Francesca Rossi
Slaves were involved in building the pyramids of Giza. Slaves are people that are forced to work for someone else and they do not get paid. In the following paragraph I will prove that slaves were involved in the construction of the pyramids by using evidence from three different docements.
According to Document C, Egypt says, that if slaves built the pyramids then they wouldn’t have buried them so honorably. This evidence isn’t convincing because when someone says a country is speaking they usually mean the government, this could mean that Egypt’s government doesn’t want to let other countries know that they had slaves and that they treated people like that. Another piece of evidence is that according to Document D, the people
Pyramids originated from the Egyptians. They expressed a worldwide view of the Egyptians. First of all, they were symbols of the pharaoh's authority and divine status. It reflects hierarchical status. In the Egyptian society there were slaves, the commoners, the pharaohs. If you were to put them in order the top of the pyramid would the pharaohs below them the commoners, then slaves and so forth. The most important one would be on the top which is the pharaohs. Also it was a testimony of the pharaoh's ability to marshal Egypt's resources. They were also used for tombs. Their worldview was very religious too, because the pyramids were a symbol of a gateway of the next life. This is seen as inside the pyramids the Egyptians buried
In fact they were built by paid workers with special skills and trades in their job. And they say that the reason a lot of people believe the pyramids to be built by slaves is because an ancient historian knew they had slaves. That's what they believed they were used for but they were actually used as farm hands and helped out around the house or on the small stuff. They weren't treated as slaves per say but more as like maids or servants but they were getting paid with food, shelter, and water and they could leave whenever they wanted it was just their choice, a lot of them realized they were better of staying
My first piece of evidence is he compelled all the egyptians to work for him. This is the very definition of slaver, slaver: A person forced into labor and has no freedom. This is what he doing so this supports that they were slaves and they were used to build the pyramids and they were wiped most likely and probably starved.
Slavery can be dated back to very early civilizations and were crucial in everyday activities, also to the economy. Some of these ancient civilizations include the India, Mesopotamian and Chinese and these had slaves work in their homes or their shops. Another early civilization who used slaves were the Egyptian who used the slaves to build their monuments, castles, palaces and statues. Hebrews also used slaves but were a little more moral on how they were identified. The Aztec, Inca and Mayan used slaves in many forms and most of these slaves were optained through war prisoners and were used in agriculture and warfare.
What makes up a pyramid? 12 lines, 5 faces, 4 triangles, 1 base, and 5 vertexes and in the case of the Great Pyramids of Giza about 2.3 million stone blocks that weigh an average of 2.5 to 15 tons. That according to the time it took to build them they would have had to place and set a stone every 2 to 2 and a half minutes. To put that in perspective some weigh as much or more than an armed military cargo truck. So, imagine dragging a cargo truck with nothing but some strong rope and some other people. Now if you're like most people you can lift maybe 100 pounds. However, the average powerlifter can lift 350 to 400 pounds and that's just lift not pack around or drag across acres of land. Now how did the Egyptians build the Great Pyramid of Giza with blocks that weigh up to 15 tons with the technology they had then? It’s clearly very obtuse to think the pyramids were built by the Egyptians and the Egyptians alone. The question is, who helped them?
Did you know that the people who built many of the Egyptian monuments we know today (also know as slaves) suffered while making creating the monuments.Well in ancient Egypt, slaves created the monuments that there still is and many of them were killed in the process of building them. Great achievements are not worth great injustices because slaves died, they had terrible lives and they couldn’t enjoy what they had made.
The following quote was stated by Zahi Hawass; an Egyptian archaeologist whose article was featured in Document C, “Those who died during the process were honored for their work and buried near the sacred pyramids of the Pharaohs.” This quote stood out to me because it provides evidence that the workers were treated with respect, meaning they weren’t slaves. A slave at that time was often whipped and beat for any wrong move.
When one looks to the village of Deir el-Medina one is given a few indications of every day life of Ancient Egyptians. Mainly workmen and their families occupied the village (except when Akhenaten was in power). Evidence from this village gives us insight into the economy of everyday man in ancient Egypt as well as how the workers lived. We are even given evidence of a strike. All of this cuts away the modern misconception of Egyptian workers in the guise of slaves.
Each block would to have been quarried or cut, and then hauled to the work site, and eventually placed in the correct position. The Egyptians had an amazing understanding of math, which helped them plan the erection of the pyramid, but the only driving force behind them was manpower. The actual people who built the pyramids were all voluntary workers; they were not slaves contrary to popular belief.
A major piece of evidence is that the Egyptians have no written history about hundred of thousands of slaves leaving. They also never write down about the plagues, which would need a explanation because both of those things are huge to the story. A reason for this could be that the Egyptians may have destroyed all their writings about these events,
From what the reader know, and what historians know Egypt is one of the greatest civilizations to ever emerge in this world. A society ruled by divine kingship, and belief in polytheism. It was not because of what the Egyptians did but more so of what was left behind for other readers and educators to see. Considering the fact that the Egyptians established a very unique language and writing system also called hieroglyphics, the Egyptians had to establish a private society due to the fact that no other person was higher than the Scribes, who were the
Slaves were servants, factory workers, shopkeepers, mine workers, and many other things that they would want them to do. They had slaves do their work because they didn’t want to do it themselves. They had to work for their owners, and they didn’t have a choice unless they wanted to get wiped and other stuff. Or they were also starved to death. Some slaves were captured by kidnappers or as prisoners of war and sold them as slaves, so they didn’t have to do the work, It was hard to find out who kidnapped them because they were really sneaky at it, and a lot of people did it.
Despite the horror of the word slavery we have to admit that slaves have played a big role in rising big empires. For example the Egyptians used slaves to build their majestic pyramids, the Chinese and Indian used slaves for large-scale construction and agricultural and the Hebrews also used slaves. Slaves were brought from Africa to the British American colonies to work in agriculture and farming, which among other factors made the British colonies in America become so strong and prosperous.
In the deserts of Egypt lie the colossal remains of an ancient civilization. These enormous works of human endeavor are the only member of the Seven Ancient Wonders of the World that time has passed down to us. These are, of course, the great pyramids of ancient Egypt. But these imposing structures were not built to impress civilization millennia down the road. The pyramids in fact had a purpose to the ancient Egyptians. While they seem very simple in nature, as they are simply four-sided pyramids with square bases, they had a meaning for those that had them built. Even by today’s standards, the pyramids of ancient Egypt were an impressive feat of engineering, due to their enormous size, both in building materials and finished product.
Most of what Herodotus tells us is probably false. Scientists calculate that fewer men and fewer years were needed than Herodotus suggests. It also seems unlikely that slaves or complicated machines were needed for the pyramid construction. It isn't surprising that the Greek historian got it wrong. By the time he visited the site the great pyramid was already 20 centuries old, and much of the truth about it was shrouded in the mists of history.