Thursday, April 16, 2020
Seven Wonders Of The Ancient World Essays - , Term Papers
  Seven Wonders Of The Ancient World    How many individuals can name the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World? These ancien, man made monuments were compiled into a list considerable in their enormous size or  some other unusual quality (Donovan 325). We should not let these legacies be left  behind in the past, because each of these Seven Wonders has a story hidden within  their ruins, or in one case, within its remains. Picture these architectural structures  as I uncover the legends of The Statue of Zeus, the Colossus of Rhodes, the Pyramids  of Egypt, the Hanging Gardens of Babylon, the Mausoleum at Halicarnassus, and the  Temple of Artemis.  The first full modern version of the list appeared less than four centuries ago in  Italy in 1608 (Romer IX). After that the lists varied, sometimes naming ten wonders,  but always keeping the honored name of The Seven Wonders of the World (IX). The  listing of these wonders initiated by Greeks and Romans listed memorable things that  they thought travelers should see (Donovan 325). The origianl authorship of the list  is not completely proven, but it is believed to be composed by Bede and Philo (Romer  X). Philo's list is the most impressive, because of it's uncomparable text, in length,  poetry, and information given (Romer X). At one time, classical writers argued over  the true list, but today there is one most commonly used (Virtual Tours 1). Few drawings  or sketches exist of the vanished monuments, so archeologists have relied on ancient  tales and literary works to get an idea of appearance and history (2).Every one of the seven wonders is connected to the legendary King Alexander (Romer  XII). He founded Egyptian Alexandria, the city of Pharos; he stormed Halicarnassus,  the city of the Mausoleum; the Rhodian of Colossus was cast in his image; he died  in Babylon, the city of the Hanging Gardens, and all of them stood within his shortlived  Empire (Romer XII). Apart from the Statue of Zeus in the west and the Hanging Gardens  in the east, they all lay in the center of the Greek Empire (McLeish 4).  In the Fourth Dynasty, built 4600 years ago, the Giza Pyramids came known as the greatest of the Seven Wonders (Grigson 18). These pyramids are the largest of the 70-odd pyramids  built (18). The largest of the three Giza Pyramids is the Pyramid of Cheops (18).  Its base is 57,000 square feet and has 2,300,000 limestone blocks each weighing two  and one-half tons (18). It is made up of a King's Chamber, Queen's Chamber, grand  gallery, vents, ascending and descending passages, and a Greaves Shaft (Krystek 4).  Cheop's Pyramid is surrounded by rows of low flat tombs, mastabas, and three small  pyramids in which his family and other high officials were buried (Grigson 20). The  second pyramid is called the Pyramid of Chephren and the third if the pyramid of Mycerinus  (20). These pyramids all have an astonishing accuracy in their construction (18).  There is only about eight inches difference between the longest and the shortest baseline  and teh four corners make an almost perfect right angle (18). It is believed that  the Eyqyptians worked by observing teh stars because all the sides are aligned to  face the cardinal points of the compass (18). Richard Procter, and astronomer, observed  hat the descending passage could have b een used to observe transit stars and he grand  gallery could have been used to map the sky when on the top (Krystek 3). The pyramid  is probably connected with Egyptain sun worship and a pyramid stone, the benben, symbolizes  the sun god ( Grigson 20). When the sun's rays breaks through at exactly the angle  of teh Giza Pyramids, the Egyptians regarded that as a stairway to heaven for their  kings (20). They believed the body was the spirit's house and so they want to perserve  the body as long as they can (Mc Leish 5). Priests began by removing all the soft  parts of the body, such as the brain, lungs, heart, liver, and intestines (5). A great  archeologist, Sir Flanders Petrie, estimated that it took 100,000 men to haul stones  and another 4,000 to work on the actual construction (Grigson 20). They used no pulleys,  but must have used an incline plane to raise the blocks (20). How the inside of teh  pyramid is built is unknown (20). The center of the pyramid is the home of Cheop's  burial chamber (20). Before and after the construction of the Pyramids, Egyptians  interned    
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