Solar Boat Museum
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Khufu's
Boat |
In 1950, Kamal el-Mallakh an architect and archaeologist,
was working as an Antiquities Inspector at Giza, when he first
noticed a thin line of mortar which delineated the edge of
a pair of long narrow pits, end to end, on the south side
of the Great Pyramid of Khufu. At the time the area was being
cleared for a tourist road and when the men dug further they
uncovered 41 huge slabs of limestone in the eastern pit (the
western one contained 40 slabs) and a mason's mark with a
cartouche of Djedefre, Khufu's successor. The stonework was
at first thought to be of little interest and it took Kamal
el-Mallakh four years to persuade his superiors that the slabs
should be further investigated.
On May 26, 1954, the team began to dig and eventually
Mr el-Mallakh was lowered into a hole in one of the blocks.
His first sensation was the sweet smell of cedarwood and a
great sense of fulfilment - then with the use of a torch and
a mirror he caught sight of the large oar of a full-sized
dismantled boat. The pit had been airtight and the boat seemed
to be in a remarkable state of preservation, arranged in thirteen
neatly piled layers, complete with ropes for rigging and pieces
of matting.
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Solar Boat
Museum |
The boat was laboriously removed from its pit, in
pieces, following preliminary consolidation of the cloth and
matting which covered it and in 1958 reconstruction of the
boat, by Hag Ahmed Youssef Moustafa the Antiquities Service's
principal restorer, was able to begin. This consisted of re-assembling
the 1224 individual pieces of cedar, acacia and other elements
in a painstaking operation rather like putting together a
jig-saw puzzle without a picture. The ancient builders had
helpfully indicated on some of the pieces which parts of the
craft they had come from, but the work still took over ten
years to complete and was finally fully re-assembled in 1968.
No nails were used in the construction and the planking was
assembled through an ingenious system of stitching through
holes with ropes of vegetable fibres. When the wood was swollen
by water the ropes would tighten and make the boat watertight.
The solar boat measures 43.3m long, 5.9m wide, has
a draft of 1.48m and an estimated displacement of around 45
tons. It resembles paintings and models of boats which have
survived since ancient times, with a large central panelled
cabin, 9m long, an open canopy supported by poles and a smaller
one at the fore which was probably for the captain's use.
It was steered by five pairs of oars plus one pair at the
stern to act as a rudder. It's stem and stern were fashioned
in the form of papyrus stalks, as though intended to represent
the type of papyrus boat used throughout ancient Egyptian
history.
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Solar Boat
Museum |
The significance of the buried boat is still debated.
The Pyramid Texts clearly state that at the end of the pharaoh's
life on Earth, his soul ascends to the heavens in the solar
barque to join his father Re. The arguments are about whether
this boat was purely symbolic - part of the burial goods -
or whether it was actually used in the funeral procession
to transport the body of the king by river to his pyramid
complex. While some scholars claim that there is evidence
that the boat has been in water, Zahi Hawass points out that
shavings of cedar and acacia found in the pit during excavation,
indicate that it was probably built close to where it was
buried. While the boat is of the right dimensions to be suitable
as a river craft, no mast was found with the components.
Other ancient wooden boats and their emplacements
have been discovered in Egypt. In 1893, Jaques de Morgan discovered
six boats near the Middle Kingdom pyramid of Senwosret III
at Dashur. More recently, in 1987, the western boat pit at
the Great Pyramid was examined by a microprobe inserted through
a hole drilled into the pit, confirming the presence of a
second wooden boat similar to the first. It has been decided
that the second boat will remain in its pit, in conditions
which make its preservation near perfect.
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Solar Boat
Museum Interior |
In 1991, American archaeologist David O'Connor discovered
twelve boat pits near Khasekhemwy's Dynasty II funerary enclosure
at Abydos (Shunet el-Zebib), although it has been recently
established by experts that the boats had been placed in the
pits long before the enclosure was built. Each of the pits
was found to contain remains of a wooden boat, though not
as well-preserved as Khufu's. Interestingly, the boats were
filled in with mudbricks, each one itself boat-shaped. In
a period when wood is believed to have been a rare and precious
commodity in Egypt, it is hoped that this exciting discovery
will provide many insights into power and foreign relationships
at the beginning of Egyptian history. Two more boats were
discovered at Abydos in the year 2000, making a total of fourteen
boats thought to predate those of Khufu by at least 300 years.
Khufu's solar boat remains the most spectacular of
all Egyptian boats found to date. It is now on display in
its own specially-built museum just a few metres from where
it was found on the southern side of the monument, an imposing
legacy from the builder of the Great Pyramid.