Ancient diaries reveal the process of building the Great Pyramid (1 Viewer)

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Cold Ethyl

Super Moderator
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EgyptThe diary from 4.500 years ago of a captain participating in the construction of the Great Pyramid of Giza describes in detail the daily activities, wages and meals of the workers under his command.

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The aridity of Wadi al-Jarf helped preserve the Merer papyrus. Image: The Past

Located on Egypt's Red Sea coast, Wadi al-Jarf was a bustling center more than 4.000 years ago. Wadi al-Jarf's historical importance was reinforced in 2013 when researchers found 30 of the world's oldest papyri hidden in man-made limestone caves there. These Red Sea scrolls have special significance in terms of content. Not only do they reveal Wadial-Jarf's past as a bustling seaport, they also contain firsthand records of a man named Merer, who participated in the construction of the Great Pyramid of Giza, according to National Geographic.

The Wadi al-Jarf site was first discovered in 1823 by British traveler and antiquarian John Gardner Wilkinson. In 2008, French Egyptologist Pierre Tallet directed a series of excavations that helped identify Wadi al-Jarf as an important seaport dating back 4.500 years to the reign of pharaoh Khufu and the construction of the Great Pyramid. Tallet's team discovered that Wadi al-Jarf was a vibrant economic center with trade in materials used to build pyramids 241 km away. Archaeological evidence comes from Merer's diary located among the papyri.

Wadi al-Jarf consists of several different areas, spread over several kilometers between the Nile and the Red Sea. From the direction of the Nile, the first area about 4,8 km from the coast contains 30 large limestone caves used for storage. This is where the papyrus scrolls were discovered. Continuing east for another 457 meters is a series of camps and then a large stone building divided into 13 parallel compartments. The archaeological team speculates that the building was used as a residence. Finally, at the seaside is the harbor with residences and storage space. Based on ceramics and inscriptions found at the site, researchers were able to date the port complex to the 4th Dynasty of Egypt, 4.500 years ago. They claim that the harbor was opened under pharaoh Sneferu and abandoned at the end of the reign of his son Khufu. Although operating for a short time, the port contributed to the construction of pharaoh Khufu's tomb.

Along with the papyrus, many other important archaeological discoveries there revealed the importance of the harbor. Large structures such as the 183-meter-long wharf indicate heavy investment in materials in the area. Tallet and his colleagues also found 130 anchors, proving that the harbor was very busy. From the harbor, the pharaoh's ships sailed across the Red Sea to the Sinai peninsula possessing much copper. Copper was the hardest metal available at the time and the Egyptians needed it to cut stone to build the pharaoh's giant pyramid. When they returned to port, the Egyptian ships were loaded with copper. Between trips, the ship is stored in a limestone cave.

After the Wadi al-Jarf port ceased operations around the time of pharaoh Khufu's death, a team from Giza sealed the chamber carved from limestone. During the process of blocking the limestone cave, Merer's papyrus notes were likely stuck between the rocks. They lay in the desert for 4,5 millennia until discovered during an excavation by Tallet in 2013. The Red Sea scrolls were found on March 24 of the same year near the entrance to chamber number G3 . Tellet's team collected the second and largest set of papyri stuck among the rocks in chamber G2.

The Red Sea Scrolls contain several types of documents, but Merer's notes have attracted the most attention. As leader of the worker team, Merer maintained records of the team's activities in a diary. It was a daily record of the work his team performed during the three-month period of building the Great Pyramid.

Merer's team consisted of about 200 workers who moved around Egypt and were responsible for all the work involved in building the Great Pyramid. Most notable are the limestone blocks used to cover the pyramid. Merer recorded in detail how they collected stones from the Tura mines and transported them to Giza by boat.

Workers in the Merer team will load the limestone blocks onto boats, move them along the Nile, and monitor the count at the management area before moving to Giza. A fragment from the diary describes a three-day journey from the quarry to the pyramid. The next day, Merer and the team returned to the quarry to deliver a new load.

Merer's diary even revealed one of the pyramid's architects. Ankhhaf, Khufu, Khufu's half-brother held the position of "commander of all the king's works". Merer also carefully monitors the team's wages. Because under the Egyptian pharaohs there was no currency, wages were paid in grain with the basic unit being ration. Workers receive more or less depending on their rank. According to the papyrus, the workers' basic diet consisted of yeast bread, flat bread, various meats, dates, honey, beans, and beer.

Historians have long debated the status of the large labor force that built the Great Pyramid. Many people believe that the workers were slaves, but the Red Sea Scrolls provide contradictory information. Merer's detailed records of wages prove that the pyramid builders were skilled workers who were paid for their labor.

 

Russellmark11

Mcsnacks
How the hell were they not slaves? They weren't paid. They fed them so they wouldn't die.
A lot of speculating by the "Historians." Just them making guesses and assumptions some of which have already been proven to not be true like their usage of copper to cut stone would never have worked. Their usage of copper would have been for things like cups and plates, or to keep drinking pools clean because copper kills fungus and bacteria and the rest for decorations.
 

deviant2

cause it glitters doesn't mean it's gold
Only two ways ancient cities, structures, cathedrals, and some art work could possibly have been perfectly built, with functioning infrastructures, beautifully crafted mathematically flawless churches, statues, tapestry's and paintings by hands and minds with talent the likes which have never been replicated... And the key is in a magically found 4,500 year old diary?
Nope.
 

Father Corpse

We are not your kind
Only two ways ancient cities, structures, cathedrals, and some art work could possibly have been perfectly built, with functioning infrastructures, beautifully crafted mathematically flawless churches, statues, tapestry's and paintings by hands and minds with talent the likes which have never been replicated... And the key is in a magically found 4,500 year old diary?
Nope.
I agree. Aliens.
 

ZeroK

SCIENCE AVENGER
I don't know how reliable this information is. Just because something is old doesn't make it true. There's no way they made those pyramids with just copper and 200 men. @ZeroK your thoughts?
Thanks for the call out my friend. I do believe this information because it’s based on peer reviewed science, not just some bloke giving his opinion. Egyptology is an academic discipline which must follow the scientific method. The Diary of Merer is considered the greatest find of Egyptian archaeology in the 21st century.

Egyptology first started wit the Egyptians themselves but modern Egyptology begins with the invasion of Egypt by Napoleon in the 1800’s
 

K.I.T.T.

I Fucked Your Porsche
@Cold Ethyl That's a very misleading title...

There is absolutely ZERO information within the Diary Of Merer that discloses how or why The Great Pyramid was built. All it discloses is some people were paid to quarry some limestone and transport it somewhere  near the Great Pyramid.

The rest is mere speculation:

"The most intact papyri describe several months of work with the transportation of limestone from quarries Tura North and Tura South to Giza in the 27th year of the reign of pharaoh Khufu. Though the diary does not specify where the stones were to be used or for what purpose, given the diary may date to what is widely considered the very end of Khufu's reign, Tallet believes they were most likely for cladding the outside of the Great Pyramid."

In other words, they might have taken measures to protect the exterior of the Great Pyramid, but they sure as fuck didn't build it.
 

Jizdrop1

Hope Mojo dies
I've done a lot of reading about the Pyramids and watch a lot of films. Most say it was impossible to cut that stone with copper not to mention how accurate the cuts are. At the time you couldn't insert a razor blade into the joints. For me it's still a mystery how they where built and who built them.

EDIT= They also can't explain how the blocks got moved into position. They tried some of the suggested methods with much lighter blocks and it couldn't be done.
 
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deviant2

cause it glitters doesn't mean it's gold
I've done a lot of reading about the Pyramids and watch a lot of films. Most say it was impossible to cut that stone with copper not to mention how accurate the cuts are. At the time you couldn't insert a razor blade into the joints. For me it's still a mystery how they where built and who built them.

EDIT= They also can't explain how the blocks got moved into position. They tried some of the suggested methods with much lighter blocks and it couldn't be done.
^ This.
Also, they've hardly shifted, the discoveries beneath them, they line up with other pyramids on the other side of the planet, and we ain't talking no everyday brick that fists in your hand.
15 ton perfectly cut bricks, moved into perfect position and still level as ya please.
 

Jizdrop1

Hope Mojo dies
^^ Also they can't explain why the Pyramid shape went around the world and built into so called "Tombs",no communication at the time.
 

slickrick27

Well Known Member
Thanks for the call out my friend. I do believe this information because it’s based on peer reviewed science, not just some bloke giving his opinion. Egyptology is an academic discipline which must follow the scientific method. The Diary of Merer is considered the greatest find of Egyptian archaeology in the 21st century.

Egyptology first started wit the Egyptians themselves but modern Egyptology begins with the invasion of Egypt by Napoleon in the 1800’s
Yea it's interesting. I'll have to learn more about this. Thanks bro.
 
EgyptThe diary from 4.500 years ago of a captain participating in the construction of the Great Pyramid of Giza describes in detail the daily activities, wages and meals of the workers under his command.

View attachment 782409

The aridity of Wadi al-Jarf helped preserve the Merer papyrus. Image: The Past

Located on Egypt's Red Sea coast, Wadi al-Jarf was a bustling center more than 4.000 years ago. Wadi al-Jarf's historical importance was reinforced in 2013 when researchers found 30 of the world's oldest papyri hidden in man-made limestone caves there. These Red Sea scrolls have special significance in terms of content. Not only do they reveal Wadial-Jarf's past as a bustling seaport, they also contain firsthand records of a man named Merer, who participated in the construction of the Great Pyramid of Giza, according to National Geographic.

The Wadi al-Jarf site was first discovered in 1823 by British traveler and antiquarian John Gardner Wilkinson. In 2008, French Egyptologist Pierre Tallet directed a series of excavations that helped identify Wadi al-Jarf as an important seaport dating back 4.500 years to the reign of pharaoh Khufu and the construction of the Great Pyramid. Tallet's team discovered that Wadi al-Jarf was a vibrant economic center with trade in materials used to build pyramids 241 km away. Archaeological evidence comes from Merer's diary located among the papyri.

Wadi al-Jarf consists of several different areas, spread over several kilometers between the Nile and the Red Sea. From the direction of the Nile, the first area about 4,8 km from the coast contains 30 large limestone caves used for storage. This is where the papyrus scrolls were discovered. Continuing east for another 457 meters is a series of camps and then a large stone building divided into 13 parallel compartments. The archaeological team speculates that the building was used as a residence. Finally, at the seaside is the harbor with residences and storage space. Based on ceramics and inscriptions found at the site, researchers were able to date the port complex to the 4th Dynasty of Egypt, 4.500 years ago. They claim that the harbor was opened under pharaoh Sneferu and abandoned at the end of the reign of his son Khufu. Although operating for a short time, the port contributed to the construction of pharaoh Khufu's tomb.

Along with the papyrus, many other important archaeological discoveries there revealed the importance of the harbor. Large structures such as the 183-meter-long wharf indicate heavy investment in materials in the area. Tallet and his colleagues also found 130 anchors, proving that the harbor was very busy. From the harbor, the pharaoh's ships sailed across the Red Sea to the Sinai peninsula possessing much copper. Copper was the hardest metal available at the time and the Egyptians needed it to cut stone to build the pharaoh's giant pyramid. When they returned to port, the Egyptian ships were loaded with copper. Between trips, the ship is stored in a limestone cave.

After the Wadi al-Jarf port ceased operations around the time of pharaoh Khufu's death, a team from Giza sealed the chamber carved from limestone. During the process of blocking the limestone cave, Merer's papyrus notes were likely stuck between the rocks. They lay in the desert for 4,5 millennia until discovered during an excavation by Tallet in 2013. The Red Sea scrolls were found on March 24 of the same year near the entrance to chamber number G3 . Tellet's team collected the second and largest set of papyri stuck among the rocks in chamber G2.

The Red Sea Scrolls contain several types of documents, but Merer's notes have attracted the most attention. As leader of the worker team, Merer maintained records of the team's activities in a diary. It was a daily record of the work his team performed during the three-month period of building the Great Pyramid.

Merer's team consisted of about 200 workers who moved around Egypt and were responsible for all the work involved in building the Great Pyramid. Most notable are the limestone blocks used to cover the pyramid. Merer recorded in detail how they collected stones from the Tura mines and transported them to Giza by boat.

Workers in the Merer team will load the limestone blocks onto boats, move them along the Nile, and monitor the count at the management area before moving to Giza. A fragment from the diary describes a three-day journey from the quarry to the pyramid. The next day, Merer and the team returned to the quarry to deliver a new load.

Merer's diary even revealed one of the pyramid's architects. Ankhhaf, Khufu, Khufu's half-brother held the position of "commander of all the king's works". Merer also carefully monitors the team's wages. Because under the Egyptian pharaohs there was no currency, wages were paid in grain with the basic unit being ration. Workers receive more or less depending on their rank. According to the papyrus, the workers' basic diet consisted of yeast bread, flat bread, various meats, dates, honey, beans, and beer.

Historians have long debated the status of the large labor force that built the Great Pyramid. Many people believe that the workers were slaves, but the Red Sea Scrolls provide contradictory information. Merer's detailed records of wages prove that the pyramid builders were skilled workers who were paid for their labor.

Everyone STFU it was aliens that built the pyramids ..end of story
 

deviant2

cause it glitters doesn't mean it's gold
^^ Also they can't explain why the Pyramid shape went around the world and built into so called "Tombs",no communication at the time.
Same concept as the Terracotta Warriors. Quite the holy shit moment when they were discovered. The sheer volume, their size, their weight, the paint colors(blue being unheard of at the time), no two alike, the horses... All molded then detailed by hand, and placed in their spots(which had to be dug first.) They tried replicating them too by hand, get the terracotta mixed right, with minimal tools... couldn't do it.
And that blue, very interesting.
 

K.I.T.T.

I Fucked Your Porsche
Modern science disregards the possibility that beings far more intelligent than our own may have played a part in the erection of the Great Pyramids. They will quickly cite that there's no evidence left behind to indicate this is true, but...

Wouldn't an advanced race be exceedingly attentive to something as simple as littering? Look at us, for example. We haven't even figured out how to keep the fucking planet clean! An advanced race would tidy up as they went, picking up debris or recycling materials. I think this is why it's such a mystery. They actually did the right thing and left nearly no trace of their labors behind. Whether from another planet or our own distant ancestors, beings far more advanced than we are right now have certainly been here in the past.
 

Guipago

Forum Veteran
Nothing that a bit of hard work (unknown in today's life) and a taste of the whip to get the job done.
Everyone thinks of the building of the Pyramid's in today's terms, facts are, we don't know if that area was a desert 5000 odd years age to start with, there may have been dirt around (or imported) to build ramps, we only assume, the area may have had hardwood around or Egyptians traded, they could have imported logs & ropes to move stone blocks & heavy stone blocks HAVE been moved by manpower, I helped my dad drag a guys VW Kombi out of a river in the 70's by a pully system known as a Spanish Windlass nothing more than 2 ropes attached to the car & a tree, then a heavy stick between the ropes and twist, took a few hours but out it came full of water, so heavy shit can be moved easily, the Egyptians probably had better ideas. The Romans built a 114 meter ramp to get at some Hebrew shits at Masada, bigger ramps could easily be possible, don't write off what a couple of hundred people (may have only been 1 team), ropes, simple pully systems, hard work & the incentive of a big guy with a whip could get done.
 

Chief Queef

Last of the Mohicans
I recently listened to a very interesting podcast involving the pyramids as some sort of power plant. It definitely deepend the mystery and made me stray from the belief that they are simply giant, elaborate tombstones...
 
Nothing that a bit of hard work (unknown in today's life) and a taste of the whip to get the job done.
Everyone thinks of the building of the Pyramid's in today's terms, facts are, we don't know if that area was a desert 5000 odd years age to start with, there may have been dirt around (or imported) to build ramps, we only assume, the area may have had hardwood around or Egyptians traded, they could have imported logs & ropes to move stone blocks & heavy stone blocks HAVE been moved by manpower, I helped my dad drag a guys VW Kombi out of a river in the 70's by a pully system known as a Spanish Windlass nothing more than 2 ropes attached to the car & a tree, then a heavy stick between the ropes and twist, took a few hours but out it came full of water, so heavy shit can be moved easily, the Egyptians probably had better ideas. The Romans built a 114 meter ramp to get at some Hebrew shits at Masada, bigger ramps could easily be possible, don't write off what a couple of hundred people (may have only been 1 team), ropes, simple pully systems, hard work & the incentive of a big guy with a whip could get done.
I don't think the whip works here I heard a theory that to complete the pyramids the workforce would be magnitudes more effective in good condition. I believe the Egyptians absolutely had methods of work and the means to provide a surplus of resources we don't yet understand. Just the great pyramid took 2300000 stones at an average of 2 ish ton each not to mention the percision of the work shows pride if not love throughout. Forced labour does not a pretty product make. I think in some way they had a way we don't to make alot of the stonework easier especially considering the granite boxes and the percision of one piece internal 90 degree corners in granite. This is difficult and extremely labour intensive and to do it without today's machines is near unimaginable if they didn't exist
 
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