Complex Pyramid of Djedkare Izezi |
The ruins of the valley temple lie under the edg eof the houses in the nearby villageSome granite stones are incorporated into the houses Causeway is not quite east-west A nearby necropolis for sacred snakes dates from the Late Period, and is near the upper end of the causeway The foundation slopes sharply on the east side, where the mortuary temple is located. A central courtyard with columned hall and alabaster walkway. The columns are pink granite palm columns.
The western part of the temple was incorporated into the masonry of the pyramid.
Very little remains of the decoration sor structure. Small cult pyramid near the southeast corner of the main pyramid is common. It has three coresw and a single underground chamber, entered from the north side, and enclosed in a small retaining wall.
Entrance is on the north side, but not on the pyramid face, but rather in the pavement of the courtyard and covered with a chapel. Private tombs are nearby, but they do not contain his family (they were buried in Abusir) A pyramid of an unknown queen, possibly of Djedkare, is almost integrated into the pyramid.
Basalt sarcophagus, with the head oriented to the north Fragments of canopic jars Mummified body of a man about 50 years old, possibly that of Djedkare
Core of six steps, currently missing the upper three layers 49 meters (163 feet) high (Currently only 24 meters tall) . Each step is approximately 7 meters high, built of limestone with clay mortar. Casing is long gone, but the north side is well preserved "Pyramid of the Sentinel" 25m tall, open ot visitors, but very little to see Djedkare-Isesi was the penultimate king of Dynasty V, the predecessor to Unas. He was the first pharaoh to build a pyramid in the area to the south of the main Saqqara necropolis, moving away from the chosen burial grounds of his immediate ancestors at Abusir. Although Djedkare's ancestry is still unclear, it is known that he reigned for at least three decades, during which time he was responsible for reforming the administration of Upper and Lower Egypt and reorganising the mortuary cult at Abusir.
Pyramid of Djedkare-Isesi from the north Pyramid of Djedkare-Isesi from the north
The pyramid of Djedkare, overlooking the modern village of Saqqara, is known today as 'The Sentinel' (el-Shawaf) but was originally named 'Beautiful is Djedkare'. It was visited by Perring, and recorded by Lepsius, but was first entered by Gaston Maspero in 1880 during his search for pyramid texts. In the 1940s the pyramid was excavated by Abdel Salam Hussein, although his work was never published. It has been sporadically investigated since then, especially in the area of the causeway, but due to the damage to the pyramid complex in antiquity little remains have been found there.
The funerary complex that Djedkare built at Saqqara followed the general standards of the time. To the West there was a pyramid, with its entrance facing North. There was a small Satellite Pyramid near the Southeast corner of the main pyramid. The king's mortuary temple extented to the East of the pyramid. The only surprise comes from the structure of the Queen's Pyramid complex, which is located to the Northeast of the King's Pyramid. It is the first to have contained all the elements that were standard in the funerary complex of a king: a pyramid, be it a small one, to the West, an even smaller satellite pyramid to the Southeast and a mortuary temple to the east