| The Pyramids and Temples of Gizeh by W. M. Flinders Petrie |
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Chap. 10. Outside of Third pyramid
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Pages 110 - 116 |
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79. p 110. The Third Pyramid has never been quite finished. Its granite casing blocks are left in probably the same condition that they were sent from Assonan, with their outer faces in the rough,* but smoothly dressed down on the joint surfaces. * One writer has described them as "rusticated," as if the roughness was a prepared feature; and another has attributed all the rounded irregularity of the stones to their weathering away since tbey were built. To say nothing, however, of innumerable cut holes in the outer surface, left for lifting the blocks, no weathering would add to a stone a part above its original face (see Plate. xii.). I had the pleasure of showing these details to an Engineer officer, experienced in Indian granite works, and he perfectly concurred as to the method of leaving an excess of stone on the face, to prevent injury to the block in transit.
These surfaces of contact are flat dressed, with a slightly projecting line of polished stone round the edges of the faces ; thus the stones would be in contact along the outer surfaces of the joints, though there was cement between the stones on the face in general. This line of polish is well defined on its outer edge, the stone being quite rough outside it, and sinking away sharply from it. This is important for estimating the intended plane of finish. The limestone casing which covered the upper part of the Pyramid was finished off like that of the other Pyramids; as may be seen by the worked faces, in the heaps of chips left by the Arab destroyers. But the pavement seems most probably never to have been placed around the Pyramid Perring found nothing but a substructure of rough megalithic blocks, with wide joints, and concluded that it was to be covered with finer work. On uncovering the granite casing, not only did I find no paving there, but the casing foot is quite in the rough, so that no pavement could be fitted to it; and none underlies it, as the granite rests on rough limestone. 80. At this level, then, the various data of the intended surfaces give the following size for the base, reducing those data that are on higher levels by the angle 51º 0' :—
The N. end of the W. side could not be reached, after several attempts ; and hence the lack of knowing the length of the N. or azimuth of the W. side. 81. For the angle of the Pyramid, the data are rather divergent and not only do different methods vary in result, but the measures of similar stones vary far beyond the errors of measuring the angle or judging of the surfaces.
Considering the various sources of error : that the dressed granite in situ. is very irregular; that the 1st course joint at S.S.W. may easily be estimated too far out; and that we have no guarantee in the moved granite blocks, or the limestone from the upper part, that the courses were horizontal (on the contrary, one granite block has two different joint surfaces, 1º 40' different) ; the best conclusion seems to be 51º 0' ± 10'. But from a consideration of the granite courses (see below), the angle would be 51º 10' 30" ± 1' 20"; and this might well be adopted, as being close to the very uncertain result from the measured angles. 82. The courses were measured to rather more than halfway up the N.E. corner, beside measures of the lower courses taken at each corner. The series at the N.E. is as follows, reducing to the base level above adopted. 40.3 below the first joint :—
p 113
The full height or the bottom course is : N.E., 45.5 S.E., 55.3 ; S.W. 43.7. The granite is here marked as ceasing at 645.2, i.e., including the lower 16 courses. The reasons for this are (1) the highest remaining fragments of granite (mere back ends of casing stones) are at the same level on each of the sides: hence, the granite must have come as high, and probably did not go higher, as all the pieces are on the same course; (2) there is a thicker course next over this, as if some great change took place there, and a fresh start was made; the 17th course is thicker than any other course of the whole Pyramid, and is followed by a course thinner than any that underlie it; (3) Diodorus states that the casing was of black stone up to the 15th course, and like the other Pyramids above that level. Now, by the stumps of the stones the granite must have come to the 16th, and probably the lowest course was covered with sand in his day; but it is unlikely (unless we credit him with loose errors like modern guide books *) that the casing went much higher. Hence the strong suggestions (1) and (2) are confirmed by (3), and may well be accepted. * In one of the most scientific of guide books it is said that the Third Pyramid cannot be ascended (it is easier than the Great Pyramid) and that it was "covered with slabs of polished. granite, and the upper part with rough stones !" or, making matters worse still, "in the case of the Third Pyramid the whole. surface was to be, as it were,veneered with slabs. of granite !" showing that the writer had never realised the proportions of a casing stone. But descriptions of the Pyramids are usually replete with extraordinary mistakes —"granite" for "limestone", "height" for "width," &c This being settled, it is worth notice that the granite just covered one quarter of the height of the Pyramid, the total height being 4 x 641 ± 4 Conversely this may be taken as giving a determination of the original total height, perhaps more accurately than by the varying angles of the Casing, thus :—
6452 (± 5 (?) for uncertainty of paving) x 4 = 2580 ± 2.
The mean planes of the edges of the core masonry are far more irregular than those of the Great Pyramid. At the base level adopted they are 4,082 on E., 4,077 on S., and 4,109 on W. averaging 4,089 apart; and their mean distance p 114 from the casing plane varies from 14 to 46, averaging 33. The core has no uniform skew to the casing, as in the Great Pyramid. The thickness of the top of separate granite casing stones is from 35 to 46, averaging 41.
83. The peribolus walls around the Third Pyramid (see P1. v.) are all built of unhewn stone, neatly laid with mud mortar, like the walls of the barrack galleries of the Second Pyramid. They are, however, irregular in their position, some being nearly square and parallel with the Pyrarnid, and the others on the South being very different. They were all fixed in the survey by triangulation, with more accuracy than the wall-surface can be defined.
E, to that of the larger, D ... 6275 ÷ 4
The mean of these is 1,553, which is perhaps 75 cubits of 20.71 inches.
Outside of last gallery to S. side of Third Pyramid peribolus ... 3,258 The mean of the latter three is 3,307, which is, perhaps, 160 cubits of 20.67 inches. The length of the W. enclosure 9,599 N. to S; is subdivided by a very faint ridge, in which no wall could be found. But this ridge runs straight towards the centre of the Pyramid, and it appears to be roughly about the breadth of the Pyramid, or 200 cubits, from the S. wall. Referring to the Pyramid side produced out westwards, as being the best-defined line of division for this, the N. side of the Pyramid is (3,309 + 92 (?) ) = 3,401 from the outside of the N. peribolus ; and as this is intentionally in line with the N. wall of the enclosure, therefore the S. wall of that enclosure is (9,599 - 3,401) = 6,198 S. p 115 of the N face of the Pyramid by intention - ie., as laid off by the builders.* * To understand a scheme it is necessary to take measurements, as far as possible, in the same order that the builders took them - i.e., including their mistakes in each step of the laying out; and so see, not what errors there are from a mathematically rigid plan, but what errors there are in each part as it was planned.
Now this is exactly the breadth of this enclosure (6,196 to 6,275), and is equal to 300 cubits of 20.66. Hence the design of this W. enclosure is a square of 300 Cubits, W. of the peribolus wall and S. of North face of the Pyramid, while its N. wall is advanced to the line of the N. peribolus wall. The W. wall of the enclosure is nearly straight, two points fixed on it lying 3 and 12 inches outside a line joining the corners.
S.W. corner (J) to S. wall of enclosure (F) ... 4,450
This length is necessarily (375 - 160) cubits by the previous relations and the mean 4,450, equals 215 cubits of 20.70. Shop
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