Top of Pyramid at Giza
Top of Pyramid at Giza
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II. Pyramids and Mummies

Egypt was one of the most technologically advanced ancient nations. The masonry of the passages of the Great Pyramid has not been surpassed by any period of history. The book, Outline Of History (2 Volumes), points out that this pyramid is 450 feet high and its sides are 700 feet long. It has been calculated to weigh 4,883,000 tons. "All this stone," says the book, "was lugged into place chiefly by human muscle." Such building projects exhausted the resources of Egypt and often "left her wasted as if by a war", and not surprising, for it would be a major challenge even in our modern day. The building of the great pyramids took place during the 4th dynasty (c. 2565-c. 2465 BC), a time of great wealth and splendor, when the Pharaohs were obsessed by a passion for making monuments to glorify themselves that no men have ever before or since had a chance to display or gratify. The precursor of these pyramid projects was the Step Pyramid at Saqqarah by Djoser (Horus name Netjerykhet) of the 3rd dynasty, and also other pyramid building projects have been recorded since, but none were as immense as those of the 4th dynasty. But why were such structures built? Where they simply to be symbols of the Pharaoh's power?

The pyramids were gargantuan residences for the royal dead, particularly the Pharaoh himself. The permeating religious teaching was that of reincarnation or transmigration of the soul. Even though the soul was thought to be immortal, the Egyptians felt that the human body had to also be preserved so that the soul may return and use it on occasion. For this purpose they embalmed, or mummified, their dead and placed them in a tomb inside a pyramid, which was refered to as the deceased's "home". To prepare for the afterlife most of the deceased's internal organs were removed, then the body was sterilized and dried up by being stuffed, inside and out, with natron salts. About 40 days later the body was wrapped in linen strips, affixed in a series of wooded cases and an outer stone coffin (sarcophagus), and laid in a crypt in such a way that it would face east to greet the rising sun in symbolic rebirth. The removed organs, such as the lungs, stomach, intestines, and liver, were placed inside what are known as canopic jars, decorated with paintings or reliefs of the four sons of Horus. The canopic jars were buried with the mummies.

As Egyptologists discover more buried artifacts and mummies, the world of ancient Egypt comes back alive. And, hopefully, while we read and learn about that world of the past, we learn and discover something about ourselves and humanity in general. Chiefly, the inherent desire for life and the pursuit to somehow evade, or at least explain, death.

Did you know...

-iNF-

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Tutenkhamun, 18th Dynasty
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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Ancient_Egypt"