Eight years ago, Jean-Pierre Houdin, a successful
French architect, became obsessed by the age-old mystery
of how the Great Pyramid was built. He renounced his
architectural practice, sold his Paris apartment, and
for ten hours a day labored at his computer to create
exquisitely detailed 3-D models of the interior of the
Great Pyramid. After five years of effort, the images
rotating on his computer screen provided irrefutable
evidence of an astonishing secret. Corkscrewing up the
inside of the Great Pyramid is a mile-long ramp, unseen
for 4,500 years. The pyramid was built from the inside.
The revelation casts a fresh light on the minds that
founded earth's first civilization. The narration takes
place in two time frames: ancient and modern. The
ancient story explains how a nation of farmers that had
only recently emerged from the Stone Age could construct
one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World. To
execute something as complex and massive as the Great
Pyramid, Egypt needed architects, mathematicians, boat
builders, stone masons, metallurgists. It took twenty
years to build the Great Pyramid.By the time its
capstone was laid in 2560 BC, the innovations born of
the building quest had transformed agrarian Egypt into
the world's most modern, most powerful nation. As we
follow the progress of Hemienu, the innovative architect
who planned, organized and oversaw construction of the
Great Pyramid, we also follow Houdin working to discover
how and why the ancient architect designed the pyramid
as he did. Houdin works as a 'forensic' architect,
aiming to reconstruct the lessons Hemienu had learned
from construction of three previous pyramids and to
visualise his blueprint for the massive stone
building. |
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