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saqqara - cemetery of the ancient kings The principal necropolis of the ancient city of Memphis, whose most famous monument is probably the step pyramid of Djoser, the oldest of Egypt's 97 pyramids. It was built by the architect and genius Imhotep, who designed it and the surrounding complex to be as grand as it was unique and revolutionary. The importance of the site of Saqqara is indicated by the crowded nature of the burials, with some having been used many times, and most having been plundered throughout antiquity. Mastaba tombs were constructed at Saqqara for the Memphite elite during the Old Kingdom. Pyramids were also built there, including the famous 3rd Dynasty Step Pyramid complex of Djoser, the 5th Dynasty pyramid of Unas, the "lost" unfinished pyramid complex of Sekhemkhet which bears a striking resemblance to Djoser's complex, and the 6th Dynasty pyramid complex of Pepi II which was the last major funerary monument of the Old Kingdom at Saqqara. Djoser's complex is remarkable because not only was it the worlds' first ever pyramid, it is also acknowledged as the worlds' first completely stone building.
Beneath the ground, Saqqara is riddled with tombs, galleries and robber shafts, which are not always visible from the surface. During the New Kingdom, Memphis took second place to Thebes as Egypt's capital. However, although the administration was established at Thebes, the government officials who ruled Upper Egypt lived in Memphis and were buried at Saqqara. The Pyramid of Djoser Djoser, whose Horus name was Netjerykhet, was founder of the Third Dynasty, Old Kingdom. He is one of the most famous kings in Egyptian history, his name being preceded by a rubric of red ink in the Turin Canon. He was responsible for constructing the world's first monumental stone building, the Step Pyramid at Saqqara. The pyramid's design evolved throughout its construction and its architectural form changed as the Egyptians adapted to their new building material (stone, as opposed to mud bricks). The architect of the Step Pyramid is thought to have been Djoser's son, Imhotep, who was later deified for his achievements. The fact that Djoser was able to build such a massive and innovative structure suggests that during his reign Egypt was politically stable, with a successful economy. The Step Pyramid is made of six giant steps. It has a ground plan of 459ft x 387ft (140m x 118m) and a height of 197ft (60m). The entire enclosure measures 1,788ft x 908ft (545m x 277m). It contains many chambers, including a court known as the "Heb-Sed" designed to provide the king with the necessary setting to repeat his jubilee ceremony in the afterlife. There is a relief depicting King Djoser in the Step Pyramid performing this rite, which involved him running a fixed course accompanied by Nekhen, 'the priest of the souls'. It is thought that this ceremony may have derived from a primitive belief that the fertility of the fields was dependent on the physical ability of the king. As well as being the first stone pyramid in Ancient Egypt, the Step Pyramid also boasts a superstructure unparalleled among other Old Kingdom pyramids. During excavations of the many underground passageways and galleries, 40,000 ceramic and stone vessels - dating back to the reigns of Djoser's predecessors - have been found. Against the Northern face of the Step Pyramid there is a small room known as the Serdab. The front face of the Serdab is angled at 17 degrees, the same angle as the steps of the pyramid themselves. Inside the serdab would have stood the cult statue of Djoser, a copy stand there today and the original is in the Cairo Museum. Two "peep holes" in the Serdab enabled offerings to be made to the statue inside.
This was burial place of the sacred Apis Bulls. Strabo, the Greek author, writing in the 1st century AD, had spoken of a sanded up avenue of sphinxes leading to the famous Serapeum. Napoleon's expedition had searched for the Serapeum in vain, however in 1850 Auguste Mariette and his team uncovered an avenue of over a hundred sphinxes. As excavations continued over the following weeks, Mariette and his team eventually came to a buried temple courtyard. Entry to the catacomb was finally achieved on the 12th November 1851, almost a year after Mariette's inspired search had begun.
The subterranean galleries of the Serapeum consisted of a long gallery inset with numerous votive stelae and sealed by a huge sandstone door. Side chambers contained 24 magnificent granite sarcophagi, which had been prepared between year 52 of Psammetichus I of the 26th Dynasty and the end of the Ptolemaic period. The sarcophagi would have contained the mummified remains of the Apis Bulls, which were considered by the Ancient Egyptians to be the earthly incarnations of the city god of Memphis. All the sarcophagi in this gallery had been emptied in antiquity. In 1852, further galleries, known as the Lesser Vaults, were discovered, with similar rock hewn chambers. These chambers had contained bulls in wooden coffins, dating from year 30 of Ramesses the Great down to the 22nd Dynasty. In one of these chambers, a burial of Apis XIV, made in year 55 of Ramesses the Great, had survived intact. Mariette's work at the Serapeum continued throughout 1852, and resulted in the discovery of a third series of smaller bull burials, the earliest yet uncovered, ranging in date from Amenophis III of the 18th Dynasty down into the 19th Dynasty. Again, one of these burials, which contained two coffins of Apis VII and Apis IX, was discovered intact. Various shabtis, canopic jars and amulets were also discovered. Other pyramid complexes at Saqqara
There are a considerable number of pyramid complexes at Saqqara, although many are now ruined and appear to be little more than heaps of rubble.
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