Gardners Art through the Ages A Global History

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
bedrock. The vast subterranean complex resembles a palace. It was to
be Djoser’s new home in the afterlife.
Befitting the god-king’s majesty, Djoser’s pyramid (FIG. 3-5)
stands near the center of an immense (37-acre) rectangular enclo-
sure (FIG. 3-6) surrounded by a 34-foot-high and 5,400-foot-long
wall of white limestone. The huge precinct, with its protective walls
and tightly regulated access, stands in sharp contrast to the roughly
contemporary Sumerian Royal Cemetery at Ur, where no barriers
kept people away from the burial area. Nor did the Mesopotamian
cemetery have a temple for the worship of the deified dead. At

Saqqara, a funerary temple (FIG. 3-6,no. 2) stands against the north-
ern face of Djoser’s pyramid. Priests performed daily rituals at the
temple in celebration of the divine pharaoh.
Djoser’s funerary temple was but one of many buildings
arranged around several courts. Most of the others were dummy
structures (FIG. 3-6,no. 6) with stone walls enclosing fills of rubble,
sand, or gravel. The buildings imitated in stone masonry various
types of temporary structures made of plant stems and mats erected
in Upper and Lower Egypt to celebrate the Jubilee Festival, which
perpetually reaffirmed the royal existence in the hereafter. The trans-

58 Chapter 3 EGYPT UNDER THE PHARAOHS

3-5Imhotep,Stepped Pyramid
and mortuary precinct of Djoser,
Saqqara, Egypt, Third Dynasty,
ca. 2630–2611 bce.
Imhotep, the first artist whose name
is recorded, built the first pyramid
during the Third Dynasty for King
Djoser. Djoser’s pyramid resembles
a series of stacked mastabas of
diminishing size.

3-6Plan (top) and restored view
(bottom) of the mortuary precinct
of Djoser, Saqqara, Egypt, Third
Dynasty, ca. 2630–2611 bce.
Djoser’s pyramid was the center-
piece of an immense funerary
complex that included a mortuary
temple, other buildings, and court-
yards. Its network of underground
galleries resembled a palace.

0 100 200 3 00 feet
N 0501 00 meters

Stepped pyramid
Funerary temple of Djoser
Court with serdab
Large court with altar
Entrance portico
Heb-Sed court and sham chapels
Small temple
Court before North Palace
North Palace
Court before South Palace
South Palace
South tomb
Royal Pavilion
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3-6AEntrance
hall, Djoser
precinct,
Saqqara, ca.
2630–2611 BCE.

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