Khufu's Great
Pyramid (Continued)
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The
pyramids at Giza. The far pyramid is the "Great Pyramid."
The middle one looks larger, but only because it is built
on higher ground.
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The Arabs, as if in revenge for the missing treasure,
stripped the pyramid of it's fine white limestone casing and used
it for building in Cairo. They even attempted to disassemble the
great pyramid itself, but after removing the top 30 feet of stone,
they gave up on this impossible task.
So what happened to the treasure of King Khufu?
Conventional wisdom says that, like so many other royal tombs,
the pyramid was the victim of robbers in ancient times. If we
believe the accounts of Manum's men, though, the granite plugs
that blocked the passageways were still in place when they entered
the tomb. How did the thieves get in and out?
In 1638 a English mathematician, John Greaves, visited
the pyramid. He discovered a narrow shaft, hidden in the wall,
that connected the Grand Gallery with the descending passage.
Both ends were tightly sealed and the bottom was blocked with
debris. Some archaeologists suggested this route was used by the
last of the Pharaoh's men to exit the tomb, after the granite
plugs had been put in place, and by the thieves to get inside.
Given the small size of the passageway and the amount of debris
it seems unlikely that the massive amount of treasure, including
the huge missing sarcophagus lid, could have been removed this
way.
Some have suggested that the pyramid was never meant
as a tomb, but as an astronomical observatory. The Roman author
Proclus, in fact, states that before the pyramid was completed
it did serve in this function. We can't put two much weight on
Proclus words, though, remembering that when he advanced his theory
the pyramid was already over 2000 years old.
Richard Proctor, an astronomer, did observe that
the descending passage could have been used to observe the transits
of certain stars. He also suggested that the grand gallery, when
open at the top, during construction, could have been used for
mapping the sky.
Many strange, and some silly, theories have arisen
over the years to explain the pyramid and it's passageways. Most
archaeologists, though, accept the theory that the great pyramid
was just the largest of a tradition of tombs used for the Pharaohs
of Egypt.
So what happened to Khufu's mummy and treasure?
Nobody knows. Extensive explorations have found no other chambers
or passageways. Still one must wonder if, perhaps in this one
case, the King and his architects out smarted both the ancient
thieves and modern archaeologists and that somewhere in, or below,
the last wonder of the ancient world, rests Khufu and his sacred
gold.

A cross-section
of the Great Pyramid showing the passageways.
(Copyright Lee Krystek 1997)
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