Sekhemkhet's pyramid complex was built southwest of Djoser's at
Saqqara, and it includes a pyramid, a subterranean structure and a necropolis complex.
The name Imhotep appears on a section of the complex's enclosure wall. While the name itself contains no titles and thus it is uncertain if this is the
same architect that planned Djoser's Step Pyramid, the line of succession and similar architectural features suggest such possibility.
[8]Pyramid[edit]
The ancient name of Sekhemkhet's pyramid is unknown; however, it is colloquially known as Buried Pyramid due to its unfinished nature as well as it being previously unknown until its discovery in 1952, when it was found beneath the sands. Its present state is more similar to a
mastaba, only reaching 2.43 m (8 ft) of height. The pyramid's foundations stand upon an uneven rock surface, leading the builders to try to level the terrain by building terraces, some reaching ten metres high.
[9]The pyramid was to be stepped right from its inception. With a base 115 metres (377 ft) in length, it suggests that, if it had been completed, the superstructure would be taller than
its neighbour, with seven steps and rising to 70 metres (230 ft).
As the pyramid was unfinished, it never received its limestone casing, but the construction technique can be still be made out: the limestone blocks are inclined inwards by 15°, with sloping courses of stone laid at right angles to the incline.
[10]Substructure[edit]
The entrance to the subterranean structure lies to the north, starting with a narrow passage that descends for about 60,96 m (200 ft) until meeting a vertical shaft from the top of the corridor. At this spot, another passage leads down to a row of 136 unfinished galeries which forms a U shape around the pyramid.
[11] Two further such magazine galleries appear right before the entrance to the burial chamber with a similar disposition, like their counterparts, they were never finished.
The burial chamber has a base measurement of 8,8 m (29 ft) x 5,18 m (17 ft) and a height of 4,5 m (15 ft). It was also left unfinished, yet, it contained a complete burial arrangement. The sarcophagus is cut from a single block of fine alabaster, its lid was vertical, slid into place and held at the front face by means of mortar sealing.
[12]Necropolis complex[edit]
The complex is oriented with a north-south axis, but with an accuracy deviation of about 11°. One notable feature of this complex is an inner wall known as "White Wall" made out of limestone covered with red mason's lines and graffiti.
It remain unknown whether Sekhemkhet's complex would include any mortuary temples or other features also found in Djoser's complex.
[13] Its unfinished state presents difficulty for such conjectures.
The actual entrance to the complex is unknown.
South Tomb[edit]
In 1963, J. P. Lauer found, offset from the center to west axis of the pyramid and under a mastaba-like structure with dimensions 32 m (104,9 ft) × 16 m (52,4 ft), the foundations of the so-called South Tomb. It stands closer to the pyramid itself than in the complex of his predecessor.
[14]In the substructure of the mastaba, following a passage accessed by a vertical shaft, the excavators unearthed a chamber where they found a wooden coffin with the remains of an unidentified two-year-old child. It is certain the child is not Sekhemkhet himself, since he is represented as an adult in reliefs from Wadi Maghara in
Sinai. Also found were animal bones, stone vessels and gold jewelry from the Third Dynasty, as well as traces of a robbery of the tomb.
[15]Enclosure wall[edit]
The enclosure walls had a niches similar to the one on the walls of the Djoser complex, and was clad with Tura limestone that has been preserved in the first north wall, as they had been filled with the extension. The walls were about ten meters high. The extension walls may have halted during the first stages of construction or the Tura limestone casing was stolen.
References[edit]
[list=references]
[*]
Jump up ^ Shaw, Ian, Oxford History of Ancient Egypt, 2000 p. 86[*]
Jump up ^ Lehner, Mark, "The Complete Pyramids – Solving the Ancient Mysteries", 1997 p. 84[*]
Jump up ^ Lehner, Mark, 1997 p. 94[*]
Jump up ^ Goneim, Zakaria, "The Lost Pyramid", 1956 p.40[*]
Jump up ^ http://www.catchpenny.org/sekhem.html[*]
Jump up ^ Lehner, Mark, 1997 p.94[*]
Jump up ^ http://www.catchpenny.org/sekhem.html[*]
Jump up ^ Goneim, Zakaria, 1956 p.167[*]
Jump up ^ http://www.touregypt.net/featurestories/sekhemkhet.htm[*]
Jump up ^ Lehner, Mark, 1997 p. 94[*]
Jump up ^ Goneim, Zakaria, 1956 p.104[*]
Jump up ^ Goneim, Zakaria, 1956 p.141[*]
Jump up ^ http://emhotep.net/2013/01/23/em-hotep-digest/em-hotep-digest-vol-02-no-03-djosers-step-pyramid-complex/[*]
Jump up ^ http://egyptsites.wordpress.com/2009/02/18/pyramid-complex-of-sekhemkhet[*]
Jump up ^ Lehner, Mark, 1997 p.94[/list]