The Golden mask of an ancient Egyptian Pharaoh. Shutterstock

The Pyramids of Giza and the Missing Pharaoh Mummies

The mummies of Pharaohs Djoser, Sneferu, Khufu, Khafre, and Menkaure are all missing, despite the fact that Egyptologists say their mummies were once placed inside their respective pyramids.

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Of all the ancient Egyptian Pyramids— there are about 120—those located at Giza are the rock stars of the ancient world. The three pyramids at Giza—Khufu, Khafre, and Menkaure—symbolize the ancient world. The largest of the three, the Great Pyramid of Giza, is the tallest and most massive pyramid ever built in Egypt. A true marvel of ancient engineering, for hundreds of years, people have wondered about how the ancients were able to erect such a behemoth structure thousands of years ago.

Ancient marvel

According to mainstream scholars, the Great Pyramid of Giza results from the cumulative effort of pyramid building in Egypt. Thought to have been commissioned by Pharaoh Khufu of the Fourth Dynasty, Egyptologists maintain that the pyramid was completed around 4,500 years ago, after a construction period that lasted around 20 years. Just how it was built remains an enigma. Of all the problems concerning the pyramids, their construction is the most puzzling. Just as it is for us today, it was so hundreds of years ago.

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Even the Roman writer Pliny the Elder, who condemned the pyramids as an “Idle and foolish exhibition of royal wealth,” found much to wonder about the ancient structures. Writing about their construction, Pliny wrote, “…The most curious question is how the stones were raised to so great a height…” People have wondered about how these colossal monuments were created. Using what technologies and what tools? The Great Pyramid of Giza was built using more than two and a quarter million stone blocks. Some of these stones weigh more than 15 tons, although, on average, around 2.5 tons.

It is simply mind-boggling to think about the staggering amount of work involved in building these structures, even if done with modern equipment and tools. However, we must bear in mind that the ancients built the pyramids with the simplest methods available to them. Without the wheel and without the pulley (the pulley was unknown in Egypt before the Roman Period), it is argued that both in quarrying and building, the constructors made use of copper chisels and possibly iron tools flint, quartz, and possibly diorite pounders.

To transport the massive stones, they made use of wooden sleds and rollers. However, it remains unclear how the ancient Egyptians moved stones weighing more than 20 tons without any more sophisticated technologies. Whatever way it was achieved, Egyptologists suggest that moving massive blocks was not considered challenging for ancient Egyptians. Stones weighing more than 100 tons were transported, apparently with ease, thousands of years ago. Therefore, it has been suggested that the process of quarrying, transporting, and erecting the massive stones was such an ordinary matter to the ancient Egyptians that they did not consider the feat worthy of record.

Although we don’t know how all of this was achieved, as there are no written records that mention the construction phases of the Great Pyramid, scholars argue that the Great Pyramid of Giza alone was completed in either 30 or 20 years. The only record of the time necessary to build a pyramid was left by Herodotus. He wrote that it took thirty years to construct the pyramid of Khufu. Ten years were needed to build the causeway and cut the substructures. Herodotus further says that around 100,000 workers (not slaves) were used to build the pyramid. They were changed every three months.

Stories about the pyramids

Curiously, Herodotus also gives us the only known detail about what the ancient Egyptians used to build the pyramids. According to Herodotus, the ancients made use of ancient machines that allowed them to build the pyramid. However, when saying machines, we are not referring to technological machines that our society possesses today, but rather simple “devices” that may have allowed a smoother construction process.

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Herodotus wrote:

The pyramid was built in steps, battlement-wise, as it is called, or, according to others, altar-wise. After laying the stones for the base, they raised the remaining stones to their places by means of machines formed of short wooden planks. The first machine raised them from the ground to the top of the first step. On this there was another machine, which received the stone upon its arrival and conveyed it to the second step, whence a third machine advanced it still higher. Either they had as many machines as there were steps in the pyramid, or possibly they had but a single machine, which, being easily moved, was transferred from tier to tier as the stone rose — both accounts are given and therefore I mention both. The upper portion of the Pyramid was finished first, then the middle and finally the part which was lowest and nearest to the ground.

Bear in mind that the description offered by Herodotus comes already 2,000 years after the pyramid was built. Whatever the means by which the pyramids were built, their purpose is another mystery worthy of study. Although Egyptologists have argued for decades that the pyramids were essentially the eternal resting places of the pharaohs, there are reasons that have led many people to believe this is not so.

Primarily, we know of the existence of the so-called Provincial Pyramids of Egypt and ancient monuments—pyramids—that were definitely not used as tombs. Seven pyramids exist in the provinces, the southernmost of which is located on the island of Elephantine. The purpose of the pyramids remains a total enigma. Some have suggested that they marked the homelands of the royal consorts or that they were symbols of the might and power of the pharaohs. So far, none of these pyramids has been shown to have a burial chamber or ancillary buildings such as chapels. In other words, they were likely not tombs.

Missing pyramid mummies

Egyptologists firmly believe that the Pyramids were tombs and nothing else. Nonetheless, the alleged burial chambers within these structures resemble anything but not tombs. Take, for example, the Great Pyramid of Giza and its three chambers. None of these three chambers are worthy of a king.

The Great Pyramid of Giza was built with around 2.3 million blocks of stone. Its average weight has been calculated at around 6.5 million tons. If the structure was really built as a tomb, it would be beyond impressive. So, if the pyramid was built as a marvel of ancient engineering, and if the construction process was unmatched in ancient times, why is the most critical part of the pyramid, the burial chamber, a room cold, undecorated, unworthy of a true king?

Building a structure like the Great Pyramid of Giza as a tomb and then leaving the burial chamber undecorated and cold is like building a Ferrari but deciding not to include an engine. The alleged burial chamber inside the Great Pyramid is ugly, to say the least. Featuring only a granite box interpreted as s sarcophagus, the chamber has been empty since time immemorial. But this strange feature is not unique to the Great Pyramid. If we were to look at the pyramid of Khafre, the second-largest pyramid at the plateau, or the pyramid of Menkaure, the smallest of the three, we would find the same thing. The alleged burial chambers were left undecorated, cold, and unworthy of the kings who built the impressive structures.

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The alleged burial chambers of these Pharaohs were also left undecorated, cold, empty, and unworthy of the mighty stone structures the chambers belonged to. If we were to look back at history, we would find that, surprisingly, neither the mummy of Djoser, the first pyramid builder, has been found, nor has the mummy of Sneferu ever been discovered. King Sneferu is thought to have built three pyramids, but his mummy was not found in any of them.

The same happens with Khufu. The mummy of the Pharaoh who built Egypt’s most impressive pyramid has never been found. The same thing is with Khafre, the builder of the second-largest pyramid at Giza. Menkaure’s mummy is also missing. To explain the missing mummies, Egyptologists have said that although the pyramids were tombs, and their mummies were placed inside the pyramids since the structures were broken into in ancient times, the looters took everything from inside the pyramid, including the mummies of the Pharaohs, reason why their mummies are gone today.

However, the same Egyptologists have revealed that the pyramids, since they were tombs, had intricate defense mechanisms implemented within them in order to prevent the looting of their interior. Despite these defense mechanisms, tomb robbers somehow accessed the ancient structures and are thought to have looted everything they came across.


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Written by Ivan Petricevic

I've been writing passionately about ancient civilizations, history, alien life, and various other subjects for more than eight years. You may have seen me appear on Discovery Channel's What On Earth series, History Channel's Ancient Aliens, and Gaia's Ancient Civilizations among others.

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