Uncovering Secrets of the Sphinx
After decades of research, American archaeologist Mark Lehner has some answers about the mysteries of the Egyptian colossus
- By Evan Hadingham
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2010, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 5)
The face, though better preserved than most of the statue, has been battered by centuries of weathering and vandalism. In 1402, an Arab historian reported that a Sufi zealot had disfigured it “to remedy some religious errors.” Yet there are clues to what the face looked like in its prime. Archaeological excavations in the early 19th century found pieces of its carved stone beard and a royal cobra emblem from its headdress. Residues of red pigment are still visible on the face, leading researchers to conclude that at some point, the Sphinx’s entire visage was painted red. Traces of blue and yellow paint elsewhere suggest to Lehner that the Sphinx was once decked out in gaudy comic book colors.
For thousands of years, sand buried the colossus up to its shoulders, creating a vast disembodied head atop the eastern edge of the Sahara. Then, in 1817, a Genoese adventurer, Capt. Giovanni Battista Caviglia, led 160 men in the first modern attempt to dig out the Sphinx. They could not hold back the sand, which poured into their excavation pits nearly as fast as they could dig it out. The Egyptian archaeologist Selim Hassan finally freed the statue from the sand in the late 1930s. “The Sphinx has thus emerged into the landscape out of shadows of what seemed to be an impenetrable oblivion,” the New York Times declared.
The question of who built the Sphinx has long vexed Egyptologists and archaeologists. Lehner, Hawass and others agree it was Pharaoh Khafre, who ruled Egypt during the Old Kingdom, which began around 2,600 B.C. and lasted some 500 years before giving way to civil war and famine. It’s known from hieroglyphic texts that Khafre’s father, Khufu, built the 481-foot-tall Great Pyramid, a quarter mile from where the Sphinx would later be built. Khafre, following a tough act, constructed his own pyramid, ten feet shorter than his father’s, also a quarter of a mile behind the Sphinx. Some of the evidence linking Khafre with the Sphinx comes from Lehner’s research, but the idea dates back to 1853.
That’s when a French archaeologist named Auguste Mariette unearthed a life-size statue of Khafre, carved with startling realism from black volcanic rock, amid the ruins of a building he discovered adjacent to the Sphinx that would later be called the Valley Temple. What’s more, Mariette found the remnants of a stone causeway—a paved, processional road—connecting the Valley Temple to a mortuary temple next to Khafre’s pyramid. Then, in 1925, French archaeologist and engineer Emile Baraize probed the sand directly in front of the Sphinx and discovered yet another Old Kingdom building—now called the Sphinx Temple—strikingly similar in its ground plan to the ruins Mariette had already found.
Despite these clues that a single master building plan tied the Sphinx to Khafre’s pyramid and his temples, some experts continued to speculate that Khufu or other pharaohs had built the statue. Then, in 1980, Lehner recruited a young German geologist, Tom Aigner, who suggested a novel way of showing that the Sphinx was an integral part of Khafre’s larger building complex. Limestone is the result of mud, coral and the shells of plankton-like creatures compressed together over tens of millions of years. Looking at samples from the Sphinx Temple and the Sphinx itself, Aigner and Lehner inventoried the different fossils making up the limestone. The fossil fingerprints showed that the blocks used to build the wall of the temple must have come from the ditch surrounding the Sphinx. Apparently, workmen, probably using ropes and wooden sledges, hauled away the quarried blocks to construct the temple as the Sphinx was being carved out of the stone.
That Khafre arranged for construction of his pyramid, the temples and the Sphinx seems increasingly likely. “Most scholars believe, as I do,” Hawass wrote in his 2006 book, Mountain of the Pharaohs, “that the Sphinx represents Khafre and forms an integral part of his pyramid complex.”
But who carried out the backbreaking work of creating the Sphinx? In 1990, an American tourist was riding in the desert half a mile south of the Sphinx when she was thrown from her horse after it stumbled on a low mud-brick wall. Hawass investigated and discovered an Old Kingdom cemetery. Some 600 people were buried there, with tombs belonging to overseers—identified by inscriptions recording their names and titles—surrounded by the humbler tombs of ordinary laborers.
Near the cemetery, nine years later, Lehner discovered his Lost City. He and Hawass had been aware since the mid-1980s that there were buildings at that site. But it wasn’t until they excavated and mapped the area that they realized it was a settlement bigger than ten football fields and dating to Khafre’s reign. At its heart were four clusters of eight long mud-brick barracks. Each structure had the elements of an ordinary house—a pillared porch, sleeping platforms and a kitchen—that was enlarged to accommodate around 50 people sleeping side by side. The barracks, Lehner says, could have accommodated between 1,600 to 2,000 workers—or more, if the sleeping quarters were on two levels. The workers’ diet indicates they weren’t slaves. Lehner’s team found remains of mostly male cattle under 2 years old—in other words, prime beef. Lehner thinks ordinary Egyptians may have rotated in and out of the work crew under some sort of national service or feudal obligation to their superiors.
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Comments (100)
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great facts
Posted by on April 18,2013 | 01:29 PM
Thank you i loved this web site it was very helpful!!! <3
Posted by kate on March 12,2013 | 06:48 PM
i love this cite it is so imforming on the sphinx
Posted by trevor f on February 7,2013 | 10:12 AM
very good website x greaty facts
Posted by deborah on January 24,2013 | 05:45 AM
good website full of facts
Posted by lilly on January 24,2013 | 05:43 AM
This information only has one topic: trying to find an underground secret room where some "alantians" put their records before "atlantis" sank below the ocean. This doesn't help me at all. I'm trying to write a 3-page essay on the sphinx in my social studies class, and this is the worst website i've been too. You say you are "uncovering the sphinx" but all your doing is writing a biography on that Lehner guy.
Posted by Alex Barberini on January 21,2013 | 08:19 AM
this stuff is very interesting before I read this I knew nothing about the sphinx now I know like everything. this passage is so informative I can get a 1,000,000 word essay and do it all
Posted by Ayslinn on January 14,2013 | 03:14 PM
The proportions of the Great Sphinx show me not a lion, but a cheetah. Look at the long legs, relatively small head. Wild cheetahs today have a very unexpected genetic pattern- they are all genetically practically identical. This suggests that the species has an unusual history. We know that cheetahs were kept as hunting animals in ancient Egypt, but it may go far beyond that. I think today's cheetahs might be survivors of cats domesticated ages ago and bred by prehistoric African cultures, and that the Great Sphinx is a record of the connection between man and cheetah in forgotten, pre-dynastic Egypt.
Posted by joe poore on December 19,2012 | 09:29 PM
Not very helpful
Posted by Octavia Evans on December 12,2012 | 10:13 AM
I have read the article thru. It's wrong to assume ancient Egyptians lacked steel tools. They had them! You have dug only 1/16 to get to the bottom of Giza where they lay. It is simple; If NY is covered with sand, and a primitive man see one of its tallest building at his foot he will claim that he has discovered something interesting. But then he has seen only a roof. You can never see cranes which built the skyscraper at the roof. What you see at Giza is only a roof. Simple.
Posted by Allan Lema on December 8,2012 | 06:55 AM
interesting! :D
Posted by bob on December 7,2012 | 04:31 PM
Very intresting stuff!
Posted by hi on October 28,2012 | 02:24 PM
Very intresting stuff!
Posted by hi on October 28,2012 | 02:24 PM
The sphinx and the Great Pyramid was built by The Great Thoth The Atlantean. He reveals its secrets in his Emerald Tablets.
Posted by Alex on September 10,2012 | 02:44 PM
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