View allAll Photos Tagged Pyramid.

The Memphis pyramid.

You've seen the square watermelon. Now gaze upon Japan's homage to ancient Egypt... the Pyramid Watermelon, complete with a Pharaoh seal.

Román Diaz

Book: Origami Essence

Paper: 15x15 cm

Pyramids seen from the car when we arrived.

On Saturday 30th March 2013, 5 members of the South East Gang met up for a traipse through the East Sussex countryside in and around Brightling to see 4 of the 6 follies built by Jack Fuller.

 

Between visiting the Temple and the Pyramid we had lunch at The Swan Inn at Woods Corner - a lovely old pub with lots of interesting features and good food.

 

The sun came out whilst we were in Brightling churchyard to see the tomb of Jack Fuller, but it wasn't out for long!

long explosure at Pyramid Louvre Museum, Paris

Another pyramid using Geomag balls. Same trick to keep the whole thing from falling apart as in version one, but with one extra Geomag rod. As a result I could do one extra layer, hiding the rods completely on all sides.

 

However, the whole thing is quite difficult to build, since it is barely stable!

LOMO LCA+, Kodak elitechrome, cross processed

What better place to spend our final few hours in Egypt than the Giza plateau, this time exploring the site by foot and visiting mastaba tombs (there are many here but only a couple can be visited) and Menkaure's pyramid, the only one of the three large pyramids we'd not entered before (the two largest we'd been inside on our first visit in 1995, this time queues for the Great Pyramid of Khufu were discouraging, and Khafre's was closed).

 

The Giza Pyramids need no introduction, the largest and most famous monuments of antiquity and the sole surviving of the Seven Ancient Wonders of the World.

 

Situated on a desert plateau to the south west of Cairo (and indeed on the very edge of the city's modern urban sprawl) the pyramids of Giza form the heart of an extensive ancient necropolis with the monumental tombs of three of Egypt's earliest Old Kingdom pharaohs marked by the vast structures. Each of the pyramids is a colossal mass of near solid masonry, without adornment and with only a few passages within each leading to burial chambers long since emptied and robbed in antiquity.

 

The earliest is the Great Pyramid of Khufu (sometimes referred to by the Greek title 'Cheops', or by his full pharaonic name 'Khnum-Khufu'). It is also the largest; the structure is simply enormous and remained the World's tallest building until well into the Middle Ages.

 

The following pyramid was built by Khafre (also called 'Khephren') and is similarly vast (often appearing in photos of the whole group as larger due to its more central position) but is significantly smaller than Khufu's monument. The smallest of the three (at around less than half the size) was built by his successor Menkaure. Both his and Khufu's monuments have much smaller satellite pyramids at their base (some in more ruinous condition) to house the tombs of their queens.

 

Originally all the pyramids had a smooth outer covering of white stone but this was quarried away by later generations (much of which was used for some of Cairo's greatest Islamic monuments) leaving the rough inner blocks exposed. A small section remains at the apex of Khafre's pyramid (suggestive of a snow-capped mountain) to give a sense of the original finish and overall mass.

 

Today the site remains the most popular in Egypt and an astonishing testament to the skill and determination of its earliest builders.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giza_pyramid_complex

From the opening chords, Pyramid lets you know you're in for a trip. Voyager, In The Lap Of The Gods and Pyramania.

  

The oldest pyramid in Egypt. Called a step pyramid for obvious reasons

Robert Schlick - Tonight It's Me

Pyramid Books G248, 1957

Cover Artist: Lou Marchetti

 

"Who gets her for tonight?"

Heye / 1000 pieces / 29516 / 2013

 

I bought this puzzle immediately after I saw it in the store. It is a beautiful photograph of the pyramids in a great panorama format. It was somewhat challenging to assemble due to a limited color palette, but the various piece shapes made it easier.

Taken at the human pyramid festival, in Montserrat, outside of Barcelona.

Baltimore Comic-Con 2024

Long trip to Mexico and the amazing pyramid of sun

The Great Pyramid

   

"That is, the stones which were to fill up the angles of the steps, and make the side of the pyramid a smooth inclined plane. The pyramids built by Cheops, Chephren, and Mycerinus respectively are the Pyramids of Gizeh, near Cairo.

 

Herodotus, Histories [2.134.1]

These are the famous Pyramids at Giza, located outside the former Ancient Egyptian cities of Memphis and Heliopolis, located south and north of modern-day Cairo, respectively. The earliest pyramids were located at Saqqara, to the south, which included the stepped pyramid, the bent pyramid, and the red pyramid, which were the earliest attempts at pyramids by the Ancient Egyptian Old Kingdom during the 2600s BC. The pyramids at Giza were constructed starting around 2580 BC with the Pyramid of Cheops (Khufu), the tallest of the pyramids, also known as the Great Pyramid. The second tallest is the Pyramid of Khafre (Cheprhen), which maintains part of its limestone facing near the top and was constructed starting around 2558 BC. The smallest of the pyramids is the Pyramid of Menkaure, built starting around 2510 BC. The pyramids are part of a larger complex of tombs, temples, and other structures, which includes the Great Sphinx. The Pyramids of Cheops and Menkaure also include three smaller pyramids for the queens of the pharaohs that built the pyramids. Considered one of the seven wonders of the ancient world, the Pyramid of Cheops remained the tallest man-made structure until Lincoln Cathedral was constructed in England during the Middle Ages. Though the tombs were raided of their valuables during ancient times, the pyramids have remained due to their sheer size, despite being used as a source of stone during the Ptolemaic, Roman, and Medieval periods, with the last stones finally being taken during the 19th Century. The pyramids also survived several attempts by the Sultans during the Medieval period, notably al-Malek al-Aziz Othman ben Yusuf during the 1100s AD, to demolish them due to their association with the ancient pagan religion, seen as being an affront to their faith, which they survived due to the sheer size of the task making it futile. Today, the pyramids have been stabilized and attract thousands of visitors every year, and remain the most iconic and recognizable world heritage site and ancient structures in the country and the most recognizable structures on the continent of Africa.

These are the famous Pyramids at Giza, located outside the former Ancient Egyptian cities of Memphis and Heliopolis, located south and north of modern-day Cairo, respectively. The earliest pyramids were located at Saqqara, to the south, which included the stepped pyramid, the bent pyramid, and the red pyramid, which were the earliest attempts at pyramids by the Ancient Egyptian Old Kingdom during the 2600s BC. The pyramids at Giza were constructed starting around 2580 BC with the Pyramid of Cheops (Khufu), the tallest of the pyramids, also known as the Great Pyramid. The second tallest is the Pyramid of Khafre (Cheprhen), which maintains part of its limestone facing near the top and was constructed starting around 2558 BC. The smallest of the pyramids is the Pyramid of Menkaure, built starting around 2510 BC. The pyramids are part of a larger complex of tombs, temples, and other structures, which includes the Great Sphinx. The Pyramids of Cheops and Menkaure also include three smaller pyramids for the queens of the pharaohs that built the pyramids. Considered one of the seven wonders of the ancient world, the Pyramid of Cheops remained the tallest man-made structure until Lincoln Cathedral was constructed in England during the Middle Ages. Though the tombs were raided of their valuables during ancient times, the pyramids have remained due to their sheer size, despite being used as a source of stone during the Ptolemaic, Roman, and Medieval periods, with the last stones finally being taken during the 19th Century. The pyramids also survived several attempts by the Sultans during the Medieval period, notably al-Malek al-Aziz Othman ben Yusuf during the 1100s AD, to demolish them due to their association with the ancient pagan religion, seen as being an affront to their faith, which they survived due to the sheer size of the task making it futile. Today, the pyramids have been stabilized and attract thousands of visitors every year, and remain the most iconic and recognizable world heritage site and ancient structures in the country and the most recognizable structures on the continent of Africa.

The tiny one is the Pyramid of Menkaure (Mycerinus).

Although the city of Cairo encroaches up to the edge of the pyramids you still get a feeling of what it must have been like.

 

The small procession of camels makes a nice foreground to the desert sourroundings and the pyramids in the background.

Here stand the witnesses to time.

1 2 ••• 25 26 28 30 31 ••• 79 80