Pyramid of Unas

The Pyramid was closed when we went — many of the sites in Saqqara are closed for renovations or restoration work — and from the outside it doesn’t look like much. A pile of limestone rubble in the vague shape of a pyramid originally 44 meters high, but squashed down to less than 20 now. If you can scramble around the back side of the pyramid, there are a number of intact casing stones.

Pyramid of Unas, Saqqara
Pyramid of Unas, Saqqara

The interior stone that is revealed, however, is roughly stacked rubble — it looks hastily put in place and barely capable of supporting the weight of the limestone casing when the pyramid was finished.

According to the books,though, the interior is well preserved and contains beautiful heiroglyphs. Every inch of the burial chamber is covered in texts. There is a plain sarcophagus, which has been carefully decorated. The quality of the carvings here are rarely matched in Egyptian art.

A short piece of the causeway has been reconstructed, and the inscriptions inside show transportation of granite and the predictable “smiting scenes” of Unas over his enemies. There are also extensive famine scenes, with the figures carved in emaciated stick-figure form.

Most of what you see standingis reconstruction, but parts of the causeway itself were found intact. The angled slit in the ceiling is designed to let in light, but not let it fade the colorful reliefs, and to divert any rain that might fall

The causeway of Unas, leading to his funerary temple
The causeway of Unas, leading to his funerary temple

The entrance is predictably on the north side down a steep passageway to the burial chamber. Three granite portcullises originally barred the way, an attempt to keep tomb robbers from the treasures buried inside. The burial chamber is plainly decorated except that the ceiling is covered in 5-pointed stars (a pattern repeated in the covered causeway outside) and a basalt sarcophagus. It is the walls of the passage leading to the burial chamber that are most interesting — painted green and containing the first known example of The Pyramid Texts, which formed the basis for the reknowned Book of the Dead.

The pyramid was opened in 1881 by the director of antiquities and sponsored by Thomas Cook & Son. Tourists have been visiting it ever since.

A funerary temple stood to the east, although only a few walls remain and some pieces of granite floor. The temple is not half as impressive as the causeway connecting the funerary temple to a valley temple near the Nile almost 700 meters away.

The causeway, still sporting a ceiling, at the Pyramid of Unas
The causeway, still sporting a ceiling, at the Pyramid of Unas

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