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Pyramids of Abu Sir - Pyramid of Sahure
The pyramids of Abu Sir are a far cry from the enormous
monuments of Giza. The four ruins here date from the
5th Dynasty, and are mostly piles of rubble with excavations
of temples and causeways already starting to disappear
under the sand. There were originally 14 pyramids
here.
The site is currently closed (Feb 2003)
as it has been reabsorbed into a military zone, so
we were only able to get close enough for a few pictures
-- unfortunately directly into the late afternoon
sun. We pulled up into a vacant lot outside the site
and got out to take pictures, and were accosted by
locals who argued with our guide and driver that we
should have to pay to take pictures from the road.
Only the northern pyramid, of Sahure,
is ever open. It has a mortuary temple attached to
it that contains scenes of the king hunting and of
sea voyages. A 240 meter ramp connected it to a Valley
Temple on the bank of the Nile, which can just be
made out in the sand. The ceiling of the funerary
temple, which is somewhat preserved, is yellow stars
on a blue background, a pattern we see in many other
tombs and mastabas.
The pyramid of Sahure (named "The
Rising of the Ba Spirit") is built as a core
of blocks of limestone , and originally consisted
of five or six steps with the blocks held together
with a mud mortar. The casing would have been fine
white limestone. It was initially excavated by Borchardt
in 1902-8, and most of the complex (which includes
the pyramid, a retaining wall, a causeway, and temple)
was excavated. The mortuary temple, on the southern
side of the pyramid, was an elegant mix of black basalt
on the floor, red aswan granite for the dado, limestone
with painted reliefs above. THis is the first pyramid
to show reliefs of the king smiting his enemies, a
theme that is repeated in pretty much every temple
afterwards.
The valley temple is ruined and overgrown,
but originally lay on the shore of Abu sir Lake, a
huge canal.
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