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The astronomical symbolism of the Giza Pyramids

Last updated:

07/03/25, 12:23

Published:

06/03/25, 08:00

Observations suggest that aspects of their design were purposeful for other reasons

This is Article 2 in a series about astro-archaeology. Next article coming soon. Previous article: Cities designed to track the heavens: Chaco Canyon, New Mexico


The Giza Pyramids of the ancient Egyptian civilisation may be most well known as one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, but they also harbour astronomical secrets. 


The three Great Pyramids (Khafre, Khufu, and Menkaure) are incredible feats of engineering, with heights measuring 146.6 meters, 143.5 meters, and 64.5 meters, respectively. No documentation has been found explaining the planning or construction processes behind the creation of these magnificent structures, yet observations suggest that aspects of their design were purposeful for reasons other than simply erecting the pyramid.


Example 1: The square bases of the pyramids are very carefully oriented to the cardinal points with the Khufu Pyramid aligning within 4 arc minutes of the north-south line. For context, if you were to hold your index finger up, it would cover a portion of the sky that measures about 10 degrees across. 1 arc minute is a unit of measurement equal to 1/60 of 1 degree, which means that the orientation of the Khufu Pyramid only deviates from the north-south line by less than 4/60-degree error. Today, we would calculate this using a GPS or other technical equipment, but what did the ancient Egyptians use? Well, astronomy! 


While the exact method of calculation is not known, researchers believe that the ancient engineers aligned the pyramids to the constellation Orion and the star Sirius as they are circumpolar stars, never rising nor setting, and are therefore visible every night as a useful guide. This may also have religious implications relating to immortality, perhaps adding to the desire to align the Pharoah’s tombs with such a symbolic constellation. 


Example 2: The south-eastern corners of the three Giza Pyramids all point toward the nearby great solar temple of Heliopolis, which was a major religious centre of the sun god Atum-Ra. According to the Pyramid Texts, Heliopolis was the location that the god-creator Atum emerged from chaos and begun creation. These texts suggest that the ancient Egyptians believed that the Pharaohs join Atum-Ra in the afterlife, and they together cross the sky in Atum-Ra’s sun boat as part of the rebirth process. Upon investigation, the three pyramids seem to be aligned with various solar events as well as the city of the sun god:


  • the setting sun is aligned with the northern side of the Khafre pyramid and the southern side of the Khufu pyramid during the equinoxes


  • the causeways point to the setting sun behind the pyramid twice per year, which are distanced the same number of days from the winter/summer solstices


  • each of the two causeways point towards sunset in two separate locations that are halfway between the equinoxes and solstices, respectively (not according to the calendar year, but according to the astronomical year)


  • on the summer solstice, the sun sets directly between the two great pyramids when viewing from the Sphinx area of the pyramidal complex


Example 3: the position of three Great Pyramids with respect to each other mimics the position of the stars in the constellation Orion’s belt with respect to each other. Astronomical calculations show that the orientation and position of the Khufu, Khafre, and Menkaure pyramids align together in exactly the same way that the Alnitak, Alnilam, and Mintaka stars align in Orion’s belt. Of course, there is a small percentage of error, but it is because of naked eye observations instead of mathematical miscalculations.  


While there are still many secrets hidden in and around the Great Pyramids of ancient Egypt, they can continue to provide insight into how ancient peoples interconnected architecture, astronomy/mathematics, and religious beliefs within their societies. 


Written by Amber Elinsky



REFERENCES


Magli, G. (2009). Archaeoastronomy at Giza: the ancient Egyptians’ mathematical astronomy in action. In: Emmer, M., Quarteroni, A. (eds) Mathknow. MS&A, vol 3. Springer, Milano. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-88-470-1122-9_10.


Orofino, V. and P. Bernardini. Archaeoastronomical Study of the Main Pyramids of Giza, Egypt: Possible Correlations with the Stars?. Archaeological Discovery: 1 (2016), vol 3. https://www.scirp.org/journal/paperinformation?paperid=61389


Verner, Miroslav, 'Heliopolis: The City of the Sun', in Anna Bryson-Gustová (ed.), Temple of the World: Sanctuaries, Cults, and Mysteries of Ancient Egypt (Cairo, 2013; online edn, Cairo Scholarship Online, 18 Sept. 2014), https://doi.org/10.5743/cairo/9789774165634.003.0002.

https://pyramidtextsonline.com/translation.html 

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