but the cement used to hold these stones in place is unknown to scientifically oriented researchers. Even when our modern labs discovered the elements of the chemical composition of the cement, they were unable to duplicate it! How is this possible? From where did the ancient ones get this cement? How did they produce it, given their primitive conditions in comparison to ours? But wait, there’s more! In 1986 a French research team found sand in a hidden chamber behind the wall of the passageway to the Queen’s Chamber, and when they examined the sand, it was found not to be indigenous to Giza! From where did the ancient ones get this sand? And why would they hide it in a secret chamber? Are they trying to convey some strange message to us? Aren’t we the high point of evolution and science? These two discoveries add to the mystery and wonder of the Great Pyramid and the intentions of its ancient designers and builders.
• The red granite coffin (or sarcophagus) in the King’s Chamber is too large to fit through the entrance to this chamber! Did these builders actually build this magnificent chamber around the coffin? If so, why? What purpose could justify adding so much difficulty to building the chamber? One might consider that they wanted to prevent the sarcophagus from ever being taken out of that chamber—but what a feat of engineering and manpower to build the massive chamber around the coffin. And what were they doing with this coffin that never contained a mummy and did not require a lid?
• There is growing evidence that the ancient Egyptians could not build this pyramid. It’s true! Attempts have been made to prove that the pyramid could be constructed using known ancient Egyptian tools and methods. Egyptologist Dr. Mark Lehner made an attempt with a large group of people, but when the structure that he and his team built reached twenty feet high (six meters), they had to use a truck with a winch to get even the downsized stone blocks out of the quarry. They only attempted to cut and stack small blocks, so keep in mind that many of the stones in the Great Pyramid weigh from 2.5 to 70 tons and had to be hoisted to heights over four hundred feet! In the late seventies a Japanese team, funded by auto manufacturer Nissan, made another attempt to create a scaled-down model of the pyramid 59 feet high (18 meters) using the same primitive ancient Egyptian tools archaeologists assume were used, such as chisels and hammers. The highly skilled and technically savvy Japanese team could not cut the Aswan granite. They ended up using jackhammers. They were also unable to move the stones and ended up using bulldozers, a truck, and even a helicopter to get the blocks stacked in a pile that remotely resembled a pyramid. Again, like Dr. Lehner and his team, the Japanese used only small blocks, nothing close to the size and weight of those in the Great Pyramid. This situation is perplexing, leading us to no answers as to how this pyramid was built by these people. But even today we may not be able to build a structure like this because we have only two cranes on the planet that could possibly lift some of the stones in the pyramid to the heights necessary to place them on the levels they are found in that structure.
Clearly we are dealing with a people and a monument that is more than it appears to be. There are more details on this pyramid in the Appendices.
Historical Accounts of the Great Pyramid
Ca 1850 BC-1600 BC: One of the most important papyruses found in Egypt contains a plea, a lament, and a conversation between an Egyptian of the Old Kingdom called Ipuwer and God. The papyrus is called The Dialogue of Ipuwer and the Lord of All (formally titled Papyrus Leiden I 344, Leiden being the town in Netherlands where the papyrus is housed today). Here again we have a reproduction by a later generation of an earlier artifact for preservation and historical purposes—the papyrus was likely written in the New Kingdom, sometime in the 1200s BC, but Ipuwer lived sometime between 1850 BC and 1600 BC of the Middle Kingdom. Egyptologist Sir Alan Gardiner translated the papyrus into English in 1909 and considered it to be “a single picture of a particular moment in Egyptian history as it was seen by the pessimistic eyes of Ipuwer.” (19, p. 8) What is of interest to us is Ipuwer’s report that the Great Pyramid was forcibly broken into and its contents were removed while the upper chambers above the King’s Chamber were also violently entered. Evidence of this is seen in the rough-cut passages that show no precision workmanship, not the earlier repair crew’s well-cut passage into the original builders’ stone. There are other rough-cut areas within the pyramid that indicate attempts to gain entry without concern for the structure, such as the damage to the large niche of the Queen’s Chamber by persons not concerned with precision. Archaeologist Sir Flinders Petrie wrote: “When, then, was the Pyramid first violated? Probably by the same hands that so ruthlessly destroyed the statues and temples of Khafra, and the Pyramids of Abu Roash, Abusir, and Sakkara. That is to say, probably during the civil wars of the seventh to the tenth dynasties.” [ca 2181-2055 BC] (30, p. 217) Here’s a passage from the Ipuwer Papyrus that appears to confirm the violence but not the date: “All is in ruin. A man kills his brother. Blood is everywhere. A few laws of the judgment hall are cast forth. Officials are slain and their records are taken away. The secrets of the kings of Upper and Lower Egypt are divulged. What the pyramid concealed has become empty and the palace is destroyed” (my italics). (19, p. 9)
24 BC: Greco-Roman geographer and historian Strabo recorded the only known firsthand witness to the original opening of the Great Pyramid. He wrote that there was an entrance on the South (he was confused because he was actually on the North) face that had a hidden door:
“The Greater [pyramid], a little way up one side, has a stone that may be taken out, which being raised up (sublato, meaning to “take up” as in open upward), there is a sloping passage to the foundations.” (38, pp. 84-5)
This is exactly how the original opening of the Great Pyramid is, and it is the entrance to the descending passageway that runs to the very foundation of the edifice.
Again we have an observation from Sir Flinders Petrie: “Strabo’s account is less careful in the dimensions, merely giving roughly a stadium for the height and base of each of the larger Pyramids, and saying that one is a little larger than the other. As these dimensions vary from .85 to 1.25 stadia, he is, at least, quite as accurate as he professes to be. He gives the invaluable description of the Great Pyramid doorway, which so exactly accords with the only remaining doorway of a pyramid.” (30, p. 160)
AD 250: Julius Solinus and others wrote about the phenomenon of the “consumption of the shadow,” referring to a strange characteristic of the Great Pyramid’s outer design that captures the sunlight such that it throws no shadow. When the original siding was on the structure, this occurred twice a day, in the morning at sunrise and the evening at sunset. It was because each side of the Great Pyramid slopes inward to an extremely precise center line, giving the edifice eight sides (see illustration 3) and the highly polished white limestone casing stones reflect the Sun’s light. Many called these moments the “Flash” because it seemed as if the pyramid lit up brightly and no shadows were seen around it on the morning side at sunrise and then again on the evening side at sunset. What is most interesting about Solinus’ writings is that he clearly confirms that in AD 250 the marvelous white limestone casing was still on the Great Pyramid. Today it is largely gone, removed by generations using it to build surrounding structures of the modern era. The exceptions that remain are of a few unpolished and dingy ones (see illustration 4).
AD 820: The entrance to the Great Pyramid that tourists use today was first cut by treasure-seeking Arabs led by Caliph al-Ma’mun, roughly around AD 820. A “caliph” (Arabic khalifa, meaning “successor”) is a chief Islamic civil and religious ruler, regarded as the successor of Mohammed. The original entrance is just above al-Ma’mun’s forced entrance.
Dating the Great Pyramid
The longstanding date for the construction of the Great Pyramid is 2560 BC during the reign of Pharaoh Khufu (Cheops in Greek), but there is some controversy in this dating.
There is an Egyptian stela (a rectangular, vertical slab of stone that commemorates events and persons) titled the “Inventory Stela” that was found in 1858 in the ruins of the temple of Isis at the southeastern foot of the Great Pyramid by Auguste Mariette, an Egyptologist and founder of the Egyptian Museum. The stela is