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{{Short description|Limestone statue of a reclining sphinx}} | |||
] | |||
{{redirect|The Sphinx}} | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2019}} | |||
{{Infobox ancient site | |||
| name = Great Sphinx of Giza | |||
| native_name = | |||
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| image = Sphinx with the third pyramid.jpg | |||
| image_size = 250px | |||
| alt = | |||
| caption =The sphinx in 2017 | |||
| map = | |||
| map_type = Egypt | |||
| map_alt = | |||
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| altitude_m = <!-- Enter a number for altitude in meters (m) --> | |||
| altitude_ref = | |||
| relief = 1 | |||
| coordinates = {{Coord|29.97526|31.13758|format=dms|display=title,inline|region:EG_type:landmark}} | |||
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| location = ] | |||
| region = ] | |||
| type = | |||
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| length ={{convert|73|m|ft}} | |||
| width ={{convert|19|m|ft}} | |||
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| height ={{convert|20|m|ft}} | |||
| builder = | |||
| material = ] | |||
| built =c. 2500 BC | |||
| abandoned = | |||
| epochs = <!-- actually displays as "Periods" --> | |||
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| condition =Partially restored | |||
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}} | |||
The '''Great Sphinx of Giza''' is a ] ] of a reclining ], a ] with the head of a human and the body of a lion.<ref name="The Great Sphinx of Giza">{{Cite web|url=https://www.worldhistory.org/The_Great_Sphinx_of_Giza/|title=The Great Sphinx of Giza|newspaper=Ancient History Encyclopedia|access-date=2016-12-07|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180612163646/https://www.ancient.eu/The_Great_Sphinx_of_Giza/|archive-date=12 June 2018|url-status=dead}}</ref> Facing directly from west to east, it stands on the ] on the west bank of the ] in ], ]. The face of the Sphinx appears to represent the ] ].<ref>{{cite book|last=Sims|first=Lesley|title=A Visitor's Guide to Ancient Egypt|date=2000|chapter=The Great Pyramids|location=Saffron Hill, London|publisher=]|page=|isbn=0-7460-30673|chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/visitorsguidetoa00lesl/page/17}}</ref> The original shape of the Sphinx was cut from ], and has since been restored with layers of ]s.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/ancient/hawass-sphinx.html|title=Saving the Sphinx – NOVA {{!}} PBS|website=pbs.org|date=January 2010 |access-date=2016-12-07}}</ref> It measures {{Convert|73|m|ft|0|abbr=on}} long from paw to tail, {{Convert|20|m|ft|0|abbr=on}} high from the base to the top of the head and {{Convert|19|m|ft|0|abbr=on}} wide at its rear haunches.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4arwBQAAQBAJ&pg=PA148|title=Pyramids of the Giza Plateau|first= Charles|last= Rigano|year=2014|page=148|publisher=Author House |isbn=9781496952493}}</ref> | |||
The Sphinx is the oldest known ] in Egypt and one of the most recognizable statues in the world. The archaeological evidence suggests that it was created by ancient Egyptians of the ] during the reign of Khafre ({{circa|2558–2532 BC}}).<ref name=":3">{{Cite web |date=10 September 2009 |title=Sphinx Project « Ancient Egypt Research Associates |url=http://www.aeraweb.org/projects/sphinx/ |url-status=usurped |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211112153459/https://aeraweb.org/projects/sphinx/ |accessdate=12 November 2021 |archive-date=12 November 2021}}</ref><ref>Dunford, Jane; Fletcher, Joann; French, Carole (ed., 2007). {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090218063731/http://www.dorlingkindersley-uk.co.uk/nf/Book/BookDisplay/0%2C%2C9781405320931%2C00.html?%2FEgypt|date=2009-02-18}}. London: ], 2007. {{ISBN|978-0-7566-2875-8}}.</ref>{{sfn|Lehner|1991}} | |||
The '''Great Sphinx of Giza''' is a large half-human ] statue in ]. Commonly believed by Egyptologists to have been built by ] about 4,500 years ago, on the ] on the west bank of the ] near modern-day ], it is one of the largest single-stone statues on Earth. | |||
The circumstances surrounding the Sphinx's nose being broken off are uncertain, but close inspection suggests a deliberate act using rods or chisels.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Lehner |first=Mark |url=https://archive.org/details/completepyramids00lehn |title=The Complete Pyramids: Solving the Ancient Mysteries |publisher=] |year=1997 |pages=11|isbn=9780500050842 }}</ref> Contrary to a ], it was not broken off by cannonfire from ]'s troops during his 1798 ]. Its absence is in fact depicted in artwork predating Napoleon and referred to in descriptions by the 15th-century historian ].<ref>{{Cite news |last=Journeys |first=Smithsonian |title=What happened to the Sphinx's nose? |url=https://www.smithsonianjourneys.org/blogs/blog/2020/05/20/photo-what-happened-to-the-sphinxs-nose/ |access-date=2023-01-23 |website=www.smithsonianjourneys.org |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=The Sphinx's Nose |url=http://www.catchpenny.org/nose.html |access-date=2023-01-23 |website=www.catchpenny.org}}</ref> | |||
==Description== | |||
] | |||
The Great Sphinx is a half-human statue with the face of a man and the body of a ]. Carved out of the surrounding ] bedrock, it is 57 metres (260 feet) long, 6 m (20 ft) wide, and has a height of 20 m (65 ft), making it one of the largest single-stone statues in the world. It is located on the west bank of the ] within the confines of the ] pyramid field. | |||
The Great Sphinx faces due east, with a small temple between its paws. | |||
== Names == | |||
After the ] was abandoned, the Sphinx became buried up to its shoulders in sand. The first attempt to dig it out dates back to ], when the young ], falling asleep beneath the giant head, dreamt that he was promised the crown if he would only dig the Sphinx out. The young prince immediately formed an excavation party which, after much effort, managed to dig the front paws out. To commemorate this effort, Tutmosis IV had a ] ] known as the ] placed between the paws. It was only in ] that the first modern dig, supervised by ], uncovered the Sphinx's chest completely. The entirety of the Sphinx was finally dug out in ], to the great pleasure of its numerous visitors. | |||
The original name the ] creators gave the Sphinx is unknown, as the Sphinx temple, enclosure, and possibly the Sphinx itself was not completed at the time, and thus little is known about its cultural context.{{Sfn|Lehner|1991|p=96}} In the ], the Sphinx was revered as the ] '']-em-]'' ({{langx|en|"Horus of the Horizon"}}; ]: ''Harmachis''),<ref>{{cite book|last=Hawkes|first=Jacquetta|url=https://archive.org/details/atlasofancientar00hawk/page/150|title=Atlas of Ancient Archaeology|publisher=]|year=1974|isbn=0-07-027293-X|page=|author-link=Jacquetta Hawkes}}</ref> and the pharaoh ] (1401–1391 or 1397–1388 BC){{efn|See ]}} specifically referred to it as such in his ].<ref>Bryan, Betsy M. (1991) ''The Reign of Thutmose IV''. The Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 145–146</ref> | |||
The commonly used name "]" was given to it in ], around 2,000 years after the commonly accepted date of its construction by reference to a ] with the head of a woman, a falcon, a cat, or a sheep and the body of a lion with the wings of an eagle (although, like most ], the Great Sphinx has a man's head and no wings).<ref>{{Cite news|title=sphinx {{!}} mythology|newspaper=Encyclopædia Britannica|url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/sphinx|access-date=2016-12-07}}</ref> The English word ''sphinx'' comes from the ] Σφίγξ (<small>]:</small> {{transliteration|grc|sphinx}}) apparently from the verb σφίγγω (<small>]:</small> {{transliteration|grc|sphingo}} / {{langx|en|to squeeze}}), after the Greek sphinx who strangled anyone who failed to answer ].{{citation needed|date=October 2020}} | |||
The body of the Sphinx was carved out of solid bedrock; stones removed in this process, some weighing upwards of 200 tonnes, were used to construct the adjoining Sphinx Temple. | |||
Medieval ] writers, including ], call the Sphinx by an Arabized ] name ''Belhib'' ({{Langx|ar|بلهيب}}), ''Balhubah'' ({{Langx|ar|بلهوبه}}) ''Belhawiyya (''{{Langx|ar|بلهويه}}),<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://al-maktaba.org/book/11566/227|title=ص229 - كتاب المواعظ والاعتبار بذكر الخطط والآثار - ذكر الصنم الذي يقال له أبو الهول - المكتبة الشاملة الحديثة|website=al-maktaba.org|accessdate=12 November 2021}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Makrîsî |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dalEAAAAcAAJ&dq=%D8%A8%D9%84%D9%87%D9%88%D8%A8%D9%87&pg=PA122 |title=Kitâb el mawâ'is wa 'l i'tibâr bidhikri 'lchitat wa 'l athâr d. h. Buch der Unterweisungen und der Betrachtung in der Geschichte der Länderstriche und Denkmale: Eine histor. und topogr. Beschreibung Ägyptens von Takieddîn Ahmed ben Ali ben Abdelkâder ben Mohammed Makrisi |date=1853 |language=ar}}</ref> which in turn comes from ''Pehor'' ({{Langx|egy|pꜣ-Ḥwr}}) or ''Pehor(o)n'' ({{Langx|egy|pꜣ-Ḥwr(w)n}}), a name of the ] god ] with whom the Sphinx was identified. It is also rendered as ''Ablehon'' on a depiction of the Sphinx made by ].<ref>{{Cite web |last=Chartier |first=Marc |date=2013-05-22 |title=Le Sphinx de Guizeh - énigmes - théories: "Les anciens Égyptiens l'honoraient comme un dieu" (François Le Gouz de La Boullaye - XVIIe s. - à propos du Sphinx) |url=http://le-sphinx-de-guizeh.blogspot.com/2013/05/les-anciens-egyptiens-lhonoraient-comme.html |access-date=2023-02-27 |website=Le Sphinx de Guizeh - énigmes - théories}}</ref> The modern ] name is ] (''ʼabu alhōl / ʼabu alhawl'' {{IPA|ar|ʔabulhoːl|IPA}}, "The Terrifying One"; literally "Father of Dread") which is a ] of the Coptic name.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Peust|first=Carsten|title=Die Toponyme vorarabischen Ursprungs im modernen Ägypten|url=http://www.peust.de/ortsnamen_original.pdf|page=46}}</ref> | |||
What name ancient Egyptians called the statue is unknown. Its ] name, ''Abu al-Hôl'', translates as "Father of Terror". The Western name "]" was given to it based on the legendary Greek creature with the body of a lion and the head of a woman, but the Egyptian Sphinx has the head of a man, and therefore the name is not technically accurate. | |||
== |
== History == | ||
The Great Sphinx is an international symbol of mystery and controversy. It is the world's largest statue and one of its oldest, yet basic facts about it are unknown, such as the real-life model for the face, when exactly it was built, and by whom it was built. These mysteries have collectively earned the title "Riddle of the Sphinx", a nod to its Greek namesake, although this phrase should not be confused with the original ]. | |||
] | |||
=== |
=== Old Kingdom === | ||
], the builder of the ] at Giza]] | |||
The face of the Great Sphinx is generally thought to be a portrait of the ] ] (also known by the hellenised version of his name, ]), which would place its construction in the Fourth Dynasty (]–]). However, the idea that the face is that of Khafre is only based on the fact that his pyramid is behind the Sphinx when coming from modern Cairo; the political centre of Ancient Egypt was ], south of the Giza plataeu. When approching from Memphis the Sphinx is seen in profile in front of the ] of ]. | |||
], Egypt]] | |||
The archaeological evidence suggests that the Great Sphinx was created around 2500 BC for the king ], the builder of the ] at Giza.<ref>{{cite web|date=2007|title=Sphinx Project: Why Sequence is Important|url=http://www.aeraweb.org/khafre_seq.asp|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100726101013/http://www.aeraweb.org/khafre_seq.asp|archive-date=26 July 2010|access-date=27 February 2015}}</ref> The Sphinx is a ] carved from the bedrock of the plateau, which also served as the ] for the ] and other monuments in the area.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|url=http://www.cheops-pyramide.ch/khufu-pyramid/stone-quarries.html|title=Stone quarries in ancient Egypt. Details about the Giza quarries, the granite quarries in Assuan, and the Tura limestone quarries|last=Zuberbühler|first=Franz Löhner, Teresa|website=cheops-pyramide.ch|access-date=2016-12-08}}</ref> Egyptian geologist Farouk El-Baz has suggested that the head of the Sphinx may have been carved first, out of a natural ], i.e. a ridge of bedrock that had been sculpted by the wind. These can sometimes achieve shapes that resemble animals. El-Baz suggests that the "moat" or "ditch" around the Sphinx may have been quarried out later to allow for the creation of the full body of the sculpture.<ref>Egyptology at the Dawn of the Twenty-first Century: Archaeology; INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS OF EGYPTOLOGISTS, Lyla Pinch Brock; American University in Cairo Press, 2003; pages 70-71</ref> | |||
The stones cut from around the Sphinx's body were used to construct a temple in front of it; however, neither the enclosure nor the temple were ever completed, and the relative scarcity of Old Kingdom cultural material suggests that a Sphinx cult was not established at the time.<ref>{{Cite journal|date=2017|title=Who Built the Sphinx?|url=http://www.aeraweb.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/AG_18_1.pdf|journal=Aeragram|volume=18 - 1|pages=2–6}}</ref> ], writing in 1949 on recent excavations of the Sphinx enclosure, made note of this circumstance: | |||
{{blockquote|Taking all things into consideration, it seems that we must give the credit of erecting this, the world's most wonderful statue, to Khafre, but always with this reservation: that there is not one single contemporary inscription which connects the Sphinx with Khafre, so sound as it may appear, we must treat the evidence as circumstantial, until such time as a lucky turn of the spade of the excavator will reveal to the world a definite reference to the erection of the Sphinx.{{sfn|Hassan|1953|p=164}} |author=Hassan|source=page 164}} | |||
Other theories exist. In 2004, French ] ] announced the results of a 20-year re-examination of historical records and uncovering of new evidence that suggest the Great Sphinx is the work of a forgotten Pharaoh named ], Khafre's half brother and a son of Khufu, the builder of the Great Pyramid. He suggests it was built by Djedefre in the image of his father Khufu, identifying him with the sun god ] in order to restore respect for their dynasty.{{fn|1}} | |||
In order to construct the temple, the northern perimeter-wall of the Khafre Valley Temple had to be deconstructed, hence it follows that the Khafre funerary complex preceded the creation of the Sphinx and its temple. Furthermore, the angle and location of the south wall of the enclosure suggests the causeway connecting Khafre's Pyramid and Valley Temple already existed before the Sphinx was planned. The lower base level of the Sphinx temple also indicates that it does not pre-date the Valley Temple.<ref name=":3" /> | |||
Other alternative theories re-date the Sphinx to pre-] – and, according to one hypothesis, to ] – times. | |||
=== |
=== New Kingdom === | ||
] between the paws of the Sphinx, 2009]] | |||
] | |||
Some time around the ], the Giza Necropolis was abandoned, and drifting sand eventually buried the Sphinx up to its shoulders. The first documented attempt at an excavation dates to {{circa|1400 BC}}, when the young ] (1401–1391 or 1397–1388 BC) gathered a team and, after much effort, managed to dig out the front paws, between which he erected a shrine that housed the ], an inscribed ] slab (possibly a repurposed door lintel from one of Khafre's temples). When the stele was discovered, its lines of text were already damaged and incomplete. An excerpt reads: | |||
The 1 m wide ] on the face is missing. It has long been presumed that the nose had been broken off by a cannon ball fired by ]'s soldiers. However, this is false, as sketches of the Sphinx by ] made in ] and published in ] illustrate the Sphinx without a nose. An Arab historian from the ] attributes the vandalism to a Turkish fanatic in ], outraged at the life-like representation of the human form, which is forbidden in ]. After ordering the monument defaced, legend has it, the religious zealot was promptly hacked to death by outraged locals. This explanation is corroborated by recent evidence which suggests that two bars, used as levers, were inserted at the base of the nose to remove it between the ] and ]. | |||
{{blockquote|... the royal son, Thothmos, being arrived, while walking at midday and seating himself under the shadow of this mighty god, was overcome by slumber and slept at the very moment when Ra is at the summit . He found that the Majesty of this august god spoke to him with his own mouth, as a father speaks to his son, saying: Look upon me, contemplate me, O my son Thothmos; I am thy father, Harmakhis-]-]-]; I bestow upon thee the sovereignty over my domain, the supremacy over the living ... Behold my actual condition that thou mayest protect all my perfect limbs. The sand of the desert whereon I am laid has covered me. Save me, causing all that is in my heart to be executed.<ref>Mallet, Dominique, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141107083223/http://www.harmakhis.org/The%20Stele%20of%20Thotmes%20IV%20%28Translation%29.htm |date=7 November 2014 }}, at . Retrieved {{Nowrap|3 January}} 2009.</ref>|title=The Stele of Thothmes IV: A Translation}} | |||
The ] associates the Sphinx with Khafre. However, this part of the text is not entirely intact: | |||
In addition to the lost nose, a ceremonial pharaonic beard is thought to have been attached, although this may have been added in later periods after the original construction. This relates to the later fashion of pharaohs, which was to wear a plaited beard of authority—a false beard (chin straps are actually visible on some statues), since Egyptian culture mandated that men be clean shaven. Pieces of this beard are today kept in both the ] and the ]. | |||
{{blockquote|which we bring for him: oxen ... and all the young vegetables; and we shall give praise to ''Wenofer'' ... ''Khaf'' ... the statue made for '']-Hor-em-]''.<ref>Colavito, Jason (2001). at . Retrieved {{Nowrap|19 December}} 2008.</ref>|author=Jason Colavito|title=Who Built the Sphinx?}} | |||
==Alternative dating theories== | |||
Egyptologist ], finding the ''Khaf'' ]s in a damaged ] used to surround a royal name, inserted the glyph ''ra'' to complete Khafre's name. When the Stele was re-excavated in 1925, the lines of text referring to ''Khaf'' flaked off and were destroyed.{{citation needed|date=February 2019}} | |||
===Water erosion=== | |||
In recent years some geologists have suggested that, because of the pattern of water erosion evident on the bedrock walls of the area surrounding the Sphinx (the very bedrock from which the Sphinx's body was carved), it could have only been built no later than 6,000BC, the last time any significant volume of rain fell in Egypt. This new data, in conjuction with the corresponding astronomical alignments of the Sphinx and pyramids of the Giza plateau, suggests a date of ]. This view of an earlier date of the Sphinx has not been accepted by mainstream Egyptology, which sees the erosion as made by wind and sand and not by water as the geologists propose. | |||
Later, ] (1279–1213 BC) may have undertaken a second excavation. | |||
===Constellation of Leo=== | |||
The lion shape may be in reference to the constellation of ]. In 10,500 BC on the day of ] the sun would have risen exactly between the paws of the sphinx. It was also the time when the ] point was in the constellation of Leo. The Great Sphinx was possibly built to commemorate this event. One theory claims that the Sphinx was originally a ] statue whose head became damaged somehow. The head may have been replaced thousands of years later by the Egyptians, which could explain why the head is disproportionate with respect to the body. | |||
In the ], the Sphinx became more specifically associated with the sun god ''Hor-em-akhet'' (]: ''Harmachis'') or "Horus-at-the-Horizon". The Pharaoh ] (1427–1401 or 1397 BC) built a temple to the northeast of the Sphinx nearly 1,000 years after its construction and dedicated it to the cult of ''Hor-em-akhet''.<ref>Stadelmann, Rainer (2001). "Giza". In Redford, Donald B. (ed), ''The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt''. Volume II, p. 29</ref> | |||
==See also== | |||
=== Graeco-Roman period === | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
In Graeco-Roman times, Giza had become a tourist destination—the monuments were regarded as antiquities—and some Roman Emperors visited the Sphinx out of curiosity, and for political reasons.{{sfn|Hassan|1953|p=119}} | |||
==External links== | |||
* | |||
The Sphinx was cleared of sand again in the first century AD in honor of Emperor ] and the Governor of Egypt ].{{sfn|Lehner|1991|p=34}} A monumental stairway—more than {{convert|12|m|ft}} wide—was erected, leading to a pavement in front of the paws of the Sphinx. At the top of the stairs, a podium was positioned that allowed a view into the Sphinx sanctuary. Farther back, another podium neighbored several more steps.{{sfn|Lehner|1991|p=35}} The stairway was dismantled during the 1931–32 excavations by ].{{sfn|Lehner|1991|p=62}} | |||
{{fnb|1}}, newspaper article from '']''. Last retrieved ], ]. | |||
] describes the face of the Sphinx being colored red and gives measurements for the statue:<ref>{{Cite book|last=Pliny the Elder|url=http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.02.0137%3Abook%3D36%3Achapter%3D17|title=The Natural History}}</ref> | |||
{{Ancient Egypt}} | |||
{{Quote frame|In front of these pyramids is the Sphinx, a still more wondrous object of art, but one upon which silence has been observed, as it is looked upon as a divinity by the people of the neighbourhood. It is their belief that King Harmaïs was buried in it, and they will have it that it was brought there from a distance. The truth is, however, that it was hewn from the solid rock; and, from a feeling of veneration, the face of the monster is coloured red. The circumference of the head, measured round the forehead, is one hundred and two feet, the length of the feet being one hundred and forty-three, and the height, from the belly to the summit of the asp on the head, sixty-two.}} | |||
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A stela dated to 166 AD commemorates the restoration of the retaining walls surrounding the Sphinx.{{sfn|Hassan|1953|p=123}} The last Emperor connected with the monument is ], around 200 AD.{{sfn|Hassan|1953|p=125}} With the downfall of Roman power, the Sphinx was once more engulfed by the sands.{{sfn|Hassan|1953|p=124}} | |||
] | |||
<gallery mode="packed" heights="180"> | |||
<!-- Interwiki --> | |||
File:Retaining walls and Roman Period stairways east of the Sphinx.tif|Side view of the Sphinx with the Roman stairway on the right, c. 1930 | |||
File:Excavation East of Sphinx.tif|Top of the Roman stairway before dismantling in 1931–1932 | |||
File:Sphinx Map by Henry Salt.tif|Map of the area east of the Sphinx by ] | |||
</gallery> | |||
=== Middle Ages === | |||
] | |||
Some ancient non-Egyptians saw the Sphinx as a likeness of the god ]. The cult of the Sphinx continued into medieval times. The ] of ] saw it as the burial place of ]. Arab authors described the Sphinx as a ] that guarded the area from the desert.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rdI96px90kUC&pg=PA88|title=Egyptology: The Missing Millennium : Ancient Egypt in Medieval Arabic Writings|author=Okasha El Daly|date=12 November 2005|publisher=Psychology Press|isbn=9781844720637|accessdate=12 November 2021|via=Google Books}}</ref> ] describes it as the "talisman of the Nile" that the locals believed the ] depended upon.<ref>{{cite book|author1=Joseph E Lowry|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=x_UoDgAAQBAJ&q=Al-Maqrīzī+talisman+of+the+Nile&pg=PA263|title=Arabic Humanities, Islamic Thought: Essays in Honor of Everett K. Rowson|author2=Shawkat M Toorawa|author3=Everett K Rowson|date=2017|publisher=Boston Brill|isbn=9789004343245|page=263|oclc=992515269|access-date=11 October 2017}}</ref> ] stated that those wishing to obtain bureaucratic positions in the Egyptian government gave ] to the monument.<ref name="Egyptology">{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rdI96px90kUC&dq=al+minufi&pg=PA89|title=Egyptology: The Missing Millennium : Ancient Egypt in Medieval Arabic Writings|author=Okasha El Daly|date=12 November 2005|publisher=Psychology Press|isbn=9781844720637|accessdate=12 November 2021|via=Google Books}}</ref> | |||
] | |||
] | |||
===Early modern period=== | |||
] | |||
Over the centuries, writers and scholars have recorded their impressions and reactions upon seeing the Sphinx. The vast majority were concerned with a general description, often including a mixture of science, romance and mystique.{{Citation needed|date=April 2021}} A typical{{Citation needed|date=April 2021}} description of the Sphinx by tourists and leisure travelers throughout the 19th and 20th century was made by ]: | |||
] | |||
{{blockquote|It is the antiquity of the Sphinx which thrills us as we look upon it, for in itself it has no charms. The desert's waves have risen to its breast, as if to wrap the monster in a winding-sheet of gold. The face and head have been mutilated by Moslem fanatics. The mouth, the beauty of whose lips was once admired, is now expressionless. Yet grand in its loneliness, – veiled in the mystery of unnamed ages, – the relic of Egyptian antiquity stands solemn and silent in the presence of the awful desert – symbol of eternity. Here it disputes with Time the empire of the past; forever gazing on and on into a future which will still be distant when we, like all who have preceded us and looked upon its face, have lived our little lives and disappeared.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Stoddard |first1=John L. |title=John L. Stoddard's Lectures |date=1 March 2009 |publisher=Wildside Press LLC |isbn=978-1-4344-5271-9 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gbQo08W-cq8C |language=en |page=}}</ref>|title=John L. Stoddard's Lectures}} | |||
From the 16th to the 19th centuries, European observers described the Sphinx having the face, neck and breast of a woman. Examples included Johannes Helferich (1579), ] (1615), ] (1677), ] (1735) and ] (1844). | |||
Most early Western images were book illustrations in ] form, elaborated by a professional ] from either previous images available or some original drawing or sketch supplied by an author, and usually now lost. Seven years after visiting Giza, André Thévet (''Cosmographie de Levant'', 1556) described the Sphinx as "the head of a colossus, caused to be made by Isis, daughter of Inachus, then so beloved of Jupiter". He, or his artist and engraver, pictured it as a curly-haired monster with a grassy dog collar. Athanasius Kircher (who never visited Egypt) depicted the Sphinx as a Roman statue ('']'', 1679). Johannes Helferich's (1579) Sphinx is a pinched-face, round-breasted woman with a straight haired wig. George Sandys stated that the Sphinx was a ]; Balthasar de Monconys interpreted the headdress as a kind of hairnet, while ]'s Sphinx had a rounded hairdo with bulky collar.{{citation needed|date=February 2019}} | |||
Richard Pococke's Sphinx was an adoption of Cornelis de Bruijn's drawing of 1698, featuring only minor changes, but is closer to the actual appearance of the Sphinx than anything previous. The print versions of Norden's drawings for his '']'', 1755 clearly show that the nose was missing. | |||
<gallery mode="packed" class="center"> | |||
Image:Hogenberg & Braun, 1572.png|] and ] (map), ''Cairus, quae olim Babylon'' (1572), exists in various editions, from various authors, with the Sphinx looking different. | |||
Image:Jan Sommer, 1591.png|Jan Sommer, (unpublished) ''Voyages en Egypte des annees 1589, 1590 & 1591'', Institut de France, 1971 (Voyageurs occidentaux en Égypte 3) | |||
Image:George Sandys, 1615.png|], ''A relation of a journey begun an dom. 1610'' (1615) | |||
Image:François de La Boullaye-Le Gouz, 1653.png|], ''Les Voyages et Observations'' (1653) | |||
Image:Balthasar de Monconys, 1665.png|], ''Journal des voyages'' (1665) | |||
Image:Olfert Dapper, 1665.png|], ''Description de l'Afrique'' (1665), note the two different displays of the Sphinx. | |||
Image:Cornelis de Bruijn, 1698.png|], ''Reizen van Cornelis de Bruyn door de vermaardste Deelen van Klein Asia'' (1698) | |||
Image:Johanne Baptista Homann, 1724.png|Johanne Baptista Homann (map), ''Aegyptus hodierna'' (1724) | |||
Image:Norden, 1755 (1).png|], ''Voyage d'Égypte et de Nubie'' (1755) | |||
</gallery> | |||
=== Modern excavations === | |||
] | |||
], c. 1885]]In 1817, the first modern ] dig, supervised by the Italian ], uncovered the Sphinx's chest completely. | |||
{{blockquote|In the beginning of the year 1887, the chest, the paws, the altar, and plateau were all made visible. Flights of steps were unearthed, and finally accurate measurements were taken of the great figures. The height from the lowest of the steps was found to be one hundred feet, and the space between the paws was found to be thirty-five feet long and ten feet wide. Here there was formerly an altar; and a stele of ] was discovered, recording a dream in which he was ordered to clear away the sand that even then was gathering round the site of the Sphinx.<ref name="HistoryofEgypt">{{cite book|last1=Rappoport|first1=S.|title=The Project Gutenberg EBook of History Of Egypt From 330 B.C. To The Present Time, Volume 12 (of 12), by S. Rappoport|publisher=The Grolier Society Publishers, London|url=http://www.gutenberg.org/files/17332/17332-h/17332-h.htm|access-date=31 October 2016|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304095932/http://www.gutenberg.org/files/17332/17332-h/17332-h.htm|archive-date=4 March 2016|date=2005-12-17}}</ref>|author=S. Rappoport|title=The Project Gutenberg EBook of History of Egypt From 330 B.C. To The Present|source=Volume 12}} | |||
One of the people working on clearing the sands from around the Great Sphinx was ], a French Director of the ].<ref name="SCAHistory">{{cite web|title=A Brief History of the Supreme Council of Antiquities (SCA): 1858 to present|url=http://www.sca-egypt.org/eng/sca_history.htm|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161017043511/http://www.sca-egypt.org/eng/SCA_History.htm|archive-date=2016-10-17|access-date=2017-03-21|website=SCA - Egypt}}</ref> | |||
=== Opinions of early Egyptologists === | |||
Early Egyptologists and excavators were of divided opinion regarding the age of the Sphinx and the associated temples. | |||
In 1857, ], founder of the ] in Cairo, unearthed the much later ] (estimated to be from the ], c. 664–525 BC), which tells how ] came upon the Sphinx, already buried in sand. Although certain tracts on the Stela are likely accurate,<ref>]. ( at . Retrieved {{Nowrap|6 January}} 2009.</ref> this passage is contradicted by archaeological evidence, thus considered to be ] ],<ref name="Reader (2002)">{{cite book|last=Colin|first=Reader|title=Journal of the Ancient Chronology Forum|date=2002|volume=9|pages=5–21|chapter=Giza Before the Fourth Dynasty|access-date=11 October 2017|chapter-url=http://www.hallofmaat.com/modules.php?name=Articles&file=article&sid=93|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131210134155/http://www.thehallofmaat.com/modules.php?name=Articles&file=article&sid=93|archive-date=10 December 2013|url-status=dead}}</ref> a purposeful fake, created by the local priests as an attempt to imbue the contemporary Isis temple with an ancient history it never had. Such acts became common when religious institutions such as temples, shrines and priests' domains were fighting for political attention and for financial and economic donations.<ref name="MVTP">{{cite book|last=Verner|first=Miroslav|title=The Pyramids: The Mystery, Culture, and Science of Egypt's Great Monuments|publisher=Grove/Atlantic Inc.|year=2007|isbn=978-0802198631|page=212}}</ref><ref name="PJDP">{{cite book|last=Jánosi|first=Peter|title=Die Pyramidenanlagen der Königinnen (= ''Denkschriften der Gesamtakademie, Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften'', volume 13|year=1996|isbn=978-3700122074|pages=11, 125|publisher=Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften }}</ref> | |||
] wrote in 1883 regarding the state of opinion of the age of the Khafre Valley Temple, and by extension the Sphinx: "The date of the Granite Temple has been so positively asserted to be earlier than the fourth dynasty, that it may seem rash to dispute the point. Recent discoveries, however, strongly show that it was really not built before the reign of Khafre, in the fourth dynasty."<ref>{{Cite book|last=Petrie|first=Flinders|title=The Pyramids and Temples of Gizeh|year=1883|location=London|pages=133}}</ref> | |||
], the French Egyptologist and second director of the Egyptian Museum in Cairo, conducted a survey of the Sphinx in 1886. He concluded that because the Dream Stela showed the cartouche of Khafre in line 13, it was he who was responsible for the excavation and therefore the Sphinx must predate Khafre and his predecessors—possibly ], {{circa|2575–2467 BC}}. Maspero believed the Sphinx to be "the most ancient monument in Egypt".{{sfn|Hassan|1953|p=17-18}} | |||
] attributed the Sphinx to the Middle Kingdom, arguing that the particular features seen on the Sphinx are unique to the 12th dynasty and that the Sphinx resembles ].{{sfn|Hassan|1953|p=86-87}} | |||
] agreed that the Sphinx predated Khafre's reign, writing in ''The Gods of the Egyptians'' (1904): "This marvelous object was in existence in the days of Khafre, or Khephren,{{efn|Early Egyptologists were inconsistent in their transliteration of pharaonic names: ''Khafre'' and ''Khephren'' are both references to Khafre.}} and it is probable that it is a very great deal older than his reign and that it dates from the end of the ] ."<ref>{{cite book|last=Wallis Budge|first=E. A.|url=https://archive.org/details/godsofegyptianso02budg|title=The Gods of the Egyptians: Studies in Egyptian Mythology|publisher=]|year=1904|isbn=978-0-486-22055-0|pages=361|author-link=E. A. Wallis Budge}}</ref> | |||
] reasoned that the Sphinx was erected after the completion of the Khafre pyramid complex.{{sfn|Hassan|1953|p=88}} | |||
=== Modern dissenting hypotheses === | |||
], former director of the ] in Cairo, examined the distinct ] of the '']'' (headdress) and the now-detached beard of the Sphinx and concluded the style is more indicative of the pharaoh ] (2589–2566 BC), known to the Greeks as Cheops, builder of the ] and Khafre's father.<ref>{{Cite web | url=https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/transcripts/3703_sphinx.html | title=NOVA | Transcripts | Riddles of the Sphinx | PBS | website=] }}</ref>{{when|date=April 2024}} He supports this by suggesting Khafre's Causeway was built to conform to a pre-existing structure, which, he concludes, given its location, could only have been the Sphinx.<ref>{{Cite web | url=https://www.academia.edu/21651229 | title=Giza Before the Fourth Dynasty | last1=Reader | first1=Colin }}</ref> | |||
In 2004, Vassil Dobrev of the ] in Cairo announced he had uncovered new evidence that the Great Sphinx may have been the work of the little-known pharaoh ] (2528–2520 BC), Khafre's half brother and a son of Khufu.<ref name="Riddle of the Sphinx"> Retrieved {{Nowrap|6 November}} 2010.</ref> Dobrev suggests Djedefre built the Sphinx in the image of his father Khufu, identifying him with the sun god ] in order to restore respect for ]. Dobrev also says that the causeway connecting Khafre's pyramid to the temples was built around the Sphinx, suggesting it was already in existence at the time. Egyptologist ] responded to Dobrev saying that: "It is not implausible. But I would need more explanation, such as why he thinks the pyramid at Abu Roash is a sun temple, something I'm sceptical about. I have never heard anyone suggest that the name in the graffiti at Zawiyet el-Aryan mentions Djedefre. I remain more convinced by the traditional argument of it being Khafre or the more recent theory of it being Khufu."<ref name="Fleming (2004)"/> | |||
Geologist Colin Reader suggests that water runoff from the Giza plateau is responsible for the differential erosion on the walls of the sphinx enclosure. Because the hydrological characteristics of the area were significantly changed by the quarries, he contends this suggests that the sphinx likely predated the quarries (and thus, the pyramids). He points towards the larger cyclopean stones in part of the Sphinx Temple, as well as the causeway alignment with the pyramids and the break in the quarries, as evidence that the pyramids took the alignment with some pre-existing structure, such as the sphinx, into consideration when they were constructed, and that the sphinx temple was built in two distinct phases. He contends that such erosion could have occurred relatively rapidly and suggests that the sphinx was no more than a few centuries older than present archaeology would suggest, suggesting a late ] or ] origin, when Ancient Egyptians already were known to be capable of sophisticated masonry.<ref name="Reader (2002)" /> | |||
=== Recent restorations === | |||
In 1931, engineers of the Egyptian government repaired the head of the Sphinx. Part of its headdress had fallen off in 1926 due to erosion, which had also cut deeply into its neck.<ref>''Popular Science Monthly'', July 1931, page 56.</ref> This questionable repair was by the addition of a concrete collar between the headdress and the neck, creating an altered profile.<ref>{{cite web|date=2017-04-17|title=Filmed in 1897, THIS is the OLDEST footage of the Great Sphinx of Giza - Ancient Code|url=https://www.ancient-code.com/filmed-1897-oldest-footage-great-sphinx-giza/|access-date=23 October 2017|website=ancient-code.com}}</ref> Many renovations to the stone base and raw rock body were done in the 1980s, and then redone in the 1990s.<ref>{{cite web|last=Hawass|first=Zahi|title=HISTORY OF THE CONSERVATION OF THE SPHINX|url=http://www.guardians.net/hawass/sphinx2.htm|access-date=23 October 2017}}</ref>{{wide image|Sphinx and the Great Pyramid of Giza panorama.jpg|800px|Panoramic view of the Sphinx and the Great Pyramid of Giza, 2010}} | |||
== Degradation and violation == | |||
The ] ] of the area consists of layers which offer differing resistance to ] (mostly caused by wind and windblown sand), leading to the uneven degradation apparent in the Sphinx's body.<ref name=":0" /><ref>{{Cite news|date=1999-02-11|title=How old is the Sphinx?|newspaper=msnbc.com|url=https://www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna3077390|access-date=2016-12-07}}</ref> The lowest part of the body, including the legs, is solid rock.<ref name="The Great Sphinx of Giza" /> The body of the animal up to its neck is fashioned from softer layers that have suffered considerable disintegration.<ref name=":1">{{Cite web|title=The Great Sphinx {{!}} Geology of a Statue {{!}} Dating the Sphinx {{!}} Ancient Egypt Research Associates|url=http://www.aeraweb.org/sphinx-project/geology-of-the-sphinx/|access-date=2016-12-08|website=aeraweb.org| date=13 October 2009 }}</ref> The layer in which the head was sculpted is much harder.<ref name=":1" /><ref name="zivie-coche">{{cite book|last=Zivie-Coche|first=Christiane|title=Sphinx: History of a Monument|publisher=]|year=2002|isbn=978-0-8014-3962-9|pages=99–100}}</ref> | |||
A number of "dead-end" shafts are known to exist within and below the body of the Great Sphinx, most likely dug by treasure hunters and tomb robbers. | |||
=== Missing nose === | |||
] | |||
] before Napoleon's time (sketches made in 1737, published 1755)]]Examination of the Sphinx's face shows that long rods or ] were hammered into the nose area, one down from the bridge and another beneath the nostril, then used to pry the nose off towards the south, resulting in the one-metre wide nose still being lost to date.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Lehner|first=Mark|url=https://archive.org/details/completepyramids00lehn/page/41|title=The Complete Pyramids|publisher=Thames & Hudson|year=1997|isbn=978-0-500-05084-2|page=}}</ref> Many folk tales exist regarding the destruction of its nose, aiming to provide an answer as to where it went or what happened to it. One tale erroneously attributes it to cannonballs fired by the army of ]. This is considered false since drawings of the Sphinx by ] in 1737 already show the nose missing, predating Napoleon's arrival by sixty years.<ref>{{cite web |title=F.L. Norden. Travels in Egypt and Nubia, 1757. Plate 47, Profil de la tête colossale du Sphinx |url=https://www.brooklynmuseum.org/opencollection/archives/image/37200 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160406141503/https://www.brooklynmuseum.org/opencollection/archives/image/37200 |archive-date=6 April 2016 |access-date=24 January 2014 |website=Brooklyn Museum}}</ref> | |||
The damaged nose has also been attributed by some 10th century Arab authors stating that it was a result of iconoclastic attacks. Besides this, there was also mention of the damage being the work of the ] in the 14th century.<ref name="Lehner">{{Cite book |last=Zivie-Coche |first=Christiane |url=http://archive.org/details/sphinx00chri |title=Sphinx: History of a Monument |publisher=Cornell University Press |year=2004 |isbn=978-0-8014-8954-9 |location=Ithaca, New York, US |pages=16 |language=en}}</ref> According to Ibn Qadi Shuhba, Muhammad ibn Sadiq ibn al-Muhammad al-Tibrizi al-Masri (d. 1384), desecrated the sphinxes of "Qanatir al-Siba".<ref name="Egyptology" /> | |||
The Arab historian ], writing in the early 15th century, attributes the loss of the nose to Muhammad Sa'im al-Dahr, a ] Muslim from the ] of Sa'id al-Su'ada in 1378, who found local peasants making offerings to the Sphinx in the hope of increasing their harvest and therefore defaced the Sphinx in an act of ]. According to al-Maqrīzī, many people living in the area believed that the increased sand covering the ] was retribution for al-Dahr's act of defacement.<ref>{{cite book |author1=Joseph E Lowry |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=x_UoDgAAQBAJ&q=al+maqrizi+sphinx+sands&pg=PA264 |title=Arabic Humanities, Islamic Thought: Essays in Honor of Everett K. Rowson |author2=Shawkat M Toorawa |author3=Everett K Rowson |date=2017 |publisher=Boston Brill |isbn=9789004343245 |page=264 |oclc=992515269 |access-date=11 October 2017}}</ref><ref>The Wonders of the Ancients: Arab-Islamic Representations of Ancient Egypt, Mark Fraser Pettigrew, page 201, University of California, Berkeley</ref> ] (1443–1527) meanwhile mentioned that the ] in 1365 was divine retribution for Muhammad Sa'im al-Dahr's breaking off the nose of a sphinx.<ref name="Egyptology" /> | |||
] fragments of the Sphinx's beard in the ], 14th century BC<ref>{{cite web |title=British Museum - Fragment of the beard of the Great Sphinx |url=https://www.britishmuseum.org/explore/highlights/highlight_objects/aes/f/fragment_of_the_beard_of_the_g.aspx |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151018105335/http://www.britishmuseum.org/explore/highlights/highlight_objects/aes/f/fragment_of_the_beard_of_the_g.aspx |archive-date=2015-10-18 |work=britishmuseum.org}}</ref>]] | |||
=== Beard === | |||
In addition to the lost nose, a ] is thought to have been attached, although this may have been added in later periods after the original construction. Egyptologist Vassil Dobrev has suggested that had the beard been an original part of the Sphinx, it would have damaged the chin of the statue upon falling.<ref name="Fleming (2004)">{{cite news|last=Fleming|first=Nic|date=14 December 2004|title=I have solved riddle of the Sphinx, says Frenchman|work=]|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianocean/egypt/1478998/I-have-solved-riddle-of-the-Sphinx-says-Frenchman.html |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220111/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianocean/egypt/1478998/I-have-solved-riddle-of-the-Sphinx-says-Frenchman.html |archive-date=11 January 2022 |url-access=subscription |url-status=live|access-date=28 June 2005}}{{cbignore}}</ref> | |||
Residues of red pigment are visible on areas of the Sphinx's face and traces of yellow and blue pigment have also been found elsewhere on the Sphinx, leading Mark Lehner to suggest that the monument "was once decked out in gaudy comic book colours".<ref name="Smithsonian">{{cite web|author=Evan Hadingham|date=February 2010|title=Uncovering Secrets of the Sphinx|url=http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/uncovering-secrets-of-the-sphinx-5053442/?no-ist=&page=2|work=Smithsonian Magazine}}</ref> | |||
{{Clear}} | |||
== Holes and tunnels == | |||
] | |||
=== Hole in the Sphinx's head === | |||
Johann Helffrich visited the Sphinx during his travels in 1565–1566. He describes that a priest went into the head of the Sphinx, and when he spoke it was as if the Sphinx itself was speaking.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Helffrich|first=Johann|title=Kurtzer und warhafftiger Bericht, Von der Reis aus Venedig nach Hierusalem, Von dannen in Aegypten, auff den Berg Sinai, und folgends widerumb gen Venedig|year=1579|pages=195|language=de}}</ref> | |||
Many New Kingdom stelae depict the Sphinx wearing a crown. If it in fact existed, the hole could have been the anchoring point for it.{{Sfn|Lehner|1991|p=363}}<ref>{{Cite web|title=Accessions of the Griffith Institute Archive in 2009|url=http://www.griffith.ox.ac.uk/gri/4acc09.html}}</ref> | |||
] closed the hole with a metal hatch in 1926.<ref>{{Cite web|title=360° photograph of the Sphinx|url=https://www.airpano.com/360photo/egypt-cairo-pyramids/?startscene=1&ath=265.253&atv=17.140&fov=41.24}}</ref>{{Sfn|Lehner|1991|p=187}} | |||
=== Perring's Hole === | |||
] | |||
] directed ] in 1837 to drill a tunnel in the back of the Sphinx, just behind the head. The boring rods became stuck at a depth of {{Convert|27|ft|m}}, Attempts to blast the rods free caused further damage. The hole was cleared in 1978. Among the rubble was a fragment of the Sphinx's ] headdress.{{Sfn|Lehner|1991|pp=204-205}} | |||
==== Major fissure ==== | |||
A major natural fissure in the bedrock cuts through the waist of the Sphinx, first excavated by ] in 1853. | |||
At the top of the back it measures up to {{Convert|2|m|ft}} in width. Baraize, in 1926, sealed the sides and roofed it with iron bars, limestone and cement, and installed an iron trap door at the top. The sides of the fissure might have been artificially squared; however, the bottom is irregular bedrock, about {{Convert|1|m|ft}} above the outside floor. A very narrow crack continues deeper.{{Sfn|Lehner|1991|pp=202-203}} | |||
<gallery mode="packed" class="center" heights="170"> | |||
File:Top of Sphinx back before modern restorations.tif|Major fissure running through the waist of the Sphinx, before modern restorations in 1926 | |||
File:Iron trap-door over fissure at top of Sphinx back.tif|Trap-door access to major fissure, after restorations | |||
</gallery> | |||
=== Rump passage === | |||
In 1926, the Sphinx was cleared of sand under direction of Baraize, which revealed an opening to a tunnel at floor-level at the north side of the rump. It was subsequently closed by masonry veneer and nearly forgotten. | |||
More than fifty years later, the existence of the passage was recalled by three elderly men who had worked during the clearing as basket carriers. This led to the rediscovery and excavation of the rump passage, in 1980. | |||
The passage consists of an upper and a lower section, which are angled roughly 90 degrees to each other: | |||
* The upper part ascends to a height of {{Convert|4|m|ft}} above the ground-floor at a northwest direction. It runs between masonry veneer and the core body of the Sphinx and ends in a niche {{Convert|1|m|ft}} wide and {{Convert|1.8|m|ft}} high. The ceiling of the niche consists of modern cement, which likely spilled down from the filling of the gap between masonry and core bedrock, some {{Convert|3|m|ft}} above | |||
* The lower part descends steeply into the bedrock toward northeast, for a distance of approximately {{Convert|4|m|ft}} and a depth of {{Convert|5|m|ft}}. It terminated in a cul-de-sac pit at groundwater level. At the entrance it is {{Convert|1.3|m|ft}} wide, narrowing to about {{Convert|1.07|m|ft}} towards the end. Among the sand and stone fragments, a piece of tin foil and the base of a modern ceramic water jar was found. The clogged bottom contained modern fill. Among it, more tin foil, modern cement and a pair of shoes | |||
It is possible that the entire passage was cut top down, beginning high up on the rump, and that the current access point at floor-level was made at a later date. | |||
Vyse noted in his diary (February 27 and 28, 1837) that he was "boring" near the tail, which indicates him as the creator of the passage, as no other tunnel has been identified at this location.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Vyse|first=Howard|title=Operations carried on at the pyramids of Gizeh in 1837|year=1840|volume=1|pages=173, 175}}</ref> Another interpretation is that the shaft is of ancient origin, perhaps an exploratory tunnel or an unfinished tomb shaft.{{Sfn|Lehner|1994}} | |||
<gallery mode="packed" heights="180"> | |||
File:Top-down plan of the rump of the Great Sphinx of Giza.tif|Top-down plan of the rump passage. Lower part labeled "Sub-Floor Shaft", upper part "Core-Body Trench". | |||
File:Profile and elevation of rump passage of the Sphinx.tif|Profile of the rump passage with upper part (1+2) and lower part (3+4) | |||
File:Sphinx rump, view to east.tif|Rump of the Sphinx, with passage entrance at floor-level, c. 1980 | |||
</gallery> | |||
<gallery mode="packed"> | |||
File:Rump Passage Entrance Closeup.tif|Closeup of the entrance hole of the rump shaft | |||
File:Rump passage, entrance from inside.tif|Inside the passage, looking up, seeing entrance stones and upper tunnel | |||
File:Rump passage, upper part.tif|Looking up the upper tunnel | |||
File:Rump passage, upper part, chamber 1.tif|Ceiling of upper tunnel | |||
File:101-black-and-white-photo-02557.tif|Looking down the upper part from chamber 1 | |||
File:Rump passage, lower part before excavation.tif|Lower part of rump passage, before excavation | |||
File:Rump passage, lower part after excavation.tif|Lower part after excavation | |||
</gallery> | |||
=== Niche in northern flank === | |||
A 1925 photograph shows a man standing below floor level in a niche in the Sphinx's core body. It was closed during the 1925–1926 restorations.{{Sfn|Lehner|1994|p=215}} | |||
=== Gap under southern large masonry box === | |||
Another hole might have been at floor level in the large masonry box on the south side of the Sphinx.{{Sfn|Lehner|1994|p=215}} | |||
=== Space behind Dream Stele === | |||
The space behind the ], between the paws of the Sphinx, was covered by an iron beam and cement roof, which was fitted with an iron trap door.{{Sfn|Lehner|1991|p=298}}<ref>{{Cite web|title=360° photograph of the Sphinx|url=https://www.airpano.com/360photo/egypt-cairo-pyramids/?startscene=1&ath=268.933&atv=59.890&fov=40.00}}</ref> | |||
=== Keyhole Shaft === | |||
At the ledge of the Sphinx enclosure, a square shaft is located opposite the northern hind paw. It was cleared during excavation in 1978 by Hawass and measures {{Convert|1.42 by 1.06|m|ft}} and about {{Convert|2|m|ft}} deep. Lehner interprets the shaft to be an unfinished tomb and named it "Keyhole Shaft", because of cuttings in the ledge above the shaft that are shaped like the lower part of a traditional (Victorian era) keyhole, upside down.{{Sfn|Lehner|1991|pp=160-163}} | |||
== Pseudohistory == | |||
Numerous ideas have been suggested to explain or reinterpret the origin and identity of the Sphinx, that lack sufficient evidential support and/or are contradicted by such, and are therefore considered part of ] and ]. | |||
=== Ancient Astronauts/Atlantis === | |||
{{Further|Ancient astronauts|Atlantis#Atlantis pseudohistory}} | |||
* The Sphinx is oriented from west to east, towards the rising sun, in accordance with the ancient Egyptian solar cult. The ] posits that it was instead aligned to face the constellation of ] during the vernal equinox around 10,500 BC. The idea is considered ] by academia, because no textual or archaeological evidence supports this to be the reason for the orientation of the Sphinx<ref>Hancock, Graham; Bauval, Robert (2000-12-14). . ]. ]. Aired 2000-12-14.</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Orser|first=Charles E.|title=Race and practice in archaeological interpretation|publisher=University of Pennsylvania Press|year=2003|isbn=978-0-8122-3750-4|page=73}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Hancock|first=Graham|url=https://archive.org/details/messagesphinxque00hanc|title=The Message of the Sphinx: A Quest for the Hidden Legacy of Mankind|author2=Bauval, Robert|publisher=Three Rivers Press|year=1997|isbn=978-0-517-88852-0|page=|url-access=limited}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|title=Archaeological fantasies: how pseudoarchaeology misrepresents the past and misleads the public|publisher=Routledge|year=2006|isbn=978-0-415-30593-8|editor-last=Fagan|editor-first=Garrett G.|pages=20, 38–40, 100–103, 127, 197–201, 238, 241–255}}</ref>] | |||
* The ] contends that the main type of ] evident on the enclosure walls of the Great Sphinx could only have been caused by prolonged and extensive ],<ref name="Schoch (1992)">{{cite book|last=Schoch|first=Robert M.|url=http://www.robertschoch.net/Redating%20the%20Great%20Sphinx%20of%20Giza.htm|title=Redating the Great Sphinx of Giza|date=1992|access-date=11 October 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160204134600/http://www.robertschoch.net/Redating%20the%20Great%20Sphinx%20of%20Giza.htm|archive-date=2016-02-04|url-status=live}}</ref> and must therefore predate the time of the pharaoh Khafre. The hypothesis was championed by ], ], and ] ]. The theory is considered pseudoarchaeology by mainstream scholarship due to archaeological, climatological and geological evidence to the contrary.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1992/02/09/us/scholars-dispute-claim-that-sphinx-is-much-older.html|title=Scholars Dispute Claim That Sphinx Is Much Older|agency=Associated Press|newspaper=The New York Times|date=9 February 1992|accessdate=12 November 2021}}</ref><ref>}{{cite book|last=White|first=Chris|title=The Age of the Sphinx? Reader versus Schoch|url=http://ancientaliensdebunked.com/how-old-is-the-sphinx-colin-reader-vs-robert-schoch/|access-date=1 July 2016|archive-date=30 June 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160630054326/http://ancientaliensdebunked.com/how-old-is-the-sphinx-colin-reader-vs-robert-schoch/|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last=Reader|first=C. D.|date=February 2001|title=A Geomorphological Study of the Giza Necropolis, with Implications for the Development of the Site|journal=Archaeometry|volume=43|issue=1|pages=149–165|doi=10.1111/1475-4754.00009}}</ref> | |||
* There is a long history of speculation about hidden chambers beneath the Sphinx, by esoteric figures such as ]. ] specifically predicted in the 1930s that a "]", containing knowledge from ], would be discovered under the Sphinx in 1998. His prediction fueled much of the fringe speculation that surrounded the Sphinx in the 1990s, which lost momentum when the hall was not found when predicted<ref>{{cite book|last1=MacDonald|first1=Sally|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3RAK5pL-m0IC&q=%22hall+of+records%22+cayce|title=Consuming Ancient Egypt|last2=Rice|first2=Michael|publisher=UCL Press|year=2003|isbn=978-1-84472-003-3|pages=180–181, 190}}</ref> | |||
* Author ] proposes that the Sphinx was originally a statue of the jackal god ], the god of funerals, and that its face was recarved in the likeness of a Middle Kingdom pharaoh, ]. Temple bases his identification on the style of the eye make-up and style of the pleats on the headdress<ref>Robert K. G. Temple, ''The Sphinx Mystery: The Forgotten Origins of The Sanctuary of Anubis'' (Rochester, Vermont: Inner Traditions, 2009). {{ISBN|978-1-59477-271-9}}</ref> | |||
=== Racial characteristics === | |||
{{Further|Ancient Egyptian race controversy}} | |||
Until the early 20th century, it was suggested that the face of the Sphinx had "Negroid" characteristics, as part of the now outdated ].<ref>{{cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/booksphinx00regi|title=Book of the Sphinx|publisher=U of Nebraska Press|year=2004|isbn=978-0-8032-3956-2|editor-last=Regier|editor-first=Willis G.|page=|url-access=limited}}</ref><ref>Irwin, Graham W. (1977). , Columbia University Press, p. 11</ref> | |||
== Gallery == | |||
<gallery mode="packed" class="center"> | |||
Image:Description de l'Egypte, 1823(1).png|'']'', Planches, Antiquités, volume V (1823) | |||
Image:Description de l'Egypte, 1823(2).png|'']'', Planches, Antiquités, volume V (1823) | |||
Image:Japanese-Mission-Samurai-Sphinx-Egypt-1864.png|Members of the ] in front of the Sphinx, 1864 | |||
Image:Pedro II of Brazil in Egypt 1871.jpg|French archaeologist ] (seated, far left) and Emperor ] (seated, far right) with others in front of the Sphinx, 1871 | |||
Image:'Le Sphinx Armachis, Caire' (The Sphinx Armachis, Cairo).jpg|The Great Sphinx partly under the sand, c. 1880 | |||
Image:Bonaparte ante la Esfinge, por Jean-Léon Gérôme.jpg|]'s '']'', 1886 | |||
File:The amazing Sphinx.jpg|The Sphinx in profile in 2016 | |||
Image:Nazlet El-Semman, Al Haram, Giza Governorate, Egypt - panoramio (27).jpg|Rear view of the Sphinx in 2014, showing some of the restoration work up to that time | |||
</gallery> | |||
== See also == | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
== Notes == | |||
{{notelist}} | |||
== References == | |||
{{reflist|30em}} | |||
===Bibliography=== | |||
{{refbegin}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Lehner |first=Mark |title=Archaeology of an Image: The Great Sphinx of Giza |year=1991 |url=https://archive.org/details/ArchaeologyOfAnImage }} | |||
* {{cite journal |last=Lehner |first=Mark |title=The Passage Under the Sphinx | year = 1994 |journal=Hommages à Jean Leclant |volume=1 |pages= 201–216|url=https://www.academia.edu/36580782}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Hassan |first=Selim |title=Excavations at Giza 8: 1936-1937. The Great Sphinx and its Secrets. Historical Studies in the Light of the Recent Excavations. |year=1953 |url=http://giza.fas.harvard.edu/pubdocs/244/full/ |publisher=Government Press |location=Cairo }} | |||
{{refend}} | |||
== External links == | |||
* {{Commons category-inline}} | |||
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* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140516191332/http://www.smithsonianjourneys.org/blog/2009/12/08/photo-what-happened-to-the-sphinx%E2%80%99s-nose/ |date=16 May 2014 }} | |||
* | |||
* {{in lang|ar}} | |||
* by ] | |||
* ] | |||
{{Giza}} | |||
{{Ancient Egypt topics}} | |||
{{Ancient Near East}} | |||
{{Sculptures}} | |||
{{Authority control}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 21:50, 21 December 2024
Limestone statue of a reclining sphinx "The Sphinx" redirects here. For other uses, see The Sphinx (disambiguation).
The sphinx in 2017 | |
Shown within Egypt | |
Location | Giza, Egypt |
---|---|
Region | Egypt |
Coordinates | 29°58′31″N 31°08′15″E / 29.97526°N 31.13758°E / 29.97526; 31.13758 |
Length | 73 metres (240 ft) |
Width | 19 metres (62 ft) |
Height | 20 metres (66 ft) |
History | |
Material | Limestone |
Founded | c. 2500 BC |
Site notes | |
Condition | Partially restored |
The Great Sphinx of Giza is a limestone statue of a reclining sphinx, a mythical creature with the head of a human and the body of a lion. Facing directly from west to east, it stands on the Giza Plateau on the west bank of the Nile in Giza, Egypt. The face of the Sphinx appears to represent the pharaoh Khafre. The original shape of the Sphinx was cut from bedrock, and has since been restored with layers of limestone blocks. It measures 73 m (240 ft) long from paw to tail, 20 m (66 ft) high from the base to the top of the head and 19 m (62 ft) wide at its rear haunches.
The Sphinx is the oldest known monumental sculpture in Egypt and one of the most recognizable statues in the world. The archaeological evidence suggests that it was created by ancient Egyptians of the Old Kingdom during the reign of Khafre (c. 2558–2532 BC).
The circumstances surrounding the Sphinx's nose being broken off are uncertain, but close inspection suggests a deliberate act using rods or chisels. Contrary to a popular myth, it was not broken off by cannonfire from Napoleon's troops during his 1798 Egyptian campaign. Its absence is in fact depicted in artwork predating Napoleon and referred to in descriptions by the 15th-century historian al-Maqrīzī.
Names
The original name the Old Kingdom creators gave the Sphinx is unknown, as the Sphinx temple, enclosure, and possibly the Sphinx itself was not completed at the time, and thus little is known about its cultural context. In the New Kingdom, the Sphinx was revered as the solar deity Hor-em-akhet (English: "Horus of the Horizon"; Hellenized: Harmachis), and the pharaoh Thutmose IV (1401–1391 or 1397–1388 BC) specifically referred to it as such in his Dream Stele.
The commonly used name "Sphinx" was given to it in classical antiquity, around 2,000 years after the commonly accepted date of its construction by reference to a Greek mythological beast with the head of a woman, a falcon, a cat, or a sheep and the body of a lion with the wings of an eagle (although, like most Egyptian sphinxes, the Great Sphinx has a man's head and no wings). The English word sphinx comes from the ancient Greek Σφίγξ (transliterated: sphinx) apparently from the verb σφίγγω (transliterated: sphingo / English: to squeeze), after the Greek sphinx who strangled anyone who failed to answer her riddle.
Medieval Arab writers, including al-Maqrīzī, call the Sphinx by an Arabized Coptic name Belhib (Arabic: بلهيب), Balhubah (Arabic: بلهوبه) Belhawiyya (Arabic: بلهويه), which in turn comes from Pehor (Ancient Egyptian: pꜣ-Ḥwr) or Pehor(o)n (Ancient Egyptian: pꜣ-Ḥwr(w)n), a name of the Canaanite god Hauron with whom the Sphinx was identified. It is also rendered as Ablehon on a depiction of the Sphinx made by François de La Boullaye-Le Gouz. The modern Egyptian Arabic name is أبو الهول (ʼabu alhōl / ʼabu alhawl IPA: [ʔabulhoːl], "The Terrifying One"; literally "Father of Dread") which is a phono-semantic matching of the Coptic name.
History
Old Kingdom
The archaeological evidence suggests that the Great Sphinx was created around 2500 BC for the king Khafre, the builder of the Second Pyramid at Giza. The Sphinx is a monolith carved from the bedrock of the plateau, which also served as the quarry for the pyramids and other monuments in the area. Egyptian geologist Farouk El-Baz has suggested that the head of the Sphinx may have been carved first, out of a natural yardang, i.e. a ridge of bedrock that had been sculpted by the wind. These can sometimes achieve shapes that resemble animals. El-Baz suggests that the "moat" or "ditch" around the Sphinx may have been quarried out later to allow for the creation of the full body of the sculpture. The stones cut from around the Sphinx's body were used to construct a temple in front of it; however, neither the enclosure nor the temple were ever completed, and the relative scarcity of Old Kingdom cultural material suggests that a Sphinx cult was not established at the time. Selim Hassan, writing in 1949 on recent excavations of the Sphinx enclosure, made note of this circumstance:
Taking all things into consideration, it seems that we must give the credit of erecting this, the world's most wonderful statue, to Khafre, but always with this reservation: that there is not one single contemporary inscription which connects the Sphinx with Khafre, so sound as it may appear, we must treat the evidence as circumstantial, until such time as a lucky turn of the spade of the excavator will reveal to the world a definite reference to the erection of the Sphinx.
— Hassan, page 164
In order to construct the temple, the northern perimeter-wall of the Khafre Valley Temple had to be deconstructed, hence it follows that the Khafre funerary complex preceded the creation of the Sphinx and its temple. Furthermore, the angle and location of the south wall of the enclosure suggests the causeway connecting Khafre's Pyramid and Valley Temple already existed before the Sphinx was planned. The lower base level of the Sphinx temple also indicates that it does not pre-date the Valley Temple.
New Kingdom
Some time around the First Intermediate Period, the Giza Necropolis was abandoned, and drifting sand eventually buried the Sphinx up to its shoulders. The first documented attempt at an excavation dates to c. 1400 BC, when the young Thutmose IV (1401–1391 or 1397–1388 BC) gathered a team and, after much effort, managed to dig out the front paws, between which he erected a shrine that housed the Dream Stele, an inscribed granite slab (possibly a repurposed door lintel from one of Khafre's temples). When the stele was discovered, its lines of text were already damaged and incomplete. An excerpt reads:
... the royal son, Thothmos, being arrived, while walking at midday and seating himself under the shadow of this mighty god, was overcome by slumber and slept at the very moment when Ra is at the summit . He found that the Majesty of this august god spoke to him with his own mouth, as a father speaks to his son, saying: Look upon me, contemplate me, O my son Thothmos; I am thy father, Harmakhis-Khopri-Ra-Tum; I bestow upon thee the sovereignty over my domain, the supremacy over the living ... Behold my actual condition that thou mayest protect all my perfect limbs. The sand of the desert whereon I am laid has covered me. Save me, causing all that is in my heart to be executed.
— The Stele of Thothmes IV: A Translation
The Dream Stele associates the Sphinx with Khafre. However, this part of the text is not entirely intact:
which we bring for him: oxen ... and all the young vegetables; and we shall give praise to Wenofer ... Khaf ... the statue made for Atum-Hor-em-Akhet.
— Jason Colavito, Who Built the Sphinx?
Egyptologist Thomas Young, finding the Khaf hieroglyphs in a damaged cartouche used to surround a royal name, inserted the glyph ra to complete Khafre's name. When the Stele was re-excavated in 1925, the lines of text referring to Khaf flaked off and were destroyed.
Later, Ramesses II the Great (1279–1213 BC) may have undertaken a second excavation.
In the New Kingdom, the Sphinx became more specifically associated with the sun god Hor-em-akhet (Hellenized: Harmachis) or "Horus-at-the-Horizon". The Pharaoh Amenhotep II (1427–1401 or 1397 BC) built a temple to the northeast of the Sphinx nearly 1,000 years after its construction and dedicated it to the cult of Hor-em-akhet.
Graeco-Roman period
In Graeco-Roman times, Giza had become a tourist destination—the monuments were regarded as antiquities—and some Roman Emperors visited the Sphinx out of curiosity, and for political reasons.
The Sphinx was cleared of sand again in the first century AD in honor of Emperor Nero and the Governor of Egypt Tiberius Claudius Balbilus. A monumental stairway—more than 12 metres (39 ft) wide—was erected, leading to a pavement in front of the paws of the Sphinx. At the top of the stairs, a podium was positioned that allowed a view into the Sphinx sanctuary. Farther back, another podium neighbored several more steps. The stairway was dismantled during the 1931–32 excavations by Émile Baraize.
Pliny the Elder describes the face of the Sphinx being colored red and gives measurements for the statue:
In front of these pyramids is the Sphinx, a still more wondrous object of art, but one upon which silence has been observed, as it is looked upon as a divinity by the people of the neighbourhood. It is their belief that King Harmaïs was buried in it, and they will have it that it was brought there from a distance. The truth is, however, that it was hewn from the solid rock; and, from a feeling of veneration, the face of the monster is coloured red. The circumference of the head, measured round the forehead, is one hundred and two feet, the length of the feet being one hundred and forty-three, and the height, from the belly to the summit of the asp on the head, sixty-two.
A stela dated to 166 AD commemorates the restoration of the retaining walls surrounding the Sphinx. The last Emperor connected with the monument is Septimius Severus, around 200 AD. With the downfall of Roman power, the Sphinx was once more engulfed by the sands.
- Side view of the Sphinx with the Roman stairway on the right, c. 1930
- Top of the Roman stairway before dismantling in 1931–1932
- Map of the area east of the Sphinx by Henry Salt
Middle Ages
Some ancient non-Egyptians saw the Sphinx as a likeness of the god Hauron. The cult of the Sphinx continued into medieval times. The Sabians of Harran saw it as the burial place of Hermes Trismegistus. Arab authors described the Sphinx as a talisman that guarded the area from the desert. Al-Maqrizi describes it as the "talisman of the Nile" that the locals believed the flood cycle depended upon. Muhammad al-Idrisi stated that those wishing to obtain bureaucratic positions in the Egyptian government gave incense offering to the monument.
Early modern period
Over the centuries, writers and scholars have recorded their impressions and reactions upon seeing the Sphinx. The vast majority were concerned with a general description, often including a mixture of science, romance and mystique. A typical description of the Sphinx by tourists and leisure travelers throughout the 19th and 20th century was made by John Lawson Stoddard:
It is the antiquity of the Sphinx which thrills us as we look upon it, for in itself it has no charms. The desert's waves have risen to its breast, as if to wrap the monster in a winding-sheet of gold. The face and head have been mutilated by Moslem fanatics. The mouth, the beauty of whose lips was once admired, is now expressionless. Yet grand in its loneliness, – veiled in the mystery of unnamed ages, – the relic of Egyptian antiquity stands solemn and silent in the presence of the awful desert – symbol of eternity. Here it disputes with Time the empire of the past; forever gazing on and on into a future which will still be distant when we, like all who have preceded us and looked upon its face, have lived our little lives and disappeared.
— John L. Stoddard's Lectures
From the 16th to the 19th centuries, European observers described the Sphinx having the face, neck and breast of a woman. Examples included Johannes Helferich (1579), George Sandys (1615), Johann Michael Vansleb (1677), Benoît de Maillet (1735) and Elliot Warburton (1844).
Most early Western images were book illustrations in print form, elaborated by a professional engraver from either previous images available or some original drawing or sketch supplied by an author, and usually now lost. Seven years after visiting Giza, André Thévet (Cosmographie de Levant, 1556) described the Sphinx as "the head of a colossus, caused to be made by Isis, daughter of Inachus, then so beloved of Jupiter". He, or his artist and engraver, pictured it as a curly-haired monster with a grassy dog collar. Athanasius Kircher (who never visited Egypt) depicted the Sphinx as a Roman statue (Turris Babel, 1679). Johannes Helferich's (1579) Sphinx is a pinched-face, round-breasted woman with a straight haired wig. George Sandys stated that the Sphinx was a harlot; Balthasar de Monconys interpreted the headdress as a kind of hairnet, while François de La Boullaye-Le Gouz's Sphinx had a rounded hairdo with bulky collar.
Richard Pococke's Sphinx was an adoption of Cornelis de Bruijn's drawing of 1698, featuring only minor changes, but is closer to the actual appearance of the Sphinx than anything previous. The print versions of Norden's drawings for his Voyage d'Egypte et de Nubie, 1755 clearly show that the nose was missing.
- Hogenberg and Braun (map), Cairus, quae olim Babylon (1572), exists in various editions, from various authors, with the Sphinx looking different.
- Jan Sommer, (unpublished) Voyages en Egypte des annees 1589, 1590 & 1591, Institut de France, 1971 (Voyageurs occidentaux en Égypte 3)
- George Sandys, A relation of a journey begun an dom. 1610 (1615)
- François de La Boullaye-Le Gouz, Les Voyages et Observations (1653)
- Balthasar de Monconys, Journal des voyages (1665)
- Olfert Dapper, Description de l'Afrique (1665), note the two different displays of the Sphinx.
- Cornelis de Bruijn, Reizen van Cornelis de Bruyn door de vermaardste Deelen van Klein Asia (1698)
- Johanne Baptista Homann (map), Aegyptus hodierna (1724)
- Frederic Louis Norden, Voyage d'Égypte et de Nubie (1755)
Modern excavations
In 1817, the first modern archaeological dig, supervised by the Italian Giovanni Battista Caviglia, uncovered the Sphinx's chest completely.
In the beginning of the year 1887, the chest, the paws, the altar, and plateau were all made visible. Flights of steps were unearthed, and finally accurate measurements were taken of the great figures. The height from the lowest of the steps was found to be one hundred feet, and the space between the paws was found to be thirty-five feet long and ten feet wide. Here there was formerly an altar; and a stele of Thûtmosis IV was discovered, recording a dream in which he was ordered to clear away the sand that even then was gathering round the site of the Sphinx.
— S. Rappoport, The Project Gutenberg EBook of History of Egypt From 330 B.C. To The Present, Volume 12
One of the people working on clearing the sands from around the Great Sphinx was Eugène Grébaut, a French Director of the Antiquities Service.
Opinions of early Egyptologists
Early Egyptologists and excavators were of divided opinion regarding the age of the Sphinx and the associated temples.
In 1857, Auguste Mariette, founder of the Egyptian Museum in Cairo, unearthed the much later Inventory Stela (estimated to be from the Twenty-sixth Dynasty, c. 664–525 BC), which tells how Khufu came upon the Sphinx, already buried in sand. Although certain tracts on the Stela are likely accurate, this passage is contradicted by archaeological evidence, thus considered to be Late Period historical revisionism, a purposeful fake, created by the local priests as an attempt to imbue the contemporary Isis temple with an ancient history it never had. Such acts became common when religious institutions such as temples, shrines and priests' domains were fighting for political attention and for financial and economic donations.
Flinders Petrie wrote in 1883 regarding the state of opinion of the age of the Khafre Valley Temple, and by extension the Sphinx: "The date of the Granite Temple has been so positively asserted to be earlier than the fourth dynasty, that it may seem rash to dispute the point. Recent discoveries, however, strongly show that it was really not built before the reign of Khafre, in the fourth dynasty."
Gaston Maspero, the French Egyptologist and second director of the Egyptian Museum in Cairo, conducted a survey of the Sphinx in 1886. He concluded that because the Dream Stela showed the cartouche of Khafre in line 13, it was he who was responsible for the excavation and therefore the Sphinx must predate Khafre and his predecessors—possibly Fourth Dynasty, c. 2575–2467 BC. Maspero believed the Sphinx to be "the most ancient monument in Egypt".
Ludwig Borchardt attributed the Sphinx to the Middle Kingdom, arguing that the particular features seen on the Sphinx are unique to the 12th dynasty and that the Sphinx resembles Amenemhat III.
E. A. Wallis Budge agreed that the Sphinx predated Khafre's reign, writing in The Gods of the Egyptians (1904): "This marvelous object was in existence in the days of Khafre, or Khephren, and it is probable that it is a very great deal older than his reign and that it dates from the end of the archaic period ."
Selim Hassan reasoned that the Sphinx was erected after the completion of the Khafre pyramid complex.
Modern dissenting hypotheses
Rainer Stadelmann, former director of the German Archaeological Institute in Cairo, examined the distinct iconography of the nemes (headdress) and the now-detached beard of the Sphinx and concluded the style is more indicative of the pharaoh Khufu (2589–2566 BC), known to the Greeks as Cheops, builder of the Great Pyramid of Giza and Khafre's father. He supports this by suggesting Khafre's Causeway was built to conform to a pre-existing structure, which, he concludes, given its location, could only have been the Sphinx.
In 2004, Vassil Dobrev of the Institut Français d'Archéologie Orientale in Cairo announced he had uncovered new evidence that the Great Sphinx may have been the work of the little-known pharaoh Djedefre (2528–2520 BC), Khafre's half brother and a son of Khufu. Dobrev suggests Djedefre built the Sphinx in the image of his father Khufu, identifying him with the sun god Ra in order to restore respect for their dynasty. Dobrev also says that the causeway connecting Khafre's pyramid to the temples was built around the Sphinx, suggesting it was already in existence at the time. Egyptologist Nigel Strudwick responded to Dobrev saying that: "It is not implausible. But I would need more explanation, such as why he thinks the pyramid at Abu Roash is a sun temple, something I'm sceptical about. I have never heard anyone suggest that the name in the graffiti at Zawiyet el-Aryan mentions Djedefre. I remain more convinced by the traditional argument of it being Khafre or the more recent theory of it being Khufu."
Geologist Colin Reader suggests that water runoff from the Giza plateau is responsible for the differential erosion on the walls of the sphinx enclosure. Because the hydrological characteristics of the area were significantly changed by the quarries, he contends this suggests that the sphinx likely predated the quarries (and thus, the pyramids). He points towards the larger cyclopean stones in part of the Sphinx Temple, as well as the causeway alignment with the pyramids and the break in the quarries, as evidence that the pyramids took the alignment with some pre-existing structure, such as the sphinx, into consideration when they were constructed, and that the sphinx temple was built in two distinct phases. He contends that such erosion could have occurred relatively rapidly and suggests that the sphinx was no more than a few centuries older than present archaeology would suggest, suggesting a late Predynastic or Early Dynastic origin, when Ancient Egyptians already were known to be capable of sophisticated masonry.
Recent restorations
In 1931, engineers of the Egyptian government repaired the head of the Sphinx. Part of its headdress had fallen off in 1926 due to erosion, which had also cut deeply into its neck. This questionable repair was by the addition of a concrete collar between the headdress and the neck, creating an altered profile. Many renovations to the stone base and raw rock body were done in the 1980s, and then redone in the 1990s.
Panoramic view of the Sphinx and the Great Pyramid of Giza, 2010Degradation and violation
The nummulitic limestone of the area consists of layers which offer differing resistance to erosion (mostly caused by wind and windblown sand), leading to the uneven degradation apparent in the Sphinx's body. The lowest part of the body, including the legs, is solid rock. The body of the animal up to its neck is fashioned from softer layers that have suffered considerable disintegration. The layer in which the head was sculpted is much harder.
A number of "dead-end" shafts are known to exist within and below the body of the Great Sphinx, most likely dug by treasure hunters and tomb robbers.
Missing nose
Examination of the Sphinx's face shows that long rods or chisels were hammered into the nose area, one down from the bridge and another beneath the nostril, then used to pry the nose off towards the south, resulting in the one-metre wide nose still being lost to date. Many folk tales exist regarding the destruction of its nose, aiming to provide an answer as to where it went or what happened to it. One tale erroneously attributes it to cannonballs fired by the army of Napoleon Bonaparte. This is considered false since drawings of the Sphinx by Frederic Louis Norden in 1737 already show the nose missing, predating Napoleon's arrival by sixty years.
The damaged nose has also been attributed by some 10th century Arab authors stating that it was a result of iconoclastic attacks. Besides this, there was also mention of the damage being the work of the Mamluks in the 14th century. According to Ibn Qadi Shuhba, Muhammad ibn Sadiq ibn al-Muhammad al-Tibrizi al-Masri (d. 1384), desecrated the sphinxes of "Qanatir al-Siba".
The Arab historian al-Maqrīzī, writing in the early 15th century, attributes the loss of the nose to Muhammad Sa'im al-Dahr, a Sufi Muslim from the khanqah of Sa'id al-Su'ada in 1378, who found local peasants making offerings to the Sphinx in the hope of increasing their harvest and therefore defaced the Sphinx in an act of iconoclasm. According to al-Maqrīzī, many people living in the area believed that the increased sand covering the Giza Plateau was retribution for al-Dahr's act of defacement. Al-Minufi (1443–1527) meanwhile mentioned that the Alexandrian Crusade in 1365 was divine retribution for Muhammad Sa'im al-Dahr's breaking off the nose of a sphinx.
Beard
In addition to the lost nose, a ceremonial pharaonic beard is thought to have been attached, although this may have been added in later periods after the original construction. Egyptologist Vassil Dobrev has suggested that had the beard been an original part of the Sphinx, it would have damaged the chin of the statue upon falling.
Residues of red pigment are visible on areas of the Sphinx's face and traces of yellow and blue pigment have also been found elsewhere on the Sphinx, leading Mark Lehner to suggest that the monument "was once decked out in gaudy comic book colours".
Holes and tunnels
Hole in the Sphinx's head
Johann Helffrich visited the Sphinx during his travels in 1565–1566. He describes that a priest went into the head of the Sphinx, and when he spoke it was as if the Sphinx itself was speaking.
Many New Kingdom stelae depict the Sphinx wearing a crown. If it in fact existed, the hole could have been the anchoring point for it.
Émile Baraize closed the hole with a metal hatch in 1926.
Perring's Hole
Howard Vyse directed Perring in 1837 to drill a tunnel in the back of the Sphinx, just behind the head. The boring rods became stuck at a depth of 27 feet (8.2 m), Attempts to blast the rods free caused further damage. The hole was cleared in 1978. Among the rubble was a fragment of the Sphinx's nemes headdress.
Major fissure
A major natural fissure in the bedrock cuts through the waist of the Sphinx, first excavated by Auguste Mariette in 1853.
At the top of the back it measures up to 2 metres (6.6 ft) in width. Baraize, in 1926, sealed the sides and roofed it with iron bars, limestone and cement, and installed an iron trap door at the top. The sides of the fissure might have been artificially squared; however, the bottom is irregular bedrock, about 1 metre (3.3 ft) above the outside floor. A very narrow crack continues deeper.
- Major fissure running through the waist of the Sphinx, before modern restorations in 1926
- Trap-door access to major fissure, after restorations
Rump passage
In 1926, the Sphinx was cleared of sand under direction of Baraize, which revealed an opening to a tunnel at floor-level at the north side of the rump. It was subsequently closed by masonry veneer and nearly forgotten.
More than fifty years later, the existence of the passage was recalled by three elderly men who had worked during the clearing as basket carriers. This led to the rediscovery and excavation of the rump passage, in 1980.
The passage consists of an upper and a lower section, which are angled roughly 90 degrees to each other:
- The upper part ascends to a height of 4 metres (13 ft) above the ground-floor at a northwest direction. It runs between masonry veneer and the core body of the Sphinx and ends in a niche 1 metre (3.3 ft) wide and 1.8 metres (5.9 ft) high. The ceiling of the niche consists of modern cement, which likely spilled down from the filling of the gap between masonry and core bedrock, some 3 metres (9.8 ft) above
- The lower part descends steeply into the bedrock toward northeast, for a distance of approximately 4 metres (13 ft) and a depth of 5 metres (16 ft). It terminated in a cul-de-sac pit at groundwater level. At the entrance it is 1.3 metres (4.3 ft) wide, narrowing to about 1.07 metres (3.5 ft) towards the end. Among the sand and stone fragments, a piece of tin foil and the base of a modern ceramic water jar was found. The clogged bottom contained modern fill. Among it, more tin foil, modern cement and a pair of shoes
It is possible that the entire passage was cut top down, beginning high up on the rump, and that the current access point at floor-level was made at a later date.
Vyse noted in his diary (February 27 and 28, 1837) that he was "boring" near the tail, which indicates him as the creator of the passage, as no other tunnel has been identified at this location. Another interpretation is that the shaft is of ancient origin, perhaps an exploratory tunnel or an unfinished tomb shaft.
- Top-down plan of the rump passage. Lower part labeled "Sub-Floor Shaft", upper part "Core-Body Trench".
- Profile of the rump passage with upper part (1+2) and lower part (3+4)
- Rump of the Sphinx, with passage entrance at floor-level, c. 1980
- Closeup of the entrance hole of the rump shaft
- Inside the passage, looking up, seeing entrance stones and upper tunnel
- Looking up the upper tunnel
- Ceiling of upper tunnel
- Looking down the upper part from chamber 1
- Lower part of rump passage, before excavation
- Lower part after excavation
Niche in northern flank
A 1925 photograph shows a man standing below floor level in a niche in the Sphinx's core body. It was closed during the 1925–1926 restorations.
Gap under southern large masonry box
Another hole might have been at floor level in the large masonry box on the south side of the Sphinx.
Space behind Dream Stele
The space behind the Dream Stele, between the paws of the Sphinx, was covered by an iron beam and cement roof, which was fitted with an iron trap door.
Keyhole Shaft
At the ledge of the Sphinx enclosure, a square shaft is located opposite the northern hind paw. It was cleared during excavation in 1978 by Hawass and measures 1.42 by 1.06 metres (4.7 by 3.5 ft) and about 2 metres (6.6 ft) deep. Lehner interprets the shaft to be an unfinished tomb and named it "Keyhole Shaft", because of cuttings in the ledge above the shaft that are shaped like the lower part of a traditional (Victorian era) keyhole, upside down.
Pseudohistory
Numerous ideas have been suggested to explain or reinterpret the origin and identity of the Sphinx, that lack sufficient evidential support and/or are contradicted by such, and are therefore considered part of pseudohistory and pseudoarchaeology.
Ancient Astronauts/Atlantis
Further information: Ancient astronauts and Atlantis § Atlantis pseudohistory- The Sphinx is oriented from west to east, towards the rising sun, in accordance with the ancient Egyptian solar cult. The Orion correlation theory posits that it was instead aligned to face the constellation of Leo during the vernal equinox around 10,500 BC. The idea is considered pseudoarchaeology by academia, because no textual or archaeological evidence supports this to be the reason for the orientation of the Sphinx
- The Sphinx water erosion hypothesis contends that the main type of weathering evident on the enclosure walls of the Great Sphinx could only have been caused by prolonged and extensive rainfall, and must therefore predate the time of the pharaoh Khafre. The hypothesis was championed by René Schwaller de Lubicz, John Anthony West, and geologist Robert M. Schoch. The theory is considered pseudoarchaeology by mainstream scholarship due to archaeological, climatological and geological evidence to the contrary.
- There is a long history of speculation about hidden chambers beneath the Sphinx, by esoteric figures such as H. Spencer Lewis. Edgar Cayce specifically predicted in the 1930s that a "Hall of Records", containing knowledge from Atlantis, would be discovered under the Sphinx in 1998. His prediction fueled much of the fringe speculation that surrounded the Sphinx in the 1990s, which lost momentum when the hall was not found when predicted
- Author Robert K. G. Temple proposes that the Sphinx was originally a statue of the jackal god Anubis, the god of funerals, and that its face was recarved in the likeness of a Middle Kingdom pharaoh, Amenemhet II. Temple bases his identification on the style of the eye make-up and style of the pleats on the headdress
Racial characteristics
Further information: Ancient Egyptian race controversyUntil the early 20th century, it was suggested that the face of the Sphinx had "Negroid" characteristics, as part of the now outdated historical race concepts.
Gallery
- Description de l'Egypte, Planches, Antiquités, volume V (1823)
- Description de l'Egypte, Planches, Antiquités, volume V (1823)
- Members of the Second Japanese Embassy to Europe (1863) in front of the Sphinx, 1864
- French archaeologist Auguste Mariette (seated, far left) and Emperor Pedro II of Brazil (seated, far right) with others in front of the Sphinx, 1871
- The Great Sphinx partly under the sand, c. 1880
- Jean-Léon Gérôme's Bonaparte Before the Sphinx, 1886
- The Sphinx in profile in 2016
- Rear view of the Sphinx in 2014, showing some of the restoration work up to that time
See also
- Sphinx of Memphis
- Sphinx of Taharqo
- African lions in culture
- Lion (heraldry)
- List of colossal sculpture in situ
- List of tallest statues
Notes
- See Thutmose IV#Dates and length of reign
- Early Egyptologists were inconsistent in their transliteration of pharaonic names: Khafre and Khephren are both references to Khafre.
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External links
- Media related to Great Sphinx of Giza at Wikimedia Commons
- Riddle of the Sphinx
- Egyptian and Greek Sphinxes
- Egypt—The Lost Civilization Theory
- The Sphinx's Nose
- What happened to the Sphinx's nose? Archived 16 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine
- Sphinx photo gallery
- Al Maqrizi's account (in Arabic)
- The Age of the Sphinx by Brian Dunning
- ARCE Sphinx Project 1979–1983 Archive
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