Pyramids - Private and Exclusive Visit on Day
3 of Your Egypt Holiday

Meditation
inside The Great Pyramid Exclusively Just for
You
(optional Day 3)
Walk inside the Great Spiritual Pyramid of
Egypt, no other tourists are allowed and participate
in a Guided Meditation in the Great Pyramid while
the area is closed to the public. This will energize
your Mind, Body & Soul.
A once in a lifetime experience.
During Egypt's Old Kingdom (time line), the pharaohs
established a stable central government in the
fertile Nile Valley. Perhaps the greatest testaments
to their power were the pyramids and other tombs
built to shelter them in the afterlife.
Kings of the Dead
Ancient Egyptians believed that when the pharaoh
died, he became Osiris, king of the dead. The
new pharaoh became Horus, god of the heavens and
protector of the sun god. This cycle was symbolized
by the rising and setting of the sun.
Some
part of a dead pharaoh's spirit, called his ka,
was believed to remain with his body. And it was
thought that if the corpse did not have proper
care, the former pharaoh would not be able to
carry out his new duties as king of the dead.
If this happened, the cycle would be broken and
disaster would befall Egypt.
To prevent such a catastrophe, each dead pharaoh
was mummified, which preserved his body. Everything
the king would need in his afterlife was provided
in his grave-vessels made of clay, stone, and
gold, furniture, food, even doll-like representations
of servants, known as ushabti. His body would
continue to receive food offerings long after
his death.
Tombs Fit for Kings
To shelter and safeguard the part of a pharaoh's
soul that remained with his corpse, Egyptians
built massive tombs-but not always pyramids.
Before
the pyramids, tombs were carved into bedrock and
topped by flat-roofed structures called mastabas.
Mounds of dirt, in turn, sometimes topped the
structures.
The pyramid shape of later tombs could have come
from these mounds. More likely, Egyptian pyramids
were modeled on a sacred, pointed stone called
the benben. The benben symbolized the rays of
the sun; ancient texts claimed that pharaohs reached
the heavens via sunbeams.
Who Built the Pyramids?
Contrary to some popular depictions, the pyramid
builders were not slaves or foreigners. Excavated
skeletons show that they were Egyptians who lived
in villages developed and overseen by the pharaoh's
supervisors.
The builders' villages boasted bakers, butchers,
brewers, granaries, houses, cemeteries, and probably
even some sorts of health-care facilities-there
is evidence of laborers surviving crushed or amputated
limbs. Bakeries excavated near the Great Pyramids
could have produced thousands of loaves of bread
every week.
Some
of the builders were permanent employees of the
pharaoh. Others were conscripted for a limited
time from local villages. Some may have been women:
Although no depictions of women builders have
been found, some female skeletons show wear that
suggests they labored with heavy stone for long
periods of time.
Graffiti indicates that at least some of these
workers took pride in their work, calling their
teams "Friends of Khufu," "Drunkards of Menkaure,"
and so on-names indicating allegiances to pharaohs.
An estimated 20,000 to 30,000 workers built the
Pyramids at Giza over 80 years. Much of the work
probably happened while the River Nile was flooded.
Huge limestone blocks could be floated from quarries
right to the base of the Pyramids. The stones
would likely then be polished by hand and pushed
up ramps to their intended positions.
It took more than manual labor, though. Architects
achieved an accurate pyramid shape by running
ropes from the outer corners up to the planned
summit, to make sure the stones were positioned
correctly. And priests-astronomers helped choose
the pyramids' sites and orientations, so that
they would be on the appropriate axis in relation
to sacred constellations.
From stone pusher to priest, every worker would
likely have recognized his or her role in continuing
the life-and-death cycle of the pharaohs, and
thereby in perpetuating the glory of Egypt. |