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Who blew up the pyramids?

Sultan Al-Aziz Uthman He set himself on a campaign to destroy the pyramids, which he viewed as pagan and in opposition to the word of the Allah in the holy book of the Quran, which spoke against idolatry. Sultan Al-Aziz Uthman directed the dismantling of the pyramids and some of the smaller pyramids were destroyed.



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Perhaps the most infamous act of destruction at Meroe, however, is attributed to the Italian treasure hunter Giuseppe Ferlini, who in the 1830s destroyed several of the pyramids in a ruthless search for ancient artifacts. Local workers at Meroe. A structure known as the Roman Kiosk at the archaeological site of Naqa.

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In the 12th century, Kurdish ruler al-Malek al-Aziz Othman ben Yusuf attempted to destroy one of the pyramids, but only successfully damaged the smallest, leaving a vertical gash on the north face.

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Pyramids were the burial places for Egyptian royalty during the Old Kingdom. The three large pyramids at Giza were built for three generations of Egyptian kings: Khufu, his son Khafre, and his grandson Menkaure.

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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.

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Why did the Egyptians stop building pyramids? They went out of fashion during the Middle Kingdom. Most likely because of the economic burden of constructing the monuments, which likely contributed to the decline of the Old Kingdom.

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Well, Napoleon did invade Egypt, and he fought a major battle within sight of the pyramids in 1798. It does seem that he visited the pyramids in person, although my Googling has turned up no records of him having shot them with a cannon.

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Climbing the pyramids is also banned because it's exceedingly dangerous, and typically anyone caught scaling the pyramids face up to three years in an Egyptian jail. This wasn't Ciesielski's first climbing stunt.

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