Wonders of Ancient Egypt: The Puzzling 100-Ton Stone Boxes of Saqqara

Egypt hides many secrets. The modern country we see today was built atop thousands and thousands of years of history and crafted by countless pharaohs and rulers that reigned over the land of the golden sands and the River Nile. And while we have uncovered many of ancient Egypt’s histories and secrets, many more remain hidden beneath the sands of the land of the pharaohs, waiting for the day when adventurous explorers will uncover that which has remained hidden for millennia.

One of the granite sarcophagi in the Serapeum, Saqqara, Egypt. Image Credit: Ovedc/ CC BY SA 4.0.
One of the granite sarcophagi in the Serapeum, Saqqara, Egypt. Image Credit: Ovedc/ CC BY SA 4.0.

But some things have been revealed in Egypt and continue to excite our imagination and interest.

The Serapeum of Saqqara

Located northwest of the Pyramid of Djoser at Saqqara, we find the burial place of the so-called Apis Bulls. These sacred bulls were incarnations of the ancient Egyptian deity Ptah. The ancient Egyptians believed the bulls became immortal after death as Osiris Api.

Since these bulls were of great importance in ancient Egypt, a burial place of equal importance was created thousands of years ago.

The worship of an Apis bull, experienced by ancient Egyptians as holy, has been known since the First Dynasty in Memphis. In contrast, the Apis worship as a proper god, at least according to Manetho’s Aegyptiaca, seems to be a later adoption, purportedly started during the reign of king Kaiechos (possibly Nebra) of the Second Dynasty.

Most of the burials at the Serapeum can be traced back to the reign of AmenH๏τep III, the ninth pharaoh of the Eighteenth Dynasty during the 1350s BC.

This ancient labyrinth, located beneath the surface, is home to mᴀssive stone boxes, the alleged burial sarcophagi of the Apis Bulls, which weigh a staggering one hundred tons. The lid alone weighs a stunning 30 tons.

Mainstream scholars argue how the boxes were crafted and polished using primitive tools, and transported without technologies such as the wheel.

But is that really so?

The Bull theory is kind of a… bull theory

Since the Serapeum was ‘rediscovered’ in modern times in 1850, researchers have not fully understood or explained exactly how or why the 24 mᴀssive sarcophagi were transported to the site and installed in their notches.

The first person who identified the underground chambers was Greek geographer Strabo, who traveled to Egypt around 24 AD.

And ever since the mysterious underground chambers were found, they have induced admiration and fascination in anyone who has studied their contents.

Many authors have argued that the mᴀssive stone boxes were not meant to house any bulls since they exceeded the bulls’ size.

Curiously the mᴀssive sarcophagi inside the Serapeum were built using granite, rose granite, and limestone. This is odd since limestone is a material much easier to work with and manipulate. The granite boxes were crafted with high precision having a tolerance within 1 micron. Closing the lid essentially makes the coffer hermetically sealed.

If you are truly building sarcophagi for a sacred bull, why use such ‘complicated materials’ if you can achieve the same result using much simpler stones? Most of the sarcophagi inside the Serapeum were crafted using rose granite, an extremely hard rock mined at a quarry located around 800 kilometers from Saqqara.

Other boxes inside the Serapeum were identified as being made of an even harder material, diorite, curiously found even further away from Saqqara. Thirdly, and most importantly, if the alleged sarcophagi were indeed crafted and built to house the sacred bulls’ remains, why are there no traces of bulls inside the boxes? So if it wasn’t bulls that were meant to be inside the sarcophagi, what was? The truth is we don’t know, although many theories have been proposed.

Related Posts

The Great Sword of Dunvegan: A Legendary Tale of Scottish Medieval Craftsmanship

A Masterpiece of Highland Heritage In the heart of Scotland’s rugged Highlands stands an extraordinary piece of history – the great sword of Dunvegan. This magnificent claymore,…

Remarkable Discovery: 500-Year-Old Incan Mummy Sporting a Feather Headdress Found Near Lima

An Ancient Cemetery Revealed In a remarkable archaeological find near Lima, Peru, thousands of Inca mummies have been uncovered from a significant ancient cemetery located beneath a…

The Inlaid Eye of the Seated Scribe: A Marvel of Ancient Egyptian Craftsmanship

The Seated Scribe, an iconic piece of ancient Egyptian art dating back to the Old Kingdom (circa 2600-2350 BCE), stands as one of the finest examples of…

The Lion Fortress: A Kingdom Carved from Fear and Dream

In the heart of Sri Lanka, a stone giant rises from the encircling jungle. This is Sigiriya, the Lion Rock, a colossal volcanic plug that bears the…

The Stone Sentinel: A Dream of the Desert

In the painted badlands of southern Utah, where the earth is a furnace and the sky a vast, unbroken blue, a silent army of stone stands in…

The Balancing Giant: A Sentinel of Ice and Time

In the vast, untamed silence of Baffin Island, where the sky meets the earth in a stark and endless horizon, a stone giant keeps its watch. This…