The Sphinx
The Sphinx
The famous gigantic statue of the Great Sphinx rises from the
Giza plateau adjacent to and directly north of Khafre’s valley temple
and causeway. This monument – almost the national emblem of Egypt, has
aroused the imagination of travellers, scholars, poets and writers for
centuries, but today still retains the mysteries which have puzzled
adventurers for millennia. Fashioned from an outcrop of limestone left
behind from the quarrying of stone for the Great Pyramid, the Sphinx
crouches in a rectangular ditch bounded by Khafre’s causeway to the
south, a modern road to the north and the Old Kingdom ‘Sphinx Temple’ to
the east. A small reconstructed New Kingdom religious structure,
probably dating from Amenhotep II, lies to the north-east.
The colossal statue takes the form of a crouching lion with a human
head, thought to be carved with the features of Khafre, though this is
the subject of some debate. Sphinxes are typical elements of Egyptian
statuary, but the unique architecture of the Great Sphinx has long fired
the imaginations of ‘fantasy archaeologists’ who assert that the
sculpture is the work of a civilisation far more ancient than the
builders of the pyramids. While the enigmatic history of the Sphinx is
undeniable, recent intensive excavations and restorations have revealed
no secret subterranean chambers or evidence of vanished civilisations –
to the disappointment of many, who now claim a conspiracy on the part of
the Egyptian government to keep this information from the world.
The body of the Sphinx, almost 60m long and 20m high, was carved from
alternate soft and hard layers of sediments of marly limestone laid
down during the formation of the Giza plateau in the geological Eocene
period. The harder layers were quarried, blocks extracted for Old
Kingdom building projects and it is now possible to identify the stone
used in each of the nearby structures, providing evidence of the
sequence of quarrying. The walls of Khafre’s valley temple were probably
composed of massive blocks from the upper part of the Sphinx’s body,
while some of the limestone blocks of the Sphinx Temple came from an
area around the Sphinx’s chest.
The head of the Sphinx represents an Egyptian ruler wearing a nemes
head-dress and once had a uraeus-serpent on it’s forehead and a royal
beard (fragments exist now in museums). The human head is small in
proportion to the lion’s body and it is suggested that the body may have
been elongated to take into account a natural fissure in the rock which
would have prevented the workmen from completing the carving of the
rear quarters.
The Sphinx has been deteriorating for many centuries – a thousand
years after it was carved, as far back as Dynasty XVIII, the body of the
statue was covered by the desert sands. Between the Sphinx’s front paws
the ‘Dream Stela’ tells the story of how the young Prince Tuthmose
(later Tuthmose IV) was resting there during a gazelle hunt in the
desert when he had a prophetic dream. In the dream the Sphinx spoke to
the prince, foretelling his accession to the throne of Upper and Lower
Egypt and asking for its body to be freed from the sand. When he became
pharaoh many years later, Tuthmose remembered the dream and apparently
had the statue cleared of sand, setting up a commemorative stela in a
small open-air chapel between its paws.
Evidence from remains of mudbrick walls surrounding the Sphinx,
bearing the name of Tuthmose IV suggests that this pharaoh did indeed
undertake the first restoration, also perhaps repairing some of the
blocks which had become dislodged. From this time there is evidence of
more interest in the Sphinx, which had became the focus of a cult
revival from the reign of Amenhotep II, under the name of Horemakhet
(Horus of the Horizon). Others are documented as attempting restorations
– especially Rameses II and his son, the restorer of monuments, Prince
Khaemwaset. It was cleared of sand and perhaps also restored during the
Saite Period, according to the ‘Inventory Stela’ which was found to the
east of the Great Pyramid. During the first two centuries AD the Sphinx
became a popular tourist attraction for the Romans and was cleared by
Emperors Marcus Aurelius and Septimus Severus before being once more
covered by sand for many centuries.
When Napoleon Bonaparte arrived in Egypt in 1798 he was very
impressed by the statue of the Sphinx, though by this time it was again
covered by sand. His ‘savants’ or scientists excavated the monument,
discovering the Dream Stela in the process. In 1816 Giovanni Battista
Caviglia carried out a more thorough investigation, discovering
fragments of the Sphinx’s false royal beard (now in the British Museum).
Although Mariette, Maspero and others had investigated the Sphinx, the
next phase of conservation was carried out in the 1920s by the French
archaeologist Emile Baraize, who uncovered the temple beneath the
creature’s forepaws and restored a crack on the top of the Sphinx’s head
among other things.
Sporadic restorations by the Egyptian Antiquities Organisation were
carried out between 1955 and 1989, when the most recent conservation
work began. Egyptian archaeologists under the direction of Zahi Hawass,
with the help of foreign expertise, have been concentrating on the
deteriation of the monument caused by increased humidity, the rising
water table and air pollution. In these studies much-needed conservation
work has been completed, with restorative work on areas especially
around the south forepaw, the southern flank and the tail of the Sphinx.
During the course of the restorations Zahi Hawass found a tunnel at
ground level in the northern side of the body, which led to a small,
empty, uninscribed cavity. The final phase of the Sphinx restoration,
using the most up-to-date technologies has now been completed and the
monument was formally dedicated on 25 May 1998, but it is not yet
certain whether it can be saved from further deterioration.
The colossal figure is oriented east to west and the Sphinx Temple
with it’s huge courtyard has been called a solar temple. The Sphinx can
be identified with the god Re, who rises and sets on the horizon and
also with Horus, the son of Re. So is the Sphinx a ‘living image’
(translation of the Egyptian word for sphinx, shesep-ankh) of Khafre or
some other ruler, presenting offerings to the sun-god or some mythical
image of a solar deity, guardian of the necropolis?
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