Loading Page...

Are there traps in the pyramids?

Were Egyptian tombs booby trapped? Well, no, not in the way we see in movies like “Raiders of the Lost Ark” or “The Mummy”. There were no giant rolling balls, pits of snakes, or flesh-eating bugs. The ancient Egyptian tomb builders went to great lengths to protect the mummy and the funerary goods buried in the tombs.



People Also Ask

The pyramids' main purpose was to keep the pharaohs' bodies safe. Granite doors, false passages, and fake chambers were there to keep out robbers.

MORE DETAILS

Mummies found in Egyptian pyramids The first pyramid built was the Step Pyramid of Djoser. Human remains have been discovered inside, and Jean-Philippe Lauer (1902-2001) found a rib, a humerus, the left foot, and part of the stomach of a mummy in the stone sarcophagus of Djoser.

MORE DETAILS

Beneath its enormous construction, the great King Djoser was buried in a chamber tomb. Djoser was king of Egypt's Third Dynasty, known for pioneering the construction of stone buildings, monuments and temples. Unusually, 11 of King Djoser's daughters were buried inside this Egyptian pyramid's chamber alongside him.

MORE DETAILS

These pyramids were not to be climbed or touched by humans. There were still steps going up the sides of these pyramids, but they were often too steep to climb without a lot of effort. These pyramids were sometimes built with secret doors, tunnels, and traps.

MORE DETAILS

Scientists Just Revealed a Secret Corridor in the Great Pyramid of Giza—and It Could Lead to More. Egyptian antiquities officials have confirmed the existence of a hidden corridor above the main entrance of the Great Pyramid of Giza that dates back some 4,500 years, a discovery that could lead to further findings.

MORE DETAILS

As part of the international research team “ScanPyramids” the Munich scientists have proven the existence of an empty chamber which was until now only posited based on measurement data. The hollow space is located above the original entrance to the pyramid, which is not accessible to the public.

MORE DETAILS

rather than built by hand (by thousands of dedicated workers) as conventional science and history continually says. Some of these more “out there” ideas are likely born out of the fact that so much about the pyramids is still unknown, though. And physically exploring them up close is often impossible.

MORE DETAILS

Using advanced scanning technologies, scientists in Egypt have discovered a hidden tunnel that runs underneath the Great Pyramid of Giza, the largest stone structure of its kind and the oldest of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.

MORE DETAILS

Pyramids weren't constructed to contain mummies; tombs were. There were a variety of tombs: simple pit-graves, mastabas, burial chambers beneath pyramids, and rock-cut cliff tombs were the chief ones.

MORE DETAILS

In 1872, two British men took a trio of artifacts from the Great Pyramid of Giza—the only known items ever removed from the 4,500-year-old structure. One of these objects, a five-inch piece of cedar wood, found its way to the University of Aberdeen in Scotland, only to disappear shortly after its arrival.

MORE DETAILS

The construction of the pyramids is not specifically mentioned in the Bible. What we believe about their purpose does not impinge on any biblical doctrine.

MORE DETAILS

Pyramids today stand as a reminder of the ancient Egyptian glorification of life after death, and in fact, the pyramids were built as monuments to house the tombs of the pharaohs. Death was seen as merely the beginning of a journey to the other world.

MORE DETAILS

In a 2023 study in Nature, an international team of researchers from Egypt, France and Japan revealed more details about a hidden, 30-foot corridor. The corridor is about six feet wide and sits above the main entrance by the pyramid's north face.

MORE DETAILS