cases to pre-dynastic times—that had been mysteriously hollowed out of

  a range of materials such as diorite, basalt, quartz crystal and

  metamorphic schist.17

  For example, more than 30,000 such vessels had been found in the

  chambers beneath the Third Dynasty Step Pyramid of Zoser at Saqqara.18

  That meant that they were at least as old as Zoser himself (i.e. around

  2650 BC19). Theoretically, they could have been even older than that,

  14 Ibid., pp. 74-5.

  15 The Pyramids: An Enigma Solved, p. 8.

  16 The Pyramids and Temples of Gizeh, p. 75.

  17 The Pyramids: An Enigma Solved, p. 118.

  18 Egypt: Land of the Pharaohs, Time-Life Books, 1992, p. 51.

  19 Atlas of Ancient Egypt, p. 36.

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  because identical vessels had been found in pre-dynastic strata dated to

  4000 BC and earlier,20 and because the practice of handing down

  treasured heirlooms from generation to generation had been deeply

  ingrained in Egypt since time immemorial.

  Whether they were made in 2500 BC or in 4000 BC or even earlier, the

  stone vessels from the Step Pyramid were remarkable for their

  workmanship, which once again seemed to have been accomplished by

  some as yet unimagined (and, indeed, almost unimaginable) tool.

  Why unimaginable? Because many of the vessels were tall vases with

  long, thin, elegant necks and widely flared interiors, often incorporating

  fully hollowed-out shoulders. No instrument yet invented was capable of

  carving vases into shapes like these, because such an instrument would

  have had to have been narrow enough to have passed through the necks

  and strong enough (and of the right shape) to have scoured out the

  shoulders and the rounded interiors. And how could sufficient upward

  and outward pressure have been generated and applied within the vases

  to achieve these effects?

  The tall vases were by no means the only enigmatic vessels unearthed

  from the Pyramid of Zoser, and from a number of other archaic sites.

  There were monolithic urns with delicate ornamental handles left

  attached to their exteriors by the carvers. There were bowls, again with

  extremely narrow necks like the vases, and with widely flared, pot-bellied

  interiors. There were also open bowls, and almost microscopic vials, and

  occasional strange wheel-shaped objects cut out of metamorphic schist

  with inwardly curled edges planed down so fine that they were almost

  translucent.21 In all cases what was really perplexing was the precision

  with which the interiors and exteriors of these vessels had been made to

  correspond—curve matching curve—over absolutely smooth, polished

  surfaces with no tool marks visible.

  There was no technology known to have been available to the Ancient

  Egyptians capable of achieving such results. Nor, for that matter, would

  any stone-carver today be able to match them, even if he were working

  with the best tungsten-carbide tools. The implication, therefore, is that an

  unknown or secret technology had been put to use in Ancient Egypt.

  Ceremony of the sarcophagus

  Standing in the King’s Chamber, facing west—the direction of death

  amongst both the Ancient Egyptians and the Maya—I rested my hands

  lightly on the gnarled granite edge of the sarcophagus which

  Egyptologists insist had been built to house the body of Khufu. I gazed

  20 For example, see Cyril Aldred, Egypt to the End of the Old Kingdom, Thames &

  Hudson, London, 1988, p. 25.

  21 Ibid., p. 57. The relevant artefacts are in the Cairo Museum.

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  into its murky depths where the dim electric lighting of the chamber

  seemed hardly to penetrate and saw specks of dust swirling in a golden

  cloud.

  It was just a trick of light and shadow, of course, but the King’s

  Chamber was full of such illusions. I remembered that Napoleon

  Bonaparte had paused to spend a night alone here during his conquest of

  Egypt in the late eighteenth century. The next morning he had emerged

  pale and shaken, having experienced something which had profoundly

  disturbed him but about which he never afterwards spoke.22

  Had he tried to sleep in the sarcophagus?

  Acting on impulse, I climbed into the granite coffer and lay down, face

  upwards, my feet pointed towards the south and my head to the north.

  Napoleon was a little guy, so he must have fitted comfortably. There

  was plenty of room for me too. But had Khufu been here as well?

  I relaxed and tried not to worry about the possibility of one of the

  pyramid guards coming in and finding me in this embarrassing and

  probably illegal position. Hoping that I would remain undisturbed for a

  few minutes, I folded my hands across my chest and gave voice to a

  sustained low-pitched tone—something I had tried out several times

  before at other points in the King’s Chamber. On those occasions, in the

  centre of the floor, I had noticed that the walls and ceiling seemed to

  collect the sound, to gather and to amplify it and project it back at me so

  that I could sense the returning vibrations through my feet and scalp and

  skin.

  Now in the sarcophagus I was aware of very much the same effect,

  although seemingly amplified and concentrated many times over. It was

  like being in the sound-box of some giant, resonant musical instrument

  designed to emit for ever just one reverberating note. The sound was

  intense and quite disturbing. I imagined it rising out of the coffer and

  bouncing off the red granite walls and ceiling of the King’s Chamber,

  shooting up through the northern and southern ‘ventilation’ shafts and

  spreading across the Giza plateau like a sonic mushroom cloud.

  With this ambitious vision in my mind, and with the sound of my lowpitched note echoing in my ears and causing the sarcophagus to vibrate

  around me, I closed my eyes. When I opened them a few minutes later it

  was to behold a distressing sight: six Japanese tourists of mixed ages

  and sexes had congregated around the sarcophagus—two of them

  standing to the east, two to the west and one each to the north and

  south.

  They all looked ... amazed. And I was amazed to see them. Because of

  recent attacks by armed Islamic extremists there were now almost no

  tourists at Giza and I had expected to have the King’s Chamber to myself.

  What does one do in a situation like this?

  22 Reported in P. W. Roberts, River in the Desert: Modern Travels in Ancient Egypt,

  Random House, New York and Toronto, 1993, p. 115.

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  Gathering as much dignity as I could muster, I stood upright, smiling

  and dusting myself off. The Japanese stepped back and I climbed out of

  the sarcophagus. Cultivating a businesslike manner, as though I did

  things like this all the time, I strolled to the point two-thirds of the way

  along the northern wall of the King’s Chamber where the entrance to

  what Egyptologists refer to as the ‘northern ventilation shaft’ is located,

  and began to exami
ne it minutely.

  Some 8 inches wide by 9 inches high, it was, I knew, more than 200 feet

  in length and emerged into open air at the pyramid’s 103rd course of

  masonry. Presumably by design rather than by accident, it pointed to the

  circumpolar regions of the northern heavens at an angle of 32° 30’. This,

  in the Pyramid Age around 2500 BC, would have meant that it was

  directed on the upper culmination of Alpha Draconis, a prominent star in

  the constellation of Draco.23

  Much to my relief the Japanese rapidly completed their tour of the

  King’s Chamber and left, stooping, without a backward glance. As soon

  as they had gone I crossed over to the other side of the room to take a

  look at the southern shaft. Since I had last been here some months

  before, its appearance had changed horribly. Its mouth now contained a

  massive electrical air-conditioning unit installed by Rudolf Gantenbrink,

  who even now was turning his attentions to the neglected shafts of the

  Queen’s Chamber.

  Since Egyptologists were satisfied that the King’s Chamber shafts had

  been built for ventilation purposes, they saw nothing untoward in using

  modern technology to improve the efficiency of this task. Yet wouldn’t

  horizontal shafts have been more effective than sloping ones if their

  primary purpose had been ventilation, and easier to build?24 It was

  therefore unlikely to be an accident that the southern shaft of the King’s

  Chamber targeted the southern heavens at 45°. During the Pyramid Age

  this was the location for the meridian transit of Zeta Orionis, the lowest

  of the three stars of Orion’s Belt25—an alignment, I was to discover in due

  course, that would turn out to be of the utmost significance for future

  pyramid research.

  The game-master

  Now that I had the Chamber to myself again, I walked over to the western

  wall, on the far side of the sarcophagus, and turned to face east.

  The huge room had an endless capacity to generate indications of

  mathematical game-playing. For example, its height (19 feet 1 inch) was

  23 Robert Bauval, Discussions in Egyptology No. 29, 1994.

  24 Ibid.

  25 Ibid. See also The Orion Mystery, p. 172.

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  exactly half of the length of its floor diagonal (38 feet 2 inches).26

  Moreover, since the King’s Chamber formed a perfect 1 x 2 rectangle,

  was it conceivable that the pyramid builders were unaware that they had

  also made it express and exemplify the ‘golden section’?

  Known as phi, the golden section was another irrational number like pi

  that could not be worked out arithmetically. Its value was the square root

  of 5 plus 1 divided by 2, equivalent to 1.61803.27 This proved to be the

  ‘limiting value of the ratio between successive numbers in the Fibonacci

  series—the series of numbers beginning 0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13—in which

  each term is the sum of the two previous terms.’28

  Phi could also be obtained schematically by dividing a line A-B at a

  point C in such a way that the whole line A-B was longer than the first

  part, A-C, in the same proportion as the first part, A-C, was longer than

  the remainder, C-B.29 This proportion, which had been proven particularly

  harmonious and agreeable to the eye, had supposedly been first

  discovered by the Pythagorean Greeks, who incorporated it into the

  Parthenon at Athens. There is absolutely no doubt, however, that phi

  illustrated and obtained at least 2000 years previously in the King’s

  Chamber of the Great Pyramid at Giza.

  26 Traveller’s Key to Ancient Egypt, p. 117; The Great Pyramid: Your Personal Guide, p.

  64.

  27 John Ivimy, The Sphinx and the Megaliths, Abacus, London, 1976, p. 118.

  28 Ibid.

  29 Secrets of the Great Pyramid, p. 191.

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  At the very beginning of its Dynastic history, Egypt inherited a

  system of measures from unknown predecessors. Expressed in these

  ancient measures, the floor dimensions of the King’s Chamber (34 ft.

  4” x 17 ft. 2”) work out at exactly 20 x 10 royal cubits’, while the

  height of the side walls to the ceiling is exactly 11.18 royal cubits.

  The semi-diagonal of the floor (A-B) is also exactly 11.18 royal cubits

  and can be ‘swung up’ to C to confirm the height of the chamber. Phi

  is defined mathematically as the square root of 5 + 1 + 2, i.e. 1.618. Is

  it a coincidence that the distance C-D (i.e. the wall height of the King’s

  Chamber plus half the width of its floor) equals 16.18 royal cubits,

  thus incorporating the essential digits of phi?

  To understand how it is necessary to envisage the rectangular floor of

  the chamber as being divided into two imaginary squares of equal size,

  with the side length of each square being given a value of 1. If either of

  these two squares were then split in half, thus forming two new

  rectangles, and if the diagonal of the rectangle nearest to the centreline

  of the King’s Chamber were swung down to the base, the point where its

  tip touched the base would be phi, or 1.618, in relation to the side length

  (i.e., 1) of the original square.30 (An alternative way of obtaining phi, also

  built into the King’s Chamber’s dimensions, is illustrated on the previous

  page.)

  The Egyptologists considered all this was pure chance. Yet the pyramid

  builders had done nothing by chance. Whoever they had been, I found it

  30 Ibid. See also Traveller’s Key to Ancient Egypt, pp. 117-19.

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  hard to imagine more systematic and mathematically minded people.

  I’d had quite enough of their mathematical games for one day. As I left

  the King’s Chamber, however, I could not forget that it was located in line

  with the 50th course of the Great Pyramid’s masonry at a height of

  almost 150 feet above the ground.31 This meant, as Flinders Petrie

  pointed out with some astonishment, that the builders had managed to

  place it ‘at the level where the vertical section of the Pyramid was halved,

  where the area of the horizontal section was half that of the base, where

  the diagonal from corner to corner was equal to the length of the base,

  and where the width of the face was equal to half the diagonal of the

  base’.32

  Confidently and efficiently fooling around with more than six million

  tons of stone, creating galleries and chambers and shafts and corridors

  more or less at will, achieving near-perfect symmetry, near-perfect right

  angles, and near-perfect alignments to the cardinal points, the mysterious

  builders of the Great Pyramid had found the time to play a great many

  other tricks as well with the dimensions of the vast monument.

  Why did their minds work this way? What had they been trying to say or

  do? And why, so many thousands of years after it was built, did the

  monument still exert a magnetic influence upon so many people, from so

  many different walks of life, who came into contact with it?

  There was a Sphinx in the neighbourhood, so I de
cided that I would put

  these riddles to It ...

  31 The Great Pyramid: Your Personal Guide, p. 64.

  32 The Pyramids and Temples of Gizeh, p. 93.

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  Chapter 39

  Place of the Beginning

  Giza, Egypt, 16 March 1993, 3:30 p.m.

  It was mid afternoon by the time I left the Great Pyramid. Retracing the

  route that Santha and I had followed the night before when we had

  climbed the monument, I walked eastwards along the northern face,

  southwards along the flank of the eastern face, clambered over mounds

  of rubble and ancient tombs that clustered closely in this part of the

  necropolis, and came out on to the sand-covered limestone bedrock of

  the Giza plateau, which sloped down towards the south and east.

  At the bottom of this long gentle slope, about half a kilometre from the

  south-eastern corner of the Great Pyramid, the Sphinx crouched in his

  rock-hewn pit. Sixty-six feet high and more than 240 feet long, with a

  head measuring 13 feet 8 inches wide,1 he was, by a considerable margin,

  the largest single piece of sculpture in the world—and the most

  renowned:

  A shape with lion body and the head of a man

  A gaze blank and pitiless as the sun.2

  Approaching the monument from the north-west I crossed the ancient

  causeway that connected the Second Pyramid with the so-called Valley

  Temple of Khafre, a most unusual structure located just 50 feet south of

  the Sphinx itself on the eastern edge of the Giza necropolis.

  This Temple had long been believed to be far older than the time of

  Khafre. Indeed throughout much of the nineteenth century the consensus

  among scholars was that it had been built in remote prehistory, and had

  nothing to do with the architecture of dynastic Egypt.3 What changed all

  that was the discovery, buried within the Temple precincts, of a number

  of inscribed statues of Khafre. Most were pretty badly smashed, but one,

  found upside down in a deep pit in an antechamber, was almost intact.

  Life-sized, and exquisitely carved out of black, jewel-hard diorite, it

  showed the Fourth Dynasty pharaoh seated on his throne and gazing with

  serene indifference towards infinity.

  At this point the razor-sharp reasoning of Egyptology was brought to

  bear, and a solution of almost awe-inspiring brilliance was worked out: