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Home > Great Pyramid of Giza


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The Great Pyramid of Giza, (sometimes spelled Gizeh) is the oldest and last remaining of the Seven Wonders of the World and the most famous pyramid in the world. It is presumed to have served as the tomb of the Fourth dynasty Egyptian Pharaoh Khufu (also known under his Greek name Cheops), after whom it is often called "Khufu's pyramid."

Great Pyramid of Giza. From a 19th century stereopticon card photo

1 Age and location

The most widely accepted estimate for its date of completion is 2570 BC; it is the oldest and largest of the three great pyramids in the Giza necropolis on the outskirts of modern Cairo, Egypt.

A few hundred metres southwest of Khufu's Great Pyramid lies the slightly smaller pyramid of Khafre, one of Khufu's successors who also built the Great SphinxThe Great Sphinx of Giza is a large sculpture on the west bank of the Nile River, within the confines of the Giza pyramid field. It is generally thought to be a portrait of the Pharaoh Khafre (also known by the hellenised version of his name, Chephren), w, and a few hundred metres further southwest is the pyramid of Menkaure, Khafre's successor, which is about half as tall. Khafre's pyramid appears the tallest on some photographs as it is somewhat steeper and built on higher terrain.

2 Construction


At construction the Great Pyramid was 146 metreTo help compare different orders of magnitude this page lists lengths between 100 m and 1 km. See also lengths of other orders of magnitude. Shorter distances 100 m is equal to: wavelength of the highest medium wave radio frequency, 3 MHz 328 feet side ofs (481 feet) tall, but due to erosionErosion is the displacement of solids ( soil, mud, rock, and so forth) by the agents of wind, water, ice, or movement in response to gravity. Although the processes may be simultaneous, erosion is to be distinguished from weathering, which is the decompos its current height is 137 metres (450 feet). It covers more than 5.5 hectares (13.5 acres) at the base, which is a squareIn plane geometry, a square is a polygon with four equal sides and equal angles. Those angles are then necessarily right angles. Squares are regular quadrilaterals, rectangles, rhombi, kites, parallelograms, and isosceles trapezoids/isosceles trapezia. of over 235 metres (775 feet) on each side. For four millennia it was the world's tallest building, not being surpassed until the 160-metre tall spire of Lincoln Cathedral was completed in around 1300. The accuracy of work is such that the four sides of the base have only a mean error of 0.6 inch in length and 12 seconds in angle from a perfect square. The sides of the square are aligned quite precisely in North-South and East-West directions. The sides of the pyramid rise at an angle of approximately 51°51′.

The pyramid was constructed of limestone, basalt, and granite stones from two to four tonnes in weight each, adding up to a total estimated weight of some 7 million tonnes, and a volume of 2,600,600 cubic metres. It is the largest Egyptian pyramid. (The Great Pyramid of Cholula, in Mexico is larger in volume.) When originally built, the pyramid had inset facing blocks of polished limestone, creating smooth sides; they have since fallen out, or been recycled for other building projects, leaving the underlying step-pyramid structure visible. (The smooth outer cover is still visible at the very top of Khafre's pyramid.)


The Great Pyramid differs in its internal arrangement from the other pyramids in the area. The greater number of passages and chambers, the high finish of parts of the work, and the accuracy of construction all distinguish it. The chamber which is most normal in its situation is the subterranean chamber; but this is quite unfinished, hardly more than begun. The upper chambers, called the king's and queen's, were completely hidden, the ascending passage to them having been closed by plugging blocks, which concealed the point where it branched upwards out of the roof of the long descending passage. Another passage, which in its turn branches from the ascending passage to the queen's chamber, was also completely blocked up. The object of having two highly-finished chambers in the mass may have been to receive the king and his co-regent (of whom there is some historical evidence), and there is testimony to a sarcophagus having existed in the queen's chamber, in addition to the one found in the king's chamber.

On September 18, 2002, archaeologists used a remote-controlled robot to access a hitherto sealed chamber within the pyramid: the robot drilled a hole in a long-sealed door and poked a fiber-optic camera through. Unfortunately, all that was revealed was another closed door.

In August 2004, two French amateur Egyptologists, Gilles Dormion and Jean-Yves Verd'hurt , believed they had discovered, using new ground-penetrating radar (a technique called microgravimetry ) and architectural analysis , a room which — if it exists — is unlikely ever to have been violated, and may still contain the remains of Khufu. Despite the backing of an expert at the French Institute of Oriental Archaeology in Cairo, the pair have been refused permission by the Egyptian Supreme Council of Antiquities to follow up on their findings and prove the room's existence.



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