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At
least 35 small pyramids, along with graves, have been discovered clustered
closely together at a site called Sedeinga in Sudan.
Discovered
between 2009 and 2012, researchers are surprised at how densely the pyramids
are concentrated. In one field season alone, in 2011, the research team
discovered 13 pyramids packed into roughly 5,381 square feet (500 square
meters), or slightly larger than an NBA basketball court.
They
date back around 2,000 years to a time when a kingdom named Kush flourished in
Sudan. Kush shared a border with Egypt and, later on, the Roman Empire. The
desire of the kingdom’s people to build pyramids was apparently influenced by
Egyptian funerary architecture.
At
Sedeinga, researchers say, pyramid building continued for centuries. "The
density of the pyramids is huge," said researcher Vincent Francigny, a
research associate with the American Museum of Natural History in New York, in
an interview with LiveScience. "Because it lasted for hundreds of years
they built more, more, more pyramids and after centuries they started to fill
all the spaces that were still available in the necropolis."
The
biggest pyramids they discovered are about 22 feet (7 meters) wide at their
base with the smallest example, likely constructed for the burial of a child,
being only 30 inches (750 millimeters) long. The tops of the pyramids are not
attached, as the passage of time and the presence of a camel caravan route
resulted in damage to the monuments. Francigny said that the tops would have
been decorated with a capstone depicting either a bird or a lotus flower on top
of a solar orb.
The
building continued until, eventually, they ran out of room to build pyramids.
"They reached a point where it was so filled with people and graves that
they had to reuse the oldest one," Francigny said.
Francigny
is excavation director of the French Archaeological Mission to Sedeinga, the
team that made the discoveries. He and team leader Claude Rilly published an
article detailing the results of their 2011 field season in the most recent
edition of the journal Sudan and Nubia.
The
inner circle
Among
the discoveries were several pyramids designed with an inner cupola (circular
structure) connected to the pyramid corners through cross-braces. Rilly and
Francigny noted in their paper that the pyramid design resembles a "French
Formal Garden."
Only
one pyramid, outside of Sedeinga, is known to have been constructed this way,
and it’s a mystery why the people of Sedeinga were fond of the design. It
"did not add either to the solidity or to the external aspect [appearance]
of the monument," Rilly and Francigny write.
A
discovery made in 2012 may provide a clue, Francigny said in the interview.
"What we found this year is very intriguing," he said. "A grave
of a child and it was covered by only a kind of circle, almost complete, of
brick." It’s possible, he said, that when pyramid building came into
fashion at Sedeinga it was combined with a local circle-building tradition
called tumulus construction, resulting in pyramids with circles within them.
An
offering for grandma?
The
graves beside the pyramids had largely been plundered, possibly in antiquity,
by the time archaeologists excavated them. Researchers did find skeletal
remains and, in some cases, artifacts.
People were buried beside the pyramids in tomb chambers that often held more than one individual. This image shows a child who was buried with necklaces. |
One
of the most interesting new finds was an offering table found by the remains of
a pyramid. . It appears to depict the goddess Isis and the jackal-headed god
Anubis and includes an inscription, written in Meroitic language, dedicated to
a woman named "Aba-la," which may be a nickname for "grandmother,"
Rilly writes.