РефератыИностранный языкAnAncient Egypt A Time Of The Pyramid

Ancient Egypt A Time Of The Pyramid

Essay, Research Paper


When most people mention Ancient Egypt the first thing that


comes to mind is the Pyramids. To construct such monuments required a


mastery of art, architecture and social organization that few cultures


would ever rival. The pyramids are said to have built Egypt by being


the force that knit together the kingdom’s economy. Their creations


were so subeztial, that the sight of these vast pyramids would take


your breath away. Today, the valley of the Nile has an open air


museum so people can witness these grand monuments.


Obsessed with the afterlife, Egypt’s rulers of 4,500 years ago


glorified themselves in stone, thereby laying the foundation of the


first great nation-state. A Pyramid is an enormous machine that helps


the king go through the wall of the dead, achieve resurrection and


live forever in the happiness of the gods. The start of the Old


Kingdom is said to be the building of the Djoser’s monument. The


construction of Step Pyramid of Pharaoh Djoser began around 2630 B.C.


and was designed to awe the ancient Egyptians, to impress them with


their rule’s godlike strength. It was the world’s first great


construction project; indeed, it was the world’s largest building.


Djoser, the second king of the 3rd dynasty, hired an architect


called Imhoptep who for the first time constructed a tomb completely


of stone. Imhoptep is considered the preeminent genius of the Old


Kingdom. He assembled one workforce to quarry limestone at the cliff


of Tura, across the Nile, another to haul the stone to the site where


master carvers shaped each block and put it in place.


The Step Pyramid is a terraced structure rising in six unequal


stages to a height of 60 meters, its base measuring 120 meters by 108


meters. The substructure has a system of underground corridors and


rooms. Its main feature being a central shaft 25 meters deep and 8


meters wide. The step pyramid rises within a vast walled court 544


meters long and 277 meters wide, in which are the remnants of several


stone edifices built to supply the wants of the king in the here


after. Towering limestone columns were shaped to mimic the sway and


droop of leafy plants. Immovable doors hung on great carved hinges.


Facades called false doors through which the pharaoh’s ka, or vital


force, was presumed to pass, lay recessed within walls. The interiors


of dummy temples were packed with rubble. Everything about the place


bespoke illusion. The Step Pyramid was a ladder. Not a symbol of a


ladder but an actual one, by which the soul of a dead ruler might


climb to the sky, joining the gods in immortality.


No one knows why the Egyptians created this fantastic scene,


but some archaeologists speculate that there was an Old Kingdom belief


that a work of art, a building, had power and utility in the afterlife


in direct proportion to its uselessness in the real world. In this


view, each false door, each dummy temple worked in the afterlife


precisely because it could not function in this one.


On the north side of the pyramid is a small stone cubicle,


with a pair of tiny holes in its facade. When you look through these


holes, you see two eyes retuning your stare, the blank gaze of a life


size statue of Djoser sitting on the throne. The holes are there for


the pharaoh to look out perhaps at the stars in the northern sky


called the Imperishables because they never set.


Many believe that the building of Djoser’s pyramid complex,


which was accomplished by hundreds of workers from across the land,


served to join those provinces into the world’s first nation-state.


During the Old Kingdom, which began around 2700 B.C. and lasted some


550 years, each pharaoh after Djoser marshaled a vast portion of his


country’s manpower and wealth to build his own tomb and ensure his


immortality.


To build such outezding monuments required a precisenes

s of


architecture, and years of endless labor from so many Egyptians. The


kingdom developed a funerary tradition around the worship of their


divine pharaohs, both living and dead. Every aspect of life was


affected. The Egyptians dug a network of canals off the Nile to


transport stone for the pyramids and food for the workers, and a


simple, local agriculture became the force that knit together the


kingdom’s economy. The need to keep records of the harvest may have


led to the invention of a written language.


Yet after five and a half centuries this flourishing


civilization collapsed, plunging Egypt into disorder. Perhaps the


seeds of the collapse were planted in the soil of the civilization


that, for all its grandeur, seemed obsessed with the idea that its


dead rulers must live forever.


The daily life of the workers constructing the pyramids was


one of repetitive toil. On wooden sledges across the sands, workers


hauled the giant stone the largest granite blocks weighing as much as


seventy tons-that built the pyramids. Egypt created a vast


agricultural empire, yet all the irrigation was done by hand. Farmers


filled two heavy jars from the canals, then hung them from a yoke over


their shoulders.


Recent excavation of the graves of pyramid workers reveals


that some were missing limbs or had damaged spines the human cost of a


national compulsion to glorify gods and deify the souls of kings. Two


generations after Djoser’s reign, the center of the Old Kingdom moved


north to the barren plateau of Giza. Three 4th dynasty pyramids were


erected here, they are included among the seven wonders of the world.


The norther most and the oldest of the group was built by Khufu, the


second king of the 4th dynasty called the Great Pyramid, it is the


largest of the three the length of each side at the base averaging 775


3/4 feet and it height being 481 2/5 feet. The middle pyramid was


built by Khafre, the fourth of the eight kings of the 4th dynasty; the


structure measures 707 3/4 feet on each side and was originally 471


feet high. The southernmost and last pyramid to be built was that of


Menkaure the sixth king of the 4th dynasty. Each side measures 356 +


feet and the structure’s completed height was 218 feet.


Each monument originally consisted of not only the pyramid


itself, which housed the body of the deceased king, but also an


adjoining mortuary temple and a sloping causeway temple near the Nile.


Close to each pyramid were one or more subsidiary pyramids used for


the burials of members of the royal family.


To the south of the Great Pyramid near Khafre’s valley temple


lies the Great Sphinx. Carved out of a knoll of rock, the Sphinx has


the facial features of King Khafre, but the body of a recumbent lion;


it is approximately 240 feet long and 66 feet high. The sphinx guards


Khafu’s vallytemple and causeway.


Around 2465 B.C.- halfway through the Old Kingdom-pyramids


suddenly became less important. No one knows why, but many scholars


have suggested that after Khufu’s pyramid, which took roughly 23 years


to buil, the kingdom grew weary with each pharaoh’s effort to outdo


his predecessor. Several pharaohs died before their pyramids were


completed, perhaps a cause of embarrassment or even horror among the


populace.


Never agian would a king build his pyramid on a truly colossal


scale. Instead the religious focus shifted from the pyramid itself


toward the mortuary temple that stood just east of it. The funerary


culture was growing more sophisticated, even as the pharaoh’s


unlimited power was beginning to erode.


The pyramids will always be a conezt reminder of, the vast


architecturial accomplishments of Egypt’s Old Kingdom. A mystical


gateway for a pharaoh’s leap to immortality, a pyramid drew resourses


from throughout the king’s domain and beyond.


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