Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Saqqara

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Type
  
Necropolis

Criteria
  
i, iii, vi

Type
  
Cultural

Region
  
Lower Egypt


Location
  
Giza Governorate, Egypt

Periods
  
Early Dynastic Period to Middle Ages

Official name
  
Memphis and its Necropolis – the Pyramid Fields from Giza to Dahshur

Burials
  
Menes, Teti, Pepi II Neferkare, Pepi I Meryre

Similar
  
Pyramid of Djoser, Egyptian pyramids, Mastaba, Great Sphinx of Giza, Egyptian Museum

Saqqara ancient burial ground in egypt


Saqqara (Arabic: سقارة‎‎, [sɑʔˈʔɑːɾɑ]), also spelled Sakkara or Saccara in English /səˈkɑːrə/, is a vast, ancient burial ground in Egypt, serving as the necropolis for the Ancient Egyptian capital, Memphis. Saqqara features numerous pyramids, including the world-famous Step pyramid of Djoser, sometimes referred to as the Step Tomb due to its rectangular base, as well as a number of mastabas (Arabic word meaning 'bench'). Located some 30 km (19 mi) south of modern-day Cairo, Saqqara covers an area of around 7 by 1.5 km (4.35 by 0.93 mi).

Contents

Saqqara Guardian39s Saqqara The Step Pyramid

At Saqqara, the oldest complete stone building complex known in history was built: Djoser's step pyramid, built during the Third Dynasty. Another 16 Egyptian kings built pyramids at Saqqara, which are now in various states of preservation or dilapidation. High officials added private funeral monuments to this necropolis during the entire pharaonic period. It remained an important complex for non-royal burials and cult ceremonies for more than 3,000 years, well into Ptolemaic and Roman times.

Saqqara The Step Pyramid of Saqqara

North of the area known as Saqqara lies Abusir; south lies Dahshur. The area running from Giza to Dahshur has been used as a necropolis by the inhabitants of Memphis at different times, and it has been designated as a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1979. Some scholars believe that the name Saqqara is not derived from the ancient Egyptian funerary god Sokar, but from a supposed local Berber Tribe called Beni Saqqar.

Saqqara burial ground


Early Dynastic

Saqqara Saqqara Wikipedia

The earliest burials of nobles can be traced back to the First Dynasty, at the north side of the Saqqara plateau. During this time, the royal burial ground was at Abydos. The first royal burials at Saqqara, comprising underground galleries, date to the Second Dynasty. The last Second Dynasty king Khasekhemwy was buried in his tomb at Abydos, but also built a funerary monument at Saqqara consisting of a large rectangular enclosure, known as Gisr el-Mudir. It probably inspired the monumental enclosure wall around the Step Pyramid complex. Djoser's funerary complex, built by the royal architect Imhotep, further comprises a large number of dummy buildings and a secondary mastaba (the so-called 'Southern Tomb'). French architect and Egyptologist Jean-Philippe Lauer spent the greater part of his life excavating and restoring Djoser's funerary complex.

Early Dynastic monuments

Saqqara Saqqara amp Dahshour Happy Egypt

  • tomb of king Hotepsekhemwy
  • tomb of king Nynetjer
  • Buried Pyramid, funerary complex of king Sekhemkhet
  • Gisr el-Mudir, funerary complex of king Khasekhemwy
  • Step Pyramid, funerary complex of king Djoser
  • Old Kingdom

    Saqqara Saqqara Herodotus Returns

    Nearly all Fourth Dynasty kings chose to have a different location for their pyramids. During the second half of the Old Kingdom, under the Fifth and Sixth Dynasties, Saqqara was again the royal burial ground. The Fifth and Sixth Dynasty pyramids are not built of massive stone, but with a core consisting of rubble. They are consequently less well preserved than the world-famous pyramids built by the Fourth Dynasty kings at Giza. Unas, the last ruler of the Fifth Dynasty, was the first king to adorn the chambers in his pyramid with Pyramid Texts. It was custom for courtiers during the Old Kingdom to be buried in mastaba tombs close to the pyramid of their king. Clusters of private tombs were thus formed in Saqqara around the pyramid complexes of Unas and Teti.

    Old Kingdom monuments

  • Mastabet el-Fara'un, tomb of king Shepseskaf (Dynasty 4)
  • Pyramid complex of king Userkaf (Dynasty 5)
  • Haram el-Shawaf, pyramid complex of king Djedkare
  • Pyramid of king Menkauhor
  • Mastaba of Ti
  • Mastaba of the Two Brothers (Khnumhotep and Niankhkhnum)
  • Pyramid complex of king Unas
  • Mastaba of Ptahhotep
  • Pyramid complex of king Teti (Dynasty 6)
  • Mastaba of Mereruka
  • Mastaba of Kagemni
  • Mastaba of Akhethetep
  • Pyramid complex of king Pepi I
  • Pyramid complex of king Merenre
  • Pyramid complex of king Pepi II
  • Tomb of Perneb (now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art of New York)
  • First Intermediate Period monuments

  • Pyramid of king Ibi (Dynasty 8)
  • Middle Kingdom

    From the Middle Kingdom onwards, Memphis was no longer the capital of the country, and kings built their funerary complexes elsewhere. Few private monuments from this period have been found at Saqqara.

    Second Intermediate Period monuments

  • Pyramid of king Khendjer (Dynasty 13)
  • Pyramid of an unknown king
  • New Kingdom

    During the New Kingdom Memphis was an important administrative and military centre, being the capital after the Amaran Period. From the Eighteenth Dynasty onwards many high officials built tombs at Saqqara. When still a general, Horemheb built a large tomb here, though he was later buried as Pharaoh in the Valley of the Kings at Thebes. Other important tombs belong to the vizier Aperel, the vizier Neferrenpet, the artist Thutmose and to Maia, the wet-nurse of Tutankhamun.

    Many monuments from earlier periods were still standing, but dilapidated by this period. Prince Khaemweset, son of Pharaoh Ramesses II, made repairs to buildings at Saqqara. Among other things, he restored the Pyramid of Unas and added an inscription to its south face to commemorate the restoration. He enlarged the Serapeum, the burial site of the mummified Apis bulls, and was later buried in the catacombs. The Serapeum, containing one undisturbed interment of an Apis bull and the tomb of Khaemweset, were rediscovered by the French Egyptologist Auguste Mariette in 1851.

    New Kingdom monuments

  • Several clusters of tombs of high officials, among which the tombs of Horemheb and of Maya and Merit. Reliefs and statues from these two tombs are on display in the National Museum of Antiquities at Leiden, the Netherlands, and in the British Museum, London.
  • After the New Kingdom

    In the periods after the New Kingdom, when several cities in the Delta served as capital of Egypt, Saqqara remained in use as a burial ground for nobles. Moreover, the area became an important destination for pilgrims to a number of cult centres. Activities sprang up around the Serapeum, and extensive underground galleries were cut into the rock as burial sites for large amounts of mummified ibises, baboons, cats, dogs, and falcons.

    Monuments of the Late Period, the Graeco-Roman and later periods

  • Several shaft tombs of officials of the Late Period
  • Serapeum (the larger part dating to the Ptolemaeic Period)
  • The so-called 'Philosophers circle', a monument to important Greek thinkers and poets, consisting of statues of Hesiod, Homer, Pindar, Plato, and others (Ptolemaeic)
  • Several Coptic monasteries, among which the Monastery of Apa Jeremias (Byzantine and Early Islamic Periods)
  • Site looting during 2011 protests

    Saqqara and the surrounding areas of Abusir and Dahshur suffered damage by looters during the 2011 Egyptian protests. Store rooms were broken into, but the monuments were mostly unharmed.

    Recent Discoveries

    During routine excavations in 2011 at the dog catacomb in Saqqara necropolis, an excavation team led by Salima Ikram, and an international team of researchers led by Paul Nicholson of Cardiff University, uncovered almost eight million animal mummies at the burial site. It is thought that the mummified animals, mostly dogs, were intended to pass on prayers of their owners to their Gods.

    References

    Saqqara Wikipedia