性视界

Egyptologist Shares Findings of Everyday Life of the Pyramid Builders During Phanstiel Lecture

The grandeur of the pyramids of Giza has drawn archeologists to study their ancient mysteries and fascinated peoples for centuries. The elaborate engineering and architecture of these structures are marvels for the ages, leading most people to ask how they were built.

person speaking at podium
Egyptologist Mark Lehner presented the Phanstiel Lecture, 鈥淭he People Who Built the Pyramids鈥擧ow We Know,鈥 earlier this month in Maxwell Auditorium. (Photos by Chuck Wainwright)

For Egyptologist Mark Lehner, who has researched the monuments and environs of the Giza Plateau for decades, his question for most of his career has not been about how they were built but rather who crafted these enduring wonders.

鈥淚 was simply asking where are all the people? Where鈥檚 the settlement? What would it tell us about their lives if we could dig into it with scientific archaeology?鈥 said Lehner, who presented the Phanstiel Lecture, 鈥淭he People Who Built the Pyramids鈥擧ow We Know,鈥澛爀arlier this month in Maxwell Auditorium.

To get to those answers, 鈥淚 realized that I had to turn my back to the pyramids and look beyond them, around them, to understand the pyramids themselves,鈥 Lehner said. 鈥淏ecause if you don鈥檛 understand the elementary structures of everyday life of a people, of a culture, you don鈥檛 understand their monuments.鈥

A distinguished archeologist and founder and president of Ancient Egypt Research Associates (AERA), Lehner has over 40 years of experience studying Egypt鈥檚 ancient history. Founded in 1985, the AERA team expanded research on the infrastructure of the pyramid builders, revealing insights into the lives of the ancient workers.

Lehner鈥檚 work includes such groundbreaking projects as mapping the Great Sphinx and leading the Giza Plateau Mapping Project, an initiative that unearths and studies Old Kingdom settlements.

Sponsored by the , Lehner鈥檚 visit was one of the 鈥 centennial events.

鈥淚t’s a particular honor to be here celebrating 100 years of the Maxwell School, and I realize that we鈥檙e way deep into time here compared to a lot of studies here at the Maxwell School, and I’m just wondering if this deep dive into early civilization history might serve as some kind of notice about what is citizenship, what is public affairs, what was it 4,500 years ago?鈥 Lehner said. 鈥淲hat does citizenship mean in these very early periods? And for that matter, was there even such a thing as public versus private?鈥

Lost City of the Pyramids

Presenting photos and diagrams of the Giza Plateau and its famous sites, Lehner spoke about his discoveries in the Lost City of the Pyramids, a site south of the Sphinx where the AERA team began excavating in 1988. The site stretches south from a colossal ancient stone wall known as Heit el-Ghurab (or 鈥淲all of the Crow鈥). Here, AERA excavations are revealing an urban settlement that served those building the great pyramids 4,500 years ago.

Below the sands, AERA archeologists exposed the architectural footprint of their labor organization, Lehner said. They found small houses, streets, bakeries, a royal administrative building and a complex of galleries that would have housed the workers.

person speaking at a podium in Maxwell Auditorium in front of large crowd
Egyptologist Mark Lehner presented the Phanstiel Lecture, 鈥淭he People Who Built the Pyramids鈥擧ow We Know,鈥澛爀arlier this month in Maxwell Auditorium.

Animal bones, ancient plants and chips of stone tools鈥攖hese tiny fragments, which they found through a meticulous sieving process鈥攔evealed everyday life.

鈥淲e had evidence from the ancient bone that up to several thousand people were eating meat every day, prime beef,鈥 said Lehner, who also noted they found dozens of bakeries. 鈥淪o we came up with the barracks hypothesis. The idea that people in the provinces were pulsed through the gallery complex during periods of obligatory labor.鈥

They also discovered wares and remnants of materials that would have been brought in from other parts of Africa and the Middle East.

Their findings and hypotheses have been substantiated by an important discovery in the desert caves at Wadi al-Jarf near the Red Sea. Fellow archeologist Pierre Tallet and his colleagues found the world鈥檚 oldest inscribed papyri, written accounts by the people who built the pyramids.

Lehner and Tallet collaborated to connect the writings with the physical remnants. 鈥淭his is just one example of the evidence we used to reconstruct the pyramid builders鈥 floodplain and waterways,鈥 Lehner said. 鈥淲e think they actually dredged these harbors and waterways to the depths of the main trunk channel of the Nile, to a Western Nile branch, to bring water as close as possible to the foot of the Giza Plateau.鈥

Training the Next Generation of Archeologists

Lehner discussed another important aspect of AERA: training Egyptian archeologists to continue this important work. With funding from private sources and the U.S. Agency for International Development, AERA has trained 350 scholars over 19 years.

鈥淲e became one of the largest deployments in Egyptian archeology, and these students have gone on to become major officials and directors within the Ministry Tourism and of Antiquities,鈥 Lehner said.

Following Lehner鈥檚 lecture, Maxwell School Dean David M. Van Slyke recognized the archeologist鈥檚 work and how his research 鈥渟hines a light鈥 on those who contributed to these monumental achievements but are often overlooked.

鈥淒r. Lehner uncovers not only the physical infrastructure that sustained these great undertakings but also the values, daily lives and ingenuity of the ancient workforce that powered them,鈥 Van Slyke said. 鈥淭he builder city stands as a tribute to these individuals and reminds us that behind every monumental structure are stories of human resilience and creativity.鈥

person speaking at a podium in Maxwell Auditorium in front of large crowd
Egyptologist Mark Lehner presented the Phanstiel Lecture, 鈥淭he People Who Built the Pyramids鈥擧ow We Know,鈥澛爀arlier this month in Maxwell Auditorium.