Region | Egypt
Egypt to open inner chambers of 'bent' pyramid
Travellers to Egypt will soon be able to explore the inner chambers of the 4,500-year-old "bent" pyramid, Egypt's antiquities chief announced.
- Image Credit: AP
- The increased access to the pyramids south of Cairo is part of a new sustainable development campaign that Egypt hopes will attract more visitors.
Cairo: Travellers to Egypt will soon be able to explore the inner chambers of the 4,500-year-old "bent" pyramid, Egypt's antiquities chief announced.
The increased access to the pyramids south of Cairo is part of a new sustainable development campaign that Egypt hopes will attract more visitors.
Egypt's chief archaeologist, Zahi Hawass, said the chambers of the 330-foot-pyramid outside the village of Dahshur, south of Cairo, will be opened for the first time to tourists within the next "month or two." "This is going to be an adventure," he said.
Dahshur's bent pyramid is famous for its irregular profile. The massive tomb's sides rise at a steep angle but then abruptly tapers off at a more shallow approach to the pyramid's apex.
Archaeologists believe the pyramid-builders changed their minds while constructing it out of fear the whole structure might collapse because the sides were too steep.
The pyramid is entered through a cramped 80 meter-long tunnel that opens into an immense vaulted chamber.
From there, passageways lead to other rooms including one that has cedar wood beams believed to have been imported from ancient Lebanon.
Hawass said archaeologists believe the 4th dynasty founder Pharaoh Sneferu's burial chamber lies undiscovered inside the pyramid.
Hawass said several other nearby pyramids, including one with an underground labyrinth from the Middle Kingdom, would also be opened in the next year.
"It is amazing because of a maze of corridors underneath this pyramid—the visit will be unique," said Hawass, about the pyramid of Amenhemhat III, who ruled during Egypt's 12th dynasty from 1859-1813 BC.
"Twenty-five years ago, I went to enter this pyramid, and I was afraid I would never come back, and I had to ask the workmen to tie ropes around my leg so I wouldn't lose my way," he recalled.
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