Pyramid of Unas

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Template:Short description Template:Main other Template:Use British English Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Template:Main other The pyramid of Unas (Egyptian: Nfr swt Wnjs "Beautiful are the places of Unas") is a smooth-sided pyramid built in the 24th century BC for the Egyptian pharaoh Unas, the ninth and final king of the Fifth Dynasty.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn It is the smallest Old Kingdom pyramid, but significant due to the discovery of Pyramid Texts, spells for the king's afterlife incised into the walls of its subterranean chambers. Inscribed for the first time in Unas's pyramid, the tradition of funerary texts carried on in the pyramids of subsequent rulers, through to the end of the Old Kingdom, and into the Middle Kingdom through the Coffin Texts that form the basis of the Book of the Dead.

Unas built his pyramid between the complexes of Sekhemket and Djoser, in North Saqqara. Anchored to the valley temple at a nearby lake, a long causeway was constructed to provide access to the pyramid site. The causeway had elaborately decorated walls covered with a roof which had a slit in one section allowing light to enter, illuminating the images. A long wadi was used as a pathway. The terrain was difficult to negotiate and contained old buildings and tomb superstructures. These were torn down and repurposed as underlay for the causeway. A significant stretch of Djoser's causeway was reused for embankments. Tombs that were on the path had their superstructures demolished and were paved over, preserving their decorations. Two Second Dynasty tombs, presumed to belong to Hotepsekhemwy, Nebra, and Ninetjer, from seals found inside, are among those that lie under the causeway. The site was later used for numerous burials of Fifth Dynasty officials, private individuals from the Eighteenth to Twentieth Dynasties, and a collection of Late Period monuments known as the "Persian tombs".

The causeway joined the temple in the harbour with the mortuary temple on the east face of the pyramid. The mortuary temple was entered on its east side through a large granite doorway, seemingly constructed by Unas's successor, Teti. Just south of the upper causeway are two long boat pits. These may have contained two wooden boats: the solar barques of Ra, the sun god. The temple was laid out in a similar manner to Djedkare Isesi's. A transverse corridor separates the outer from the inner temple. The entry chapel of the inner temple has been completely destroyed, though it once contained five statues in niches. A feature of the inner temple was a single quartzite column that was contained in the antichambre carrée. The room is otherwise ruined. Quartzite is an atypical material to use in architectural projects, though examples of it being used sparingly in the Old Kingdom exist. The material is associated with the sun cult due to its sun-like coloration.

The underground chambers remained unexplored until 1881, when Gaston Maspero, who had recently discovered inscribed texts in the pyramids of Pepi I and Merenre I, gained entry. Maspero found the same texts inscribed on the walls of Unas's pyramid, their first known appearance. The 283 spells in Unas's pyramid constitute the oldest, smallest and best preserved corpus of religious writing from the Old Kingdom. Their function was to guide the ruler through to eternal life and ensure his continued survival even if the funerary cult ceased to function. In Unas's case, the funerary cult may have survived the turbulent First Intermediate Period and up until the Twelfth or Thirteenth Dynasty, during the Middle Kingdom. This is a matter of dispute amongst Egyptologists, where a competing idea is that the cult was revived during the Middle Kingdom, rather than having survived until then.

Location and excavation

The pyramid is situated on the Saqqara plateau and lies on a line running from the pyramid of Sekhemkhet to the pyramid of Menkauhor.Template:Sfn The site required the construction of an exceptionally long causeway to reach a nearby lake, suggesting the site held some significance to Unas.Template:Sfn

The pyramid was briefly examined by John Shae Perring, and soon after by Karl Richard Lepsius, who listed the pyramid on his pioneering list as number XXXV.Template:Sfn Entry was first gained by Gaston Maspero, who examined its substructure in 1881.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He had recently discovered a set of texts in the pyramids of Pepi I and Merenre I. Those same texts were discovered in Unas's tomb, making this their earliest known appearance.Template:Sfn From 1899 to 1901, the architect and Egyptologist Alessandro Barsanti conducted the first systematic investigation of the pyramid site, succeeding in excavating part of the mortuary temple, as well as a series of tombs from the Second Dynasty and the Late Period.Template:Sfn Later excavations by Cecil Mallaby Firth, from 1929 until his death in 1931, followed by those of the architect Jean-Philippe Lauer from 1936 to 1939, were conducted with little success. The archaeologists Selim Hassan, Muhammed Zakaria Goneim and A. H. Hussein mainly focused on the causeway leading to the pyramid while conducting their investigations from 1937 to 1949. Hussein discovered a pair of limestone-lined boat pits at the upper end of the causeway. In the 1970s, Ahmad Moussa excavated the lower half of the causeway and the valley temple.Template:Sfn Moussa and another archaeologist, Template:Interlanguage link, conducted an architectural survey of the valley temple from 1971 to 1981.Template:Sfn The pyramids of Unas, Teti, Pepi I and Merenre were the subjects of a major architectural and epigraphic project in Saqqara, led by Jean Leclant.Template:Sfn From 1999 until 2001, the Supreme Council of Antiquities conducted a major restoration and reconstruction project on the valley temple. The three entrances and ramps were restored, and a low limestone wall built to demarcate the temple's plan.Template:Sfn

Mortuary complex

Layout

A map of Unas's main pyramid complex.
Layout of Unas's complex

Unas's complex is situated between the pyramid of Sekhemkhet and the south-west corner of the pyramid complex of Djoser. It is in symmetry with the pyramid of Userkaf situated at the north-east corner, in Saqqara.Template:Sfn Old Kingdom mortuary complexes consist of five essential components: (1) a valley temple; (2) a causeway; (3) a mortuary temple; (4) a cult pyramid; and (5) the main pyramid.Template:Sfn Unas's monument has all of these elements: the main pyramid, constructed six steps high from limestone blocks;Template:Sfn a valley temple situated in a natural harbour at the mouth of a wadi;Template:Sfn a causeway constructed using the same wadi as a path;Template:Sfn a mortuary temple similar in layout to that of Unas's predecessor, Djedkare Isesi's,Template:Sfn and a cult pyramid in the south of the mortuary temple.Template:Sfn The pyramid, mortuary temple and cult pyramid were enclosed by a Template:Cvt tall perimeter wall.Template:Sfn The perimeter wall from the north-east to north-west corner is about Template:Cvt long, and stretches Template:Cvt from north to south.Template:Sfn

Main pyramid

Photograph of a face of the main pyramid.
Remains of the outer casing on Unas's pyramid

Though Unas's reign lasted for around thirty to thirty-three years,Template:Sfn his pyramid was the smallest built in the Old Kingdom.Template:Sfn Time constraints cannot be considered a factor explaining the small size, and it is more likely that resource accessibility constrained the project.Template:Sfn The monument's size was also inhibited due to the extensive quarrying necessary to increase the size of the pyramid. Unas chose to avoid that additional burden and instead kept his pyramid small.Template:Sfn

The core of the pyramid was built six steps high, constructed with roughly dressed limestone blocks which decreased in size in each step.Template:Sfn The construction material for the core would, ideally, have been locally sourced.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn This was then encased with fine white limestone blocksTemplate:Sfn quarried from Tura.Template:Sfn Some of the casing on the lowest steps has remained intact.Template:Sfn The pyramid had a base length of Template:Cvt converging towards the apex at an angle of approximately 56°, giving it a height of Template:Convert on completion.Template:Sfn The pyramid had a total volume of Template:Cvt.Template:Sfn The pyramid was smooth-sided.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn The pyramid has since been ruined,Template:Sfn as have all others of the Fifth Dynasty,Template:Sfn a result of its poor construction and materials.Template:Sfn The pyramids of the Fifth Dynasty were further systematically dismantled during the New Kingdom to be reused in the construction of new tombs.Template:Sfn

Unas abandoned the practice of building pyramids for his consorts;Template:Sfn instead, Khenut and Nebet were buried in a double mastaba north-east of the main pyramid.Template:Sfn Each queen was accorded separate rooms and an individual entrance, though the layout of the tombs is identical. Khenut owned the western half, and Nebet owned the eastern half. Their chambers were extensively decorated.Template:Sfn The chapel for Nebet's mastaba contains four recesses. One bears a cartouche of Unas's name, indicating that it may have contained a statue of the king, whereas the others contained statues of the queen.Template:Sfn Directly north of the mastaba were the tombs for Unas's son Unasankh and daughter Iput. Another daughter, Hemetre, was buried in a tomb west of Djoser's complex.Template:Sfn

Substructure

Annotated map of the substructure to Unas's pyramid. Described in detail in the upcoming section.
Layout of Unas's substructure.
Materials colour-coded: light orange = fine white limestone; red = red granite; white = white alabaster; grey = greywacke.

A small chapel, called the "north chapel" or "entrance chapel",Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn was situated adjacent to the pyramid's north face. It consisted of a single room, with an altar and a stela bearing the hieroglyph for "offering table". Only trace elements of the chapel remain.Template:Sfn These chapels had a false door and a decoration scheme similar to the offering hall, which the archaeologist Dieter Arnold suggests indicates that the chapel was a "miniature offering chapel".Template:Sfn

The entrance into the substructure of the pyramid lay under the chapel's pavement.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The substructure of the pyramid is similar to that of Unas's predecessor, Djedkare Isesi.Template:Sfn The entry leads into a Template:Cvt long vertically sloping corridor inclined at 22° that leads to a vestibule at its bottom.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The vestibule is Template:Cvt long and Template:Cvt wide.Template:Sfn From the vestibule, a Template:Cvt long horizontal passage follows a level path to the antechamber and is guarded by three granite slab portcullises in succession.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn The passage ends at an antechamber, a room measuring Template:Cvt by Template:Cvt, located under the centre axis of the pyramid. To the east, a doorway leads to a room Template:Endash called the serdabTemplate:Sfn Template:Endash with three recesses.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn The serdab measures Template:Cvt wide and Template:Cvt deep.Template:Sfn To the west lay the burial chamber, a room measuring Template:Cvt by Template:Cvt, containing the ruler's sarcophagus.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The roof of both the antechamber and burial chamber were gabled, in a similar fashion to earlier pyramids of the era.Template:Sfn

A photograph of the stairway into the pyramid
Modern entrance to the pyramid substructures (bottom left)

Near the burial chamber's west wall sat Unas's coffin, made from greywacke rather than basalt as was originally presumed.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The coffin was undamaged, but its contents had been robbed.Template:Sfn A canopic chest had once been buried at the foot of the south-east corner of the coffin.Template:Sfn Traces of the burial are fragmentary; all that remain are portions of a mummy, including its right arm, skull and shinbone, as well as the wooden handles of two knives used during the opening of the mouth ceremony.Template:Sfn The mummy remains have been displayed in the Egyptian Museum of Cairo.Template:Sfn

The walls of the chambers were lined with Tura limestone,Template:Sfn while those surrounding Unas's sarcophagusTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn were sheathed in white alabaster incised and painted to represent the doors of the royal palace facade, complementing the eastern passage.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Taken as symbolically functional, these allowed the king to depart the tomb in any direction.Template:Sfn The walls appear to contain blocks reused from one of Khufu's constructions, possibly his pyramid complex at Giza, as an earlier scene of the king (identified by his Horus name Medjedu) fishing with a harpoon was discovered beneath those carved for Unas.Template:Sfn

The ceiling of the burial chamber was painted blue with gold stars to resemble the night sky.Template:Sfn The ceiling of the antechamber and corridor were similarly painted. Whereas the stars in the antechamber and the burial chamber pointed northward, the stars in the corridor pointed towards the zenith.Template:Sfn The remaining walls of the burial chamber, antechamber, and parts of the corridor were inscribed with a series of vertically written texts, chiselled in bas-relief and painted blue.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Pyramid Texts of Unas

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A photograph taken from inside the burial chamber.
The burial chamber with protective spells filling the west gable, protecting the sarcophagus and its contents below.

The inscriptions, known as the Pyramid Texts, were the central innovation of Unas's pyramid,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn on whose subterranean walls they were first etched.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Pyramid Texts are the oldest large corpus of religious writing known from ancient Egypt.Template:Sfn A total of 283 such spells,Template:Sfn out of at least 1,000 known and an indeterminate number of unknown ones,Template:Sfn appear in Unas's pyramid.Template:Sfn The spells are the smallest and best-preserved collection of Pyramid Texts known from the Old Kingdom.Template:Sfn Though they first appeared in Unas's pyramid, many of the texts are significantly older.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn The texts subsequently appeared in the pyramids of the kings and queens of the Sixth to Eighth Dynasties,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn until the end of the Old Kingdom.Template:Sfn With the exception of a single spell, copies of Unas's texts appeared throughout the Middle Kingdom and later, including a near complete replica of the texts in the tomb of Senwosretankh at El-Lisht.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Ancient Egyptian belief held that the individual consisted of three basic parts; the body, the ka, and the ba.Template:Sfn When the person died, the ka would separate from the body and return to the gods from where it had come, while the ba remained with the body.Template:Sfn The body of the individual, interred in the burial chamber, never physically left;Template:Sfn but the ba, awakened, released itself from the body and began its journey toward new life.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Significant to this journey was the Akhet: the horizon, a junction between the earth, the sky, and the Duat.Template:Sfn To ancient Egyptians, the Akhet was the place from where the sun rose, and so symbolised a place of birth or resurrection.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In the texts, the king is called upon to transform into an akh in the Akhet.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The akh, literally "effective being", was the resurrected form of the deceased,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn attained through individual action and ritual performance.Template:Sfn If the deceased failed to complete the transformation, they became mutu, that is "the dead".Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The function of the texts, in congruence with all funerary literature, was to enable the reunion of the ruler's ba and ka leading to the transformation into an akh,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn and to secure eternal life among the gods in the sky.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn

The writings on the west gable in Unas's burial chamber consist of spells that protect the sarcophagus and mummy within.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The north and south walls of the chamber are dedicated to the offering and resurrection rituals respectively,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn and the east wall contains texts asserting the king's control over his sustenance in the form of a response to the offering ritual.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The offering ritual texts continue onto the north and south walls of the passagewayTemplate:Sfn splitting the resurrection ritual which concludes on the south wall.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In the rituals of the burial chamber,Template:Sfn the king is identified both as himself and as the god Osiris,Template:Sfn being addressed as "Osiris Unas".Template:Sfn The king is also identified with other deities, occasionally several, alongside Osiris in other texts.Template:Sfn The Egyptologist James Allen identifies the last piece of ritual text on the west gable of the antechamber:Template:Sfn

Your son Horus has acted for you.
The great ones will shake, having seen the knife in your arm as you emerge from the Duat.
Greetings, experienced one! Geb has created you, the Ennead has given you birth.
Horus has become content about his father, Atum has become content about his years, the eastern and western gods have become content about the great thing that has happened in his embrace – the god's birth.
It is Unis: Unis, see! It is Unis: Unis, look! It is Unis: hear! It is Unis: Unis, exist! It is Unis: Unis, raise yourself from your side!
Do my command, you who hate sleep but were made slack. Stand up, you in Nedit. Your good bread has been made in Pe; receive your control of Heliopolis.
It is Horus (who speaks), having been commanded to act for his father.
The storm-lord, the one with spittle in his vicinity, Seth – he will bear you: he is the one who will bear Atum.Template:Sfn

A photograph of hieroglyphic text columns from inside the pyramid
Pyramid Texts belonging to the Offering Ritual which appear on the north wall of Unas's burial chamber

The antechamber and corridor were inscribed primarily with personal texts.Template:Sfn The west, north and south walls of the antechamber contain texts whose primary concern is the transition from the human realm to the next, and with the king's ascent to the sky.Template:Sfn The east wall held a second set of protective spells, starting with the "Cannibal Hymn".Template:Sfn In the hymn, Unas consumes the gods to absorb their power for his resurrection.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Egyptologist Toby Wilkinson identifies the hymn as a mythologizing of the "butchery ritual" in which a bull is sacrificed.Template:Sfn The serdab remained uninscribed.Template:Sfn The southern section of the walls of the corridor contain textsTemplate:SfnTemplate:Efn that focus primarily on the resurrection and ascension of the deceased.Template:Sfn The mere presence of the spellsTemplate:Efn within the tomb were believed to have efficacy,Template:Sfn thus protecting the king even if the funerary cult ceased to function.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Efn

Parts of the corpus of Pyramid Texts were passed down into the Coffin Texts,Template:Sfn an expanded set of new texts written on non-royal tombs of the Middle Kingdom, some retaining Old Kingdom grammatical conventions and with many formulations of the Pyramid Texts recurring.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn The transition to the Coffin Texts was begun in the reign of Pepi I and completed by the Middle Kingdom. The Coffin Texts formed the basis for the Book of the Dead in the New Kingdom and Late Period.Template:Sfn The texts would resurface in tombs and on papyri for two millennia, finally disappearing around the time that Christianity was adopted.Template:Sfn

Valley temple

Photograph of the valley temple.
Valley temple belonging to Unas's pyramid complex
Annotated map of Unas's valley temple. Described in detail in upcoming section.
Layout of Unas's valley temple. In order: (1) Colonnaded entrance court; (2) Entrance hall; (3) South hall; (4a and b) Secondary entrances; (5) Main cult hall; (6) Storerooms; (7) Passage leading to (8) the Causeway.

Unas's valley temple is situated in a harbour that naturally forms at the point where the mouth of a wadi meets the lake. The same wadi was used as a path for the causeway.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The temple sits between those of Nyuserre Ini and Pepi II. Despite a complex plan, the temple did not contain any significant innovations. It was richly decorated Template:Endash in a fashion similar to the causeway and mortuary temple Template:Endash and the surviving palm granite columns that stood at the entrance into the temple evidence their high quality craftsmanship.Template:Sfn

The main entrance into the temple was on the east side, consisting of a portico with eight granite palm columns arranged into two rows. A narrow westward corridor led from the entry into a rectangular north–south oriented hall. A second hall was to the south. Two secondary entrances into the halls were built on the north and south sides. Each had a portico with two columns. These were approached by narrow ramps. West of the two halls was the main cult hall. It had a second chamber with three storerooms to the south and a passageway leading to the causeway to the north-west.Template:Sfn

Causeway

The causeway connecting the valley temple to the mortuary temple of Unas's pyramid complex was constructed along the path provided by a natural wadi.Template:Sfn The Egyptologist Iorwerth Edwards estimates the walls to be Template:Cvt high, and Template:Cvt thick. The passageway was about Template:Cvt wide. It had a roof constructed from slabs Template:Cvt thick projecting from each wall toward the centre.Template:Sfn The causeway, at between Template:CvtTemplate:Sfn and Template:CvtTemplate:Sfn long, was among the longest constructed for any pyramid, comparable to the causeway of Khufu's pyramid.Template:Sfn The causeway is also the best preserved of any from the Old Kingdom.Template:Sfn Construction of the causeway was complicated and required negotiating uneven terrain and older buildings which were torn down and their stones appropriated as underlay. The causeway was built with two turns, rather than in a straight line.Template:Sfn Around Template:Cvt worth of Djoser's causeway was used to provide embankments for Unas's causeway and to plug gaps between it and the wadi.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn South of the uppermost bend of the causeway were two Template:Cvt long boat pits of white limestone, which might originally have housed wooden boats with curved keels representing the day and night vessels of Ra, the sun god.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn The boats lay side by side in an east–west orientation.Template:Sfn

Photograph of the causeway of the Unas pyramid
Causeway leading to the pyramid of Unas

Tombs in the path of the causeway were built over, preserving their decorations, but not their contents, indicating that the tombs had been robbed either before or during the causeway's construction.Template:Sfn Two large royal tombs, dating to the Second Dynasty, are among those that lie beneath the causeway.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The western gallery tomb contains seals bearing the names of Hotepsekhemwy and Nebra, and the eastern gallery tomb contains numerous seals inscribed with the name of Ninetjer indicating probable ownership.Template:Sfn The superstructures of the tombs were demolished, allowing the mortuary temple and upper end of the causeway to be built over the top of them.Template:Sfn

The interior walls of the causeway were highly decorated with painted bas-reliefs, but records of these are fragmentary.Template:Sfn The remnants depict a variety of scenes including the hunting of wild animals, the conducting of harvests, scenes from the markets, craftsmen working copper and gold, a fleet returning from Byblos, boats transporting columns from Aswan to the construction site, battles with enemies and nomadic tribes, the transport of prisoners, lines of people bearing offerings, and a procession of representatives from the nomes of Egypt.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn A slit was left in a section of the causeway roofing, allowing light to enter illuminating the brightly painted decorations on the walls.Template:Sfn The archaeologist Peter Clayton notes that these depictions were more akin to those found in the mastabas of nobles.Template:Sfn

The Egyptologist Miroslav Verner highlights one particular scene from the causeway depicting famished desert nomads. The scene had been used as "unique proof" that the living standards of desert dwellers had declined during Unas's reign as a result of climatic changes in the middle of the third millennium B.C. The discovery of a similar relief painting on the blocks of Sahure's causeway casts doubt on this hypothesis. Verner contends that the nomads may have been brought in to demonstrate the hardships faced by pyramid builders bringing in higher quality stone from remote mountain areas.Template:Sfn Grimal suggested that this scene foreshadowed the nationwide famine that seems to have struck EgyptTemplate:Efn at the onset of the First Intermediate Period.Template:Sfn According to Allen et al., the most widely accepted explanation for the scene is that it was meant to illustrate the generosity of the sovereign in aiding famished populations.Template:Sfn

Photograph of a path, two vertical columns and main pyramid.
End of Unas's causeway facing the mortuary temple

A collection of tombs were found north of the causeway.Template:Sfn The tomb of Akhethetep, a vizier, was discovered by a team led by Christiane Ziegler.Template:Sfn The other mastabas belong to the viziers Ihy, Iy–nofert, Ny-ankh-ba and Mehu.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The tombs are conjectured to belong to Unas's viziers, with the exception of Mehu's tomb, which is associated with Pepi I.Template:Sfn Another tomb, belonging to Unas-ankh, son of Unas, separates the tombs of Ihy and Iy-nofert.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn It may be dated late into Unas's reign.Template:Sfn

Ahmed Moussa discovered the rock-cut tombs of Nefer and Ka-hay Template:Endash court singers during Menkauhor's reignTemplate:Sfn Template:Endash south of Unas's causeway, containing nine burials along with an extremely well preserved mummy found in a coffin in a shaft under the east wall of the chapel.Template:Sfn The Chief Inspector at Saqqara, Mounir Basta, discovered another rock-cut tomb just south of the causeway in 1964, later excavated by Ahmed Moussa. The tombs belonged to two palace officials Template:Endash manicuristsTemplate:Sfn Template:Endash living during the reigns of Nyuserre Ini and Menkauhor, in the Fifth Dynasty, named Ni-ankh-khnum and Khnum-hotep. A highly decorated chapel for the tomb was discovered the following year. The chapel was located inside a unique stone mastaba that was connected to the tombs through an undecorated open court.Template:Sfn

Mortuary temple

Annotated map of Unas's mortuary temple. Described in detail in upcoming section.
Layout of Unas's mortuary temple. In order: (1) Granite doorway built by Teti; (2) Entrance hall with (5a and b) storerooms to the north and south; (3) Courtyard with (4) eighteen granite columns; (6) Transverse corridor; (7) Chapel with five statue niches; (8a, b and c) Storerooms of the inner temple; (9) Antichambre carrée with central column; (10) Offering hall with (11) false door bearing a protective inscription; (12) Cult pyramid; and (13) Courtyard surrounding the pyramid complex.

The mortuary temple in Unas's pyramid complex has a layout comparable to his predecessor, Djedkare Isesi's, with one notable exception. A pink granite doorway separates the end of the causeway from the entrance hall. It bears the names and titles of Teti, Unas's successor, indicating that he must have had the doorway constructed following Unas's death.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The entrance hall had a vaulted ceiling, and a floor paved with alabaster. The walls in the room were decorated with relief paintings that depicted the making of offerings.Template:Sfn The entrance hall terminates in an open columned courtyard, with eighteen Template:Endash two more columns than in Djedkare Isesi's complex Template:Endash pink granite palm columns supporting the roof of an ambulatory.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Some of the columns were reused centuries later in buildings in Tanis, the capital of Egypt during the Twenty First and Twenty Second Dynasties. Other columns have been displayed in the British Museum, and in the Louvre. Relief decorations that were formerly in the courtyard have also been reused in later projects, as shown by the presence of reliefs of Unas in Amenemhat I's pyramid complex in El-Lisht.Template:Sfn

A photograph of a column.
Palmiform column from Unas's mortuary temple on display in the Louvre

North and south of the entrance hall and columned courtyard were storerooms.Template:Sfn These were stocked regularly with offering items for the royal funerary cult, which had expanded influenceTemplate:Efn in the Fifth Dynasty.Template:Sfn Their irregular placement resulted in the northern storerooms being twice as numerous as the southern. The rooms were used for burials in the Late Period, as noted by the presence of large shaft tombs.Template:Sfn At the far end of the courtyard was a transverse corridor creating an intersection between the columned courtyard at its east and inner temple to its west, with a cult pyramid to the south, and a larger courtyard surrounding the pyramid to the north.Template:Sfn

The inner temple is accessed by a small staircase leading into a ruined chapel with five statue niches.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The chapel and offering hall were surrounded by storerooms; as elsewhere in the temple, there were more storerooms to the north than south.Template:Sfn The antichambre carrée Template:Endash a square antechamberTemplate:Sfn Template:Endash separated the chapel from the offering hall.Template:Sfn The room measures Template:Cvt on each side, making it the smallest such chamber from the Old Kingdom,Template:Sfn but has been largely destroyed.Template:Sfn It was originally entered through a door on its eastern side, and contained two additional doors leading to the offering hall and storeroom.Template:Sfn The room contained a single column made of quartzite Template:Endash fragments of which have been found in the south-west part of the templeTemplate:Sfn Template:Endash quarried from the Gabel Ahmar stone quarry near Heliopolis.Template:Sfn Quartzite, being a particularly hard stone Template:Endash a 7 on the Mohs hardness scale Template:Endash was not typically used in architectural projects,Template:Sfn but was used sparingly as a building material at some Old Kingdom sites in Saqqara.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The hard stone is associated with the sun cult, a natural development caused by the coloration of the material being sun-like.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Remnants of a granite false door bearing an inscription concerning the souls of the residents of Nekhen and Buto marks what little of the offering hall has been preserved. A block from the door has been displayed in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Cult pyramid

The purpose of the cult pyramid remains unclear. It had a burial chamber but was not used for burials, and instead appears to have been a purely symbolic structure.Template:Sfn It may have hosted the pharaoh's ka,Template:Sfn or a miniature statue of the king.Template:Sfn It may have been used for ritual performances centring around the burial and resurrection of the ka spirit during the Sed festival.Template:Sfn

The cult pyramid in Unas's complex has identifiable remains, but has otherwise been destroyed.Template:Sfn The preserved elements suggest that it had a base length of Template:Cvt, a fifth of that of the main pyramid. The pyramid's covering slabs were inclined at 69°. This was typical for cult pyramids which had a 2:1 ratio-ed slope, and thus a height equal to the length of the base, i.e. Template:Cvt. A small channel was dug in front of the pyramid entrance, perhaps to prevent run-off from entering the pyramid.Template:Sfn The first slabs of the descending corridor are declined at 30.5°. The pit measures Template:Cvt north-south and Template:Cvt east-west. The burial chamber was cut Template:Cvt deep into the rock, sits Template:Cvt beneath the pavement and measures Template:Cvt by Template:Cvt.Template:Sfn

The "great enclosure"Template:Efn of the main pyramid and inner temple has an identifiable anomaly. Template:Cvt from the cult pyramid's west face the wall abruptly turns to the north before receding for Template:Cvt toward the main pyramid. It stops Template:Cvt from the main pyramid and turns once more back onto its original alignment.Template:Sfn The only explanation for this is the presence of the Second Dynasty Hotepsekhemwy's large tomb which spans the width of the whole temple and crosses directly under the recess. The architects of the pyramid appear to have preferred for the enclosure wall to run over the tomb's passageway, rather than over the top of the subterranean gallery. The cult pyramid has its own secondary enclosure that runs along the north face of the pyramid and half of its west face. This secondary wall was about Template:Cvt thick, and had a double-door Template:Cvt thick built close to its start.Template:Sfn

Later history

Evidence suggests that Unas's funerary cult survived through the First Intermediate Period and into the Middle Kingdom,Template:Sfn an indication that Unas retained prestige long after his death.Template:Sfn Two independent pieces of evidence corroborate the existence of the cult in the Middle Kingdom: 1) A stela dated to the Twelfth Dynasty bearing the name UnasemsafTemplate:Efn and 2) A statue of a Memphite official, Sermaat,Template:Efn from the Twelfth or Thirteenth Dynasty, with an inscription invoking Unas's name.Template:Sfn The Egyptologist Jaromír Málek contends that the evidence only suggests a theoretical revival of the cult, a result of the valley temple serving as a useful entry path into the Saqqara necropolis, but not its persistence from the Old Kingdom.Template:Sfn Despite renewed interest in the Old Kingdom rulers at the time, their funerary complexes, including Unas's, were partially reused in the construction of Amenemhat I's and Senusret I's pyramid complexes at El-Lisht.Template:Sfn One block used in Amenemhat's complex has been positively identified as originating from Unas's complex, likely taken from the causeway, on the basis of inscriptions containing his name appearing upon it.Template:Sfn Several other blocks have their origins speculatively assigned to Unas's complex as well.Template:Sfn

The Saqqara plateau witnessed a new era of tomb building in the New Kingdom. Starting with the reign of Thutmose III in the Eighteenth Dynasty and up until possibly the Twentieth Dynasty, Saqqara was used as a site for the tombs of private individuals.Template:Sfn The largest concentrations of tombs from the period are found in a large area south of Unas's causeway.Template:Sfn This area came to prominent use around the time of Tutankhamun.Template:Sfn Unas's pyramid underwent restorative work in the New Kingdom. In the Nineteenth Dynasty,Template:Sfn Khaemweset, High Priest of Memphis and son of Ramesses II, had an inscription carved onto a block on the pyramid's south side commemorating his restoration work.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Late Period monuments, colloquially called the "Persian tombs", thought to date to the reign of Amasis II, were discovered near the causeway. These include tombs built for Tjannehebu, Overseer of the Royal Navy; Psamtik, the Chief Physician; and Peteniese, Overseer of Confidential Documents. The Egyptologist John Ray explains that the site was chosen because it was readily accessible from both Memphis and the Nile Valley.Template:Sfn Traces of Phoenician and Aramaic burials have been reported in the area directly south of Unas's causeway.Template:Sfn

See also

Notes

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References

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Sources

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External links

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Template:Egyptian pyramids