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Giza › Ancient History

Definition and Origins

by Joshua J. Mark
published on 02 September 2009
Sphinx and Khephren Pyramid ()

Giza is a plateau southwest of modern Cairo which served as the necropolis for the royalty of the Old Kingdom of Egypt.Most famous for the pyramids of Khufu (completed in c. 2560 BCE) Khafre (c. 2530 BCE) and Menkaure (c. 2510 BCE) and the Great Sphinx (built 2500 BCE), recent excavations on the plateau have revealed numerous private tomb complexes and workers' quarters. The original necropolis of Giza was laid out with amazing precision and skill but, once it became associated with the great kings of Egypt and their pyramids, attracted the attention of less prominent officials of lower rank. These officials had enough money and prestige to buy their way into burial plots at Giza but had no regard for the symmetry of the original schematics and had their tombs dug wherever they found available space. This resulted in a number of grave complexes throughout Giza which would not have been authorized by the kings who built the famous pyramids which, throughout history, have drawn visitors from around the world.

THE PYRAMIDS OF KHUFU, KHAFRE, AND MENKAURE

Although the Giza plateau is most closely associated with the pyramids of Khufu, Khafre, and Menkaure, the site was used as early as the First Dynasty of Egypt as evidenced by the tomb of the king Djet which was found toward the edge of the plateau. Evidence of at least one king from the Second Dynasty (Nynetjer) buried at Giza has also been found. Further, inscriptions relate how king Khufu had to clear many earlier tombs and grave complexes to build the Great Pyramid. What happened to the corpses or the grave goods from those tombs is not known.
The Great Pyramid of Khufu (also known as the pyramid of Cheops, the king's Greek name) is the last remaining of the ancient Seven Wonders of the World and rises to a height of 481 feet (147 metres). The pyramid of Khafre is 471 feet tall(144 metres) and that of Menkaure rises to 213 feet (65 metres). The Great Sphinx sits on the eastern side of the plateau apart from the pyramids but it is thought it once was an important part of the pyramid complex which covered the area. The head of the Sphinx is believed by Egyptologists to be that of the king Khafre though others contend that represents Khufu. Further on, the great solar barge of Khufu, which is the oldest intact ship extant, was found buried in a pit near the Great Pyramid in 1954 CE.Dating from c.2500 BCE, the ship is 143 feet (43 metres) long and 19 feet (5.9 metres) wide. Near the Pyramid complex there are a number of smaller structures known as the Queens Pyramids. It is uncertain who was buried beneath these pyramids but evidence suggests they were the tombs of Hetepheres I (Khufu's mother), Meretites (Khufu's wife) and a later queen named Henutsen.

THE PYRAMIDS WERE ONCE ENCASED IN POLISHED LIMESTONE WHICH REFLECTED THE LIGHT OF THE SUN BRILLIANTLY.

The pyramids were once encased in polished limestone which, according to ancient writers, reflected the light of the sun brilliantly. The limestone was stripped away over the years for use in other building projects, most notably the mosques of Cairo. Of the three major pyramids, however, only Menkaure's is seen today without any of its original limestone casing;Khafre's Pyramid retains its casing stones at its apex while Khufu's has a smaller remainder at its base. The sides of all three of the Giza pyramids were oriented astronomically to be precisely north-south and east-west within a small fraction of a degree.

OTHER TOMBS

The original layout of the necropolis at Giza seems to have been very precise and well-ordered but, after the end of the Old Kingdom, other tombs were dug without regard for the original pattern. Sometimes they were dug above existing tombs, making present-day Giza a wealth of archaeological material. Recent excavations have uncovered tombs of high officials, magistrates, and supervisors of building projects, as well as monuments honoring the Egyptian workers who labored on the pyramids and others who were employed and lived in the immediate vicinity.
The Pyramids of Giza

The Pyramids of Giza

Largely due to engravings and etchings from the 19th century and early 20th centuries CE (and postcards and calendars of modern times) many people think of the Giza plateau and the pyramids as resting in a remote, wind-swept desert locale, when in reality it sits at the very edge of urban sprawl of Cairo today. In its time it would have also been a center of daily activity with many buildings, colonnades, terraces and shops. The image of the Giza plateau in the modern day is thus vastly different from how it looked during the Fourth Dynasty of Egypt when the pyramids were built. There was a worker's village, which has been discovered and excavated, around 1300 feet (400 meters) south of the Great Sphinx where the laborers who worked on Menkaure's pyramid lived and those who built Khufu's pyramid founded a small village (Khufu's Village) on the far side of the complex.

THE PYRAMIDS' BUILDERS

No evidence of Hebrew slave-laborers has been discovered at Giza nor anywhere else in the entirety of Egypt, contrary to popular opinion and film-versions of Egyptian history based on the biblical Book of Exodus. In fact, it is well documented that Egyptians were compelled to perform community service for the pharaoh through the construction of monuments, public parks, and tombs. The evolution of the Shabti doll (figurines in the likeness of an individual which were buried with the dead) grew out of this policy of requiring Egyptians to give up a part of their year to work on public building projects.
The only way one could evade this service was by having another take one's place. It was thought, since the afterlife was a mirror image of Egypt, that the great god Osiris would require the same service from the souls in the afterlife. The Shabti doll, blessed with incantations and funerary rites, would come to life in the next world and labor for Osiris in place of the soul of the deceased. Graves and tombs throughout Egypt are easily recognized as belonging to richer or poorer citizens based on the number of Shabti dolls found in them; the more dolls, the richer the person, and the more leisurely their afterlife was supposed to be. The tradition of Hebrew slaves laboring in bondage in Egypt is not not supported by any ancient document other than the Book of Exodus while the practice of skilled Egyptian workers building the pyramids of Giza, and the other monuments throughout the land, is well documented from ancient records and archaeological evidence.
These workers were well fed and taken care of. It is estimated that up to 4,000 pounds of meat from cattle, sheep, and goats was consumed by the workers daily and they had access to the best medical care. These claims are substantiated by the number of animal bones found at the site (over 25,000 sheep bones and 8,000 cattle, among other animals) and the graves of workers whose skeletons show expertly mended bones. These workers also appear to have had dental care and it is thought, based on skeletons found elsewhere, that pyramid workers enjoyed a higher quality of life than they would have in the villages they came from.

ABANDONMENT AND DISCOVERY

During the First Intermediate Period (c. 2181-2040 BCE) Giza was abandoned and fell into decay during the Middle Kingdom (c. 2040-1782 BCE). The tombs, including the pyramids, were broken into and robbed and kings of the Middle Kingdom tore down temples, broke up walkways, and removed statuary for use in their own building projects. The pharaohs of the New Kingdom (1570-1069 BCE) reversed this policy and dedicated themselves to preservation efforts.
Rameses II (1279-1213 BCE) was especially interested in Giza and had a small temple built there in front of the Sphinx. It was Rameses fourth son Khaemweset, however, who worked the hardest to preserve the site. Khaemweset never ruled Egypt but was a crown prince whose efforts to restore the monuments of the past are well documented. In fact, he is considered today the world's "first Egyptologist" for his work in restoration, preservation, and recording of ancient monuments. Khaemweset brought the Giza plateau back to life and it continued to be used as a necropolis by the following dynasties, with less and less frequency, until Egypt was taken over by the Roman Empire in 30 BCE.
The Giza plateau was more or less neglected - except by tourists, those dismantling the structures for their own uses, and grave robbers - until Napolean's Egyptian Campaign of 1798-1801 CE. Napolean had brought along a team of scientists, artists, and engineers who he set to work investigating and recording facts about the Giza monuments and others throughout Egypt. Napolean's work there attracted others to Egypt and archaeologists, adventure-seekers, entrepreneurs, and scholars began traveling to Egypt to investigate these monuments for themselves.
Among the most famous of these was Sir William Matthew Flinders Petrie (1853-1942 CE) whose work is still considered the most important contribution to Egyptology and who brought the Great Pyramid to world attention. It is because of the work of men like Flinders Petrie that on-going preservation, restoration, and archaeological work has continued almost non-stop from the 19th century CE to the present. The Giza plateau is one of the world's most popular tourist attractions and continues to draw visitors from around the world daily.

Collegia, Stability and the Vox Populi › Antique Origins

Ancient Civilizations

by Steven Umbrello
published on 16 August 2015

This short analysis will investigate the associations known as 'collegia' (also known as clubs, associations, companies) mentioned in the letters (10.33-34) from the Roman pro- consul Pliny to the emperor Trajan. We will determine why Trajan was against the formation of such an association in Pontus-Bithynia, as well as place the nature of collegia in the wider historical narrative. I will conclude by discussing the influence that political groups may have had on the empire 's political system, as well as the level of political freedom that the common people had under Trajan's regime. But first we must summarize Pliny's Letters.

PLINY'S REQUEST

C. Plinius Traiano Imperatori.
cum diversam partem provinciae circumirem, Nicomediae vastissimum incendium multas privatorum domos et duo publica opera, quamquam via interiacente, Gerusian et Iseon absumpsit. est autem latius sparsum, primum violentia venti, deinde inertia hominum quos satis constat otiosos et immobiles tanti mali spectatores perstitisse;et alioqui nullus usquam in publico sipo, nulla hama, nullum denique instrumentum ad incendia compescenda. et haec quidem, ut iam praecepi, parabuntur; tu, domine, dispice an instituendum putes collegium fabrorum dumtaxat hominum CL. ego attendam, ne quis nisi faber recipiatur neve iure concesso in aliud utantur; nec erit difficile custodire tam paucos.
Gaius Pliny to the Emperor Trajan.
While I was touring a different part of the province, a very extensive fire at Nicomedia consumed many private citizens' homes and two public buildings, the senate-house and the temple of Isis, even though a street lay between them. It spread more widely at first because of the force of the wind, then because of the sluggishness of the people who, it is clear, stood around as lazy and immobile spectators of such a great calamity.Furthermore there was no fire-engine or water-bucket anywhere for public use, or in fact any instrument for extinguishing fires. These things, however, will be got ready, as I have now directed; as for you, master, consider whether you think a company of workmen [ie a fire brigade] should be established, of no more than 150 men. I shall take care that no one except a workman shall be admitted, and that they shall not use the privilege they have been granted for any other purpose. It will not be difficult to keep an eye on so few.

TRAJAN'S REFUSAL OF PLINY'S REQUEST

Traianus Plinio.
tibi quidem secundum exempla complurium in mentem venit posse collegium fabrorum apud Nicomedenses constitui. sed meminerimus provinciam istam et praecipue eas civitates eius modi factionibus esse vexatas.quodcumque nomen ex quacumque causa dederimus iis, qui in idem contracti fuerint, hetaeriae eaeque brevi fient. satius itaque est comparari ea, quae ad coercendos ignes auxilio esse possint, admonerique dominos praediorum, ut et ipsi inhibeant ac, si res poposcerit, accursu populi ad hoc uti.
Trajan to Pliny.
It has occurred to you that a company of firemen could be established in Nicomedia, following the example of several cities. But we should remember that your province – and especially those cities – have been troubled by factions of this sort. Whatever name we give to them, for whatever purpose, men who have been brought together for the same purpose will quickly become political clubs. Therefore it will be preferable for those things to be got ready which are of service for the control of fires, and for the owners of property to be advised that they should extinguish fires themselves and, if the situation demands it, to employ the assistance of the populace for this purpose.

Trajan
TRAJAN

COLLEGIUM & TRAJAN'S REFUSAL

Before we discuss exactly why Trajan feared the formation of a collegium in Pontus-Bithynia, we have to discuss exactly what a collegium is, as well as its place in the political landscape of Imperial Rome. Collegia are thought to have existed since the beginning of the Republic and were constituted of groups of individuals of similar interest, usually members who shared the same craft or trade. Fowler (2004) suggests that most of these trade collegia faded from the political narrative until they appeared again in the late Republic, but now with political motivations. However, it was because of these political motivations that they were inevitably suppressed. Those that were allowed to remain active had to be given official sanction under the new laws of the Caesarian government in an attempt to regulate the possibility of turbulent groups rising up once again Those groups that did cause political upheaval were typically made up of the lower classes of the Roman public such as freedmen and even slaves.

THE SUPPRESSION OF THE COLLEGIA WAS MORE A FORM OF POLITICAL CENSORSHIP THAN THE MAINTENANCE OF POLITICAL ORDER.

Keeping this in mind we can begin to understand the context in which Trajan refused Pliny's request to allow the formation of an association in his province. Firstly, we must look at the correspondence itself. Why did Pliny ask Trajan for permission to form the collegium rather than simply forming it on his own authority? Aside from any personal connection between the two men, Pliny has to ask the emperor for permission to from the collegia because the enactments of the lex Iulia still persisted to the reign of Trajan. The lex IuliIa was a late republican era law which mandated that the formation of any association or club (collegia) must be granted by either the senate or the emperor. This point of the law no doubt persisted through the imperial period because of the Roman elites' natural distrust of lower class associations. Similarly, Trajan would have been worried about the political stability in Asia Minor should the association be formed and eventually turned into a political entity. The real questions, however, are these: Is the caution shown by Trajan warranted? Did the fire brigade that Pliny asked for pose as a likely candidate for political instability?
Given that we know the collegia are made up of lower class citizens who, during the Roman imperial period, didn't have a voice in the political narrative, we see the spark of a justified motivation to unify among like-minded individuals to strive for political change. Thus, if the goal is the suppression of any opportunistic political groups then Trajan was warranted in denying Pliny the permission to create such an association.
The following section will look at the authoritarian regime of the Imperial system and how the political collegia would affect the system, as well as a broad overview of individual freedom in the political landscape of the Roman Empire.

EFFECT OF POLITICAL COLLEGIA ON THE ROMAN EMPIRE

The Roman imperial system, being under the absolute rule of a single man, poses inevitable barriers with regards to the political voice of individuals. An individual having his voice heard by the leader of the state was virtually impossible if that individual was not part of the senatorial elite. This thus makes it a near impossibility to propose political and/or social change in the state. This, however, did not mean that the imperial system could simply ignore the needs of the vulgar crowd. When gathered en masse the mob carried significant sway. It's no wonder that when individuals of the lower classes, when gathered into groups of similar motives, will eventually come to share a similar political idea. This, no doubt, scared the political elite to instate laws like the Lex Iulia that suppressed and heavily regulated associations that threatened the status quo that they aimed to maintain. Suppressing such groups, however, did not only cease the possibility of political upheaval, but it necessarily made ineffective the only possible tool which the lower classes used to voice their political views. This is unquestionably more of a form of political censorship than the maintenance of political order.
Now let us look at the actual effects that some of these collegia had on the political system before they were suppressed.Trajan says to Pliny that such organization have “disturbed” the province in the past. But what exactly would Trajan have considered disturbing? We actually see that in the closing years of the Republican era, the elite themselves in elections implemented collegia as political tools. So was it the members of the political clubs themselves or those magistrates who bought them off as tools to win elections that are to blame? Fowler (2004) blames the ability to buy one's way into power, even in the face of countering legislation, as the cause of the corruption of the collegia from honourable clubs of like-minded men to beds of political unrest. Thus, the collegia were banned because of their potential as political tools that could be wielded by elites attempting to gain political standing. However, by suppressing such 'tools' the government synonymously suppressed any chance for the common man of the lower classes to voice their socio-political beliefs. Thus, Trajan in his correspondence is simply stating something that was solidified with the enactment of the Lex Iulia : that the vox populi was dead, and that it should remain that way.

POLITICAL SUPPRESSION OF COLLEGIA

Before I conclude this paper, I want to move away from Pliny's correspondence and bring to attention how far this form of political suppression runs. The beginning of the suppression of collegia because of their uses as political tools began in the late republic and early principate with the lex Iulia. However if we look as far as the Christian emperor Justinian, we see in his digests how he reaffirms this age-old precedent of making political associations illegal. He states in Digest 47 that it is illegal for political associations to form, however he does allow for individuals to occasionally meet in groups however not for political motivations. Justinian is clear to dictate that the punishment for funding and being a member of an “illegal society” (ie a political association) will face a penalty equal to that of treason.
We see that this ideal of suppressing political associations made up of the lower strata of Roman society is a long standing ideal held from the late republic even up until the early Christian period. Suppressing the public voice of the majority not only reaffirms the power that the senatorial and imperial classes held but also shows the lengths that they were willing to go to assure the consolidation of the longevity of this power.

SUMMARY

This document analysis has explicated and analyzed the correspondence between the Roman governor of Pontus-Bithynia Pliny and the Roman emperor Trajan. The origin and structure of collegia was looked at as well as their place in the wider historical narrative. It was discovered that collegia were one of the only outlets for the lower classes of Roman society to voice their political opinions and that this posed a threat to the Roman political elite. We showed how this threat lead to legislation which inevitably dissolved all collegia in Rome save a few registered non-political ones and we saw how Trajan in his response to Pliny only affirms this agenda. Finally we saw how the long lasting suppression of these political groups was essentially the suppression of the public voice and the consolidation of imperial power. The vox populi was dead.

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