When
we see the great pyramids of Egypt, we are in awe of how they built
such wonderful edifices so big and long-lasting. We rarely see the early
attempts, the pyramids on the short side of the learning curve. They
are still standing. We just don’t see them front-and-center in movies or
documentaries, and even those touring Egypt are given little
explanation about them. These are the pyramids of King Sneferu.
When
King Sneferu came to the throne of Egypt, the cool thing that all the
pharaohs had was a Step Pyramid, like the original one built by King
Djoser and designed by Imhotep (not the mummy). King Sneferu could
easily have had one one because his predecessor King Huni had died
before his could be finished. All Sneferu had to do was step in and put
the last few blocks on.
But King Sneferu had a vision. He didn’t
want any old Step Pyramid. He was going to build Egypt’s first
smooth-sided pyramid, and make King Huni’s pyramid way taller in the
bargain. It didn’t work. The core of Huni’s pyramid couldn’t handle
the modifications and nowadays the Step Pyramid at Meidum looks like
this:
It’s not on a hill - that’s the outer layers of the pyramid
that have fallen down all around it. The name of the structure in
Arabic is Heram el-Kaddaab, which means something like The Sort-Of
Pyramid.
And that was only his first attempt. There would be others, with their own problems. Bitey Mad Lady tells
the story of Sneferu’s pyramids in a truly amusing way.
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