops into the after life by, during his reign of 2589-2566 BC, commanding the construction of his pyramid. Slaves living in purpose-made towns nearby quarried limestone into two million stone blocks, most weighing around 500 lbs, some much heavier.

They slid these on parallel logs covered with Nile mud which move by the power of the floods, then up long ramps winding around the rising pyramids. Many slaves service the pharaoh and suffered bone damage and died young. Construction took twenty years, working all year but especially in the summer when the Nile floods and people power couldn’t work on fields, anyway. Some people believe that there is a secret or a treasure in the pyramid of Khufu.
The Great Pyramid of Khufu
The Great Pyramid of Khufu
From Aswan, down the Nile 600 miles on reed came granite for Khufu’s burial chamber. In time, the emperor’s cedar and hemp, ten-oared funeral barge, carved to resemble reed boats used to transport on the Nile, carried him to the pyramid while the king's body remained cooled with palm leaves.
Then his body was carried to the funeral in a boat-shaped sledge proceeded by many mourners to show the society’s great sadness at his death (excepting, no doubt, the dead slaves), king Khufu was buried (no mummification—those techniques developed later) with a collection of food, furniture, servants and other objects he might need in an after life.
Finally, the people buried his boat (sun boats) in the sand beside the pyramid to allow him to travel by this boats to the next world in style.
Inside the great pyramid of Khufu
Inside the great pyramid of Khufu
This pyramid of king Khufu, containing more stone than all the later European cathedrals combined, stood there, already an ancient relic, for Abraham to see when he came, starving, to Egypt. By the time of his visit, Egyptians still buried their dead in pyramids. The pyramids at the city of Giza is the symbol of the Egypt power, and there is more secrets and discovers inside the pyramid.

If you are in a trip to Egypt and arrived to the capital (Cairo), you can get any Taxi or by Metro. But if you are in Luxor city or Aswan you can access to Giza city where the pyramid found by air or by train. And finally there is a question and the answer be in the comments. Is there any pottery tools found inside the great pyramid?

The Great Pyramid of Khufu:

The pyramid of Khufu at Giza is constructed of limestone blocks of varying size. The lowest row of blocks have outer faces of 1.47 by 1.47 meters. Where the entire block is visible the depth is one and one half times the height. A limestone block of this size would weigh approximately 8,445 kg. (9.3 tons). The uppermost remaining row has blocks less than half a meter tall and weighing approximately 22.2 kg (48.9 lbs). Estimates of the total number
of blocks vary greatly. Anthony P. Sakovich has reviewed the evidence and built a computer model of the pyramid. He calculates the total number of blocks at close to 4,000,000.1. The base area of the pyramid is 5.3067 hectares (13.113 acres).
There are small sockets marking the corners of the pyramid. Since their discovery by William Flinders Petrie, these sockets have been used by all credible researchers as the reference points for measuring the lengths of the base lines of the pyramid. Petrie surveyed these lines in 1881 and a second survey was done by J. H. Cole in 1925. The two surveys agree closely with one another. The table below uses Cole’s measurements of the length and the azimuth of each line.

The unit of measure that it is expected that the Egyptians used for this and other architectural projects was the royal cubit. Numerous cubit sticks have been found in Egypt. Petrie reports an average length of 20.632 ± 0.004" (524.05 mm.). The royal cubit was divided into seven palms and each palm was divided into four digits. There were thus twenty-eight digits in a royal cubit.

Using this unit of measure, it would appear that the target dimensions of the pyramid were base lines of 440 cubits and a height of 280 cubits. The average of the lengths of the four base lines is 439.58 cubits. Alternatively, if we assume the average length of the base lines to be precisely 440 cubits, the length of the cubit inferred would be 523.55 mm., only one-half millimeter shorter than the average reported by Petrie.


The height is a projection since there are around 30’ missing from the top of the pyramid. The projected height is 280.48 cubits (146.845 meters). Interior dimensions are also convenient integers when converted to cubits. The longest interior passage is 90 cubits long and the burial chamber is 20x10x11 cubits.


The Egyptians calculated the slope of the side of a pyramid by a unit that they called the seked. It is clear from the Rhine Mathematical Papyrus example that follows that the Egyptians considered the seked a unit of length, not a ratio. The seked is the horizontal distance that must be offset for every vertical cubit of elevation in order to maintain the intended slope of the pyramid. The seked is calculated as one-half of the base divided by the height of the pyramid. It is the same as what we would call the cotangent. The example that follows is the translation of Problem 56 from the Rhine Mathematical Papyrus.

Who built the great pyramid:

By Aliens:


The pyramids are so accurately aligned with the points of the compass that only aliens could have achieved this all those thousands of years ago. The angle of the slope of the sides is so precise only aliens could achieve this. The blocks are so heavy and the pyramid so tall only aliens could achieve this. In the period 2500 BC man did not have the tools or knowledge necessary to build the pyramids, so only aliens could have done it. How the aliens built the pyramids is not known, but they would have employed the use of advanced construction equipment.

By men:


Never underestimate the ingenuity of man. We are today so used to using machinery to carry out virtually all our major construction work that we sometimes forget that machinery, in terms of historical events, is a very new development, its only been around a couple of hundred years or so. Mankind managed very well without it for many thousands of years. We have long forgotten the techniques that were used in the building of the pyramids, but this doesn't mean that we are unable to work out how it was done.

I see them as beehive in hustle

In order to try and establish who built the pyramids we have to examine the evidence that we have. We have only the pyramids themselves, the excavation sites where the blocks were quarried from, and historical accounts.


Lets start with the excavation site. If like me, you have been there, you will know that it looks pretty much like any other quarry you might see today, except there is obviously no machinery. At the quarry face there are blocks cut into the rock but not yet cut away. There are rough hewn blocks scattered around ready for transporting and on-site finishing. The entire quarry shows obvious signs of systematic development of cutting blocks out from the face and transporting them from site. The rough hewn free standing blocks show the scars of repeated chisel blows where they were chiseled out of the rock face.
There is nothing in the manner of these blocks that is anything other than old fashioned quarry work using a mallet and chisel. Nowhere is there any sign of advanced technology having been employed, just the opposite. The blocks were hewn out of the rock-face by manual labour, the signs are unmistakable. The chisels used were made of copper, the hardest metal then available, but even they were only good for about 100 blows before blunting, even though limestone is relatively soft and easy to work compared to hard rock such as granite. As the chisels were blunted they were exchanged for re-sharpened ones, and the process was repeated with a team of blacksmiths constantly re-sharpening and tempering the chisels.
The Egyptians, The Pyramids Builders

How were the blocks transported to the pyramids? By man power. The vast majority of the blocks weighed in the region of 2.5 tons and were transported on wooden sledges. They could of course have chosen any size for the blocks, but this must have been the optimum size, any bigger would probably have slowed them down. A team of men with ropes could drag the sledge across the clay floor, and this could be eased with a little water tipped in front of the runners helping the sledge to slide easier. It is estimated that it may have taken 10 years just to build the ramp from the quarry to the pyramids. In this manner all the blocks could be transported to the site of the pyramid without presenting any insurmountable challenges. So far no alien technology required, it could all be done by well organised teams of men, and a great deal of manual labour. During the time of the annual flooding of the Nile the stone blocks could have been floated to the site of the pyramids on rafts, making the task a lot easier.

The work force was was not one of slaves , the Egyptians didn't need slaves. The Nile supplied a very fertile land where farming was relatively easy and food abundant. This civilisation had time on its hands, no wonder they were such great mathematicians, astronomers and architects. The work force was primarily made up of farmers, recruited nationwide for a period ranging from a few months to a few years, and they served their time for their king, much like serving National Service today in the armed forces. A total of 20,000 to 30,000 workers would have been needed for the task, ranging from unskilled hauliers, semi-skilled quarry men, skilled quarry men, masons who finished the blocks, men who placed the blocks, officials and caterers. A village was purpose built to house them all and they were well fed and cared for in return for their work. The remains of the village can still be seen today.

Now for making the pyramids themselves. About 2,550 B.C., King Khufu, the second pharaoh of the fourth dynasty, commissioned the building of his tomb at Giza. Some Egyptologists believe it took somewhere in the region of 80 years to construct the pyramid. Having man-hauled the blocks to the site of the pyramid the obvious problem now is how to stack them up. There are a number of ways this may have been achieved, all of which require a ramp, or a system of ramps, as the only method available to the ancient Egyptians was man-power, and they had that in abundance.

The actual method of ramps used is not known with any certainty, but it most likely started with a single ramp by which means the blocks could be hauled into position. The blocks were laid down in layers, each successive layer being a little smaller in area than the one below it to give the pyramid its shape. As the blocks are layed onto a level surface, the same height as the ramp, no lifting was required, only hauling of the sledges. Removing the blocks from the sledge may have involved no more than dragging the block off the sledge. The entire pyramid could have been built using this simple system without a single block actually having to be lifted off the ground! No alien technology required. Very smart people these Egyptians.

As each successive layer was laid the ramp would need be heightened, and lengthened so as not to be too steep. Eventually this method would reach a limit where the size and construction of the ramp would be nearly as complex as the pyramid. The easiest way around this problem is to curve the ramp around the pyramid as the pyramid increased in height.

Finally, all that remained was the placing of the top stone, followed by the placing and fitting of the smooth white blocks. As the facing stones were placed so the ramp could be removed as they worked their way back down. The pyramid required a certain amount of interior design and construction for the burial chambers, and this was no easy task. The blocks that protected the burial chamber were 50 ton blocks of granite. Even with the huge teams of men at their disposal and a system of ropes and overseers guiding them, it would have been a difficult and dangerous task. There are still marks visible on the blocks and in the interior of the pyramid that were used to guide the blocks into position. Difficult yes, impossible no.

It was men that built the pyramids, make no mistake. Do not underestimate the intelligence of the ancient Egyptians or the trained manpower that was at their disposal. It was a colossal effort of team work taking 80 years to complete.

Mummy Christmas


CAIRO, Egypt — An Australian teacher who allegedly stuffed his luggage with 2,000-year old animal mummies and religious figurines wrapped as gifts was arrested Wednesday and charged with smuggling antiquities, an Egyptian airport security official said.
The 61-year teacher was heading to Thailand when a security official became suspicious of the wrapped figurines that were placed amid souvenir ceramic pots in his suitcase.
When security officials opened the case, they found two mummies of a cat and an ibis, a long-beaked bird, both dating back to 300 B.C. The confiscated collection also included 19 figurines of the revered ancient Egyptian gods of Horus and Thoth, wrapped as gifts.

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The mummy of Tutankhamun, king of Egypt icon

 Face of the ruler of ancient Egypt's most famous, the King of King Tutankhamun on display for the first time the public. Among archaeologists took the mummy from the sarcophagus and kept in a crate with the temperature settings on his tomb in Luxor's Valley of the Kings. The event comes 85 years after the pharaoh's tomb was discovered by British explorer Howard Carter. Until now, only 50 people who had seen the face of the boy king who died more than 3000 years ago. As experts lifted Tutankhamun from their coffin.
 
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