Khufu Ship

The Khufu ship is an intact full-size solar barque from ancient Egypt.

It was sealed into a pit alongside the Great Pyramid of pharaoh Khufu around 2500 BC, during the Fourth Dynasty of the ancient Egyptian Old Kingdom. Like other buried Ancient Egyptian ships, it was part of the extensive grave goods intended for use in the afterlife. The Khufu ship is one of the oldest, largest and best-preserved vessels from antiquity. It is 43.4 metres (142 ft) long, 5.9 metres (19 ft) wide, and 1.78 metres (5.83 ft) deep and is the world's oldest intact ship. It has been described as "a masterpiece of woodcraft" that could sail today if put into a lake or a river.

Khufu ship
Khufu Ship
The reconstructed "solar barge" of Khufu
TypeSolar barque
MaterialLebanon cedar
Long43.4 metres (142 ft)
Width5.9 metres (19 ft)
Createdc. 2500 BC
Discovered1954
Giza pyramid complex
Discovered byKamal el-Mallakh
Present locationGrand Egyptian Museum
CultureAncient Egypt

The ship was preserved in the Giza Solar boat museum, but was moved to the Grand Egyptian Museum in August 2021.

History

Function

The history and function of the ship is not precisely known. It is of the type known as a "solar barge", a ritual vessel believed by ancient Egyptians to carry the resurrected king across the heavens with the sun god Ra. However, it bears some signs of having been used in water, and it is possible that the ship was either a funerary "barge" used to carry the king's embalmed body from Memphis to Giza, or even that Khufu himself used it as a "pilgrimage ship" to visit holy places and that it was then buried for him to use in the afterlife. It contained no bodies, unlike northern European ship burials.

Discovery and description

Khufu Ship 
Model of the Khufu ship in the Giza Solar boat museum, with the deck removed, showing the rope stitching that holds the planks together

The ship was one of two rediscovered in 1954 by Kamal el-Mallakh—undisturbed since it was sealed into a pit carved out of the Giza bedrock. It was built largely of Lebanon cedar wood, bending the planks in the "shell-first" construction technique, using unpegged tenons of Christ's thorn. The ship was built with a flat bottom composed of several planks, but no actual keel, with the planks and frames lashed together with Halfah grass, and has been reconstructed from 1,224 pieces which had been laid in a logical, disassembled order in the pit beside the pyramid.

It measures 43.4 meters (142 ft) long and 5.9 metres (19 ft) wide. It was thus identified as the world's oldest intact ship and has been described as "a masterpiece of woodcraft" that could sail today if put into a lake, or a river. However, the vessel may not have been designed for sailing, as there is no rigging, or for rowing, as there is no room. Its discovery was described as one of the greatest Ancient Egyptian discoveries in Zahi Hawass's documentary Egypt's Ten Greatest Discoveries.

Reconstruction

It took years for the boat to be reassembled, primarily by the Egyptian Department of Antiquities' chief restorer, Ahmed Youssef Moustafa. Before reconstructing the boat, Moustafa had to gain enough experience on Ancient Egyptian boatbuilding. He studied the reliefs carved on walls and tombs as well as many of the small wooden models of ships and boats found in tombs. Moustafa visited the Nile boatyards of Old Cairo and Maadi and went to Alexandria, where wooden river boats were still being made. He hoped that modern Egyptian shipwrights had retained shipbuilding methods that would suggest how Ancient Egyptians built their ships. Then he investigated the work of shipwrights who built in a different tradition.

Exhibition

The Khufu ship was put on public display in a specially built museum at the Giza pyramid complex in 1982; the museum was a small modern facility resting alongside the Great Pyramid. The first floor of the museum took the visitor through visuals, photographs, and writings on the process of excavating and restoring the boat. The ditch where the main boat was found was incorporated into the museum's ground floor design. To see the restored boat, the visitor ascended a staircase leading to the second floor. Floor-to-ceiling windows allowed for much sunlight, and the wooden walkway took the visitor around the boat where the visitor could get a closer view of its impressive size.

In August 2021, the ship was relocated to the Grand Egyptian Museum.

See also

References

Further reading

  • Nancy Jenkins (1980). The boat beneath the pyramid: King Cheops' royal ship ISBN 0-03-057061-1
  • Paul Lipke (1984). The royal ship of Cheops: a retrospective account of the discovery, restoration and reconstruction. Based on interviews with Hag Ahmed Youssef Moustafa. Oxford: B.A.R., ISBN 0-86054-293-9
  • Björn Landström (1970). Ships of the Pharaohs: 4000 Years of Egyptian Shipbuilding. Doubleday & Company, Inc., LCCN 73-133207
  • Weitzman, David (2020 [2009]). Pharaoh's Boat Reissued by Purple House Press, ISBN 9781948959148

29°58′41″N 31°08′04″E / 29.97806°N 31.13444°E / 29.97806; 31.13444

Tags:

Khufu Ship HistoryKhufu Ship GalleryKhufu Ship Further readingKhufu ShipAfterlifeAncient EgyptAncient Egyptian solar shipsFourth dynasty of EgyptGrave goodsGreat Pyramid of GizaKhufuMarine vesselOld KingdomSolar barque

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