Menkaure's Pyramid

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Menkaure's Pyramid
Menkaure
The Pyramid of Menkaure
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The Pyramid of Menkaure
Type True Pyramid
Height 65.5 meters (215 feet)
Base 105 m (344 ft)
Slope 51°20′25″

Menkaure's Pyramid, located on the Giza Plateau on the southwestern outskirts of Cairo, Egypt, is the smallest of the three Pyramids of Giza. It was built to serve as the tomb of the fourth dynasty Egyptian Pharaoh Menkaure.

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[edit] Size and construction

Menkaure's Pyramid had an original height of 65.5 meters (215 feet). It now stands at 62 m (203 ft) tall with a base of 105 m (344 ft). Its angle of incline is approximately 51°20′25″. It was constructed of limestone and granite.

[edit] Age and location

The pyramid's date of construction is unknown, because Menkaure's reign has not been accurately defined, but it was probably completed sometime during the 26th century BC. It lies a few hundred meters southwest of its larger neighbors, the Pyramid of Khafre and the Great Pyramid of Khufu in the Giza necropolis.

[edit] Coffin and Sarcophagus

Richard William Howard Vyse, while surveying the pyramid in a 1924 investigation by Harvard University and the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, discovered in the upper antechamber the remains of a wooden anthropoid coffin inscribed with Menkaure's name and containing human bones. This is now considered to be a substitute coffin from the Saite period, and radiocarbon dating on the bones determined them to be less than 2,000 years old[citation needed]. Deeper into the pyramid Vyse came upon a beautiful basalt sarcophagus, rich in detail with a bold projecting cornice. Unfortunately this sarcophagus now lies at the bottom of the Mediterranean, sinking with the Beatrice as she made her way to Great Britain.[1] It is one of only a handful of extant Old Kingdom sarcophagi. The anthropoid coffin, however, was successfully transported on a separate ship and may be seen today at the British Museum[citation needed].

[edit] Further reading

[edit] References

  1. ^ [1] History of Giza

[edit] External links