The following article first
appeared in the London Sunday Telegraph in the
edition dated 1st January 1995. It is reproduced here with
the kind permission of The Telegraph Group Limited. This
article remains the copyright of The Telegraph Group Ltd.
The Great Pyramid is the last remaining wonder of the ancient
world. Yet this great monument built for King Cheops around 4500
years ago, which now lends its dignity to the Cairo slums, is as
enigmatic as it ever was. The more the mechanics of the building are
revealed, the more mysterious its purpose becomes. Two years ago an
astonished world learned of the possible existence of a hidden chamber
at the end of a sloping shaft that leads from the lower of the Great
Pyramid’s two large chambers.
After a steady climb of 65 metres from the heart of the pyramid, the
small 8 inch square shaft - originally believed to be for ventilation,
now generally accepted as a "corridor" enabling the soul of the dead
pharaoh to ascend to the heavens - comes to an abrupt halt in front of a
limestone slab. This is adorned with 2 copper handles, whose position
indicates an upward-sliding movement like a portcullis. This was a
sensational discovery.
The Great Pyramid’s four shafts have been known since 1872, but they are
found in no other pyramid. Two, extending from the upper, or "Kings
Chamber" exit into open air, but the lower two, from the "Queens
Chamber" , disappear within, and have sparked intense curiosity about
where they lead to.
Stories of a concealed chamber in the Great Pyramid had
circulated since the Middle Ages, but nothing had been found here bar 3
small relics discovered 100 years ago. Inevitably, speculation in the
press about what could lie behind the slab ran riot, ranging from
untold, Tut. style treasure (highly unlikely) to a simple "ka"
statue representing the king’s sprit (possible). But most surprising was
the verdict of the Head of the German Archaeological Institute in Cairo,
under whose auspices the discovery was made. Behind the "door",
Rainer Stadelmann asserted firmly, lay nothing at all. Just a block
of limestone; simply a tidying up of an abandoned shaft.
Since the only sure counter to speculation is fact, the solution would
surely have been to press on - an the means existed to do exactly that.
Rudolf Gantenbrink, the engineer whose purpose built
UPUAT-2 robot made the discovery,
stated that with minimal adjustments, the robot could manoeuvre a
fibre-optic camera through the triangular hole at the base of the
"door/slab". Whatever lay behind it - whether sensation of the century
or damp squib - the impact of its exposure would be enormous. Nothing
simpler, you might think. But nothing happened. The "door" was
discovered on 22nd March 1993. A week later, says
Gantenbrink, he was told to pack his robot and go.
Last week a spokesman for the German Archaeological Institute denied
that there was any mystery about this.
"The project was
finished. The shafts had been explored and there was nothing further
to do. The blocking stone that was found at the end of the shaft is
very normal. All these shafts were originally blocked. It is the
normal construction. It is not possible to open the blocking; the
Egyptians would never allow it."
But this does not tally with
known facts. Parallels with other shafts cannot be made, as there is no
precedent. The end of the second shaft from the Queen’s Chamber
has not yet been reached - the robot having revealed, and been
obstructed by, two sharp bends.
What is even stranger, though, is that after the "discovery" of the
"door", all further investigation shafts stopped at this cliff-hanger
stage, and has not been resumed. The original reason for the German
engineering team being there was to clear the shafts in the Great
Pyramid to improve air flow. Humidity in the King’s Chamber was
running at 90 per cent, and the limestone walls were wet with moisture
exhaled by crowds of tourists. Rudolf Gantenbrink’s robotics
experience in both nuclear plants and undersea exploration, tied in with
his amateur fascination with the pyramids, made him the perfect choice
for the job.
Fans were duly installed, and the humidity level rapidly fell. But for
reasons that are still not entirely clear, attention shifted to the
Queen’s Chamber, even though it’s shafts were known to have no exit. By
now Gantenbrink was fascinated by the Great Pyramid’s
construction and how the pyramid-builders’ minds worked. But the
though-processes of present-day Egyptologists were on a different plane,
involving - as they appeared to - international rivalry and vested
interests more familiar to thriller writers than scientists.
But what evidence is there to back the theory that some concealed
chamber does indeed lie behind the "door" ? According to Gantenbrink
there are 12 points.
As might be expected from an engineer, historical precedent or theory
play little part. What Gantenbrink focuses on are changes, intentional
or accidental, in the physical appearance of the shaft as it nears the
"door" - evidence to a construction engineer seemingly as clear as if it
were enshrined on a blueprint.
The most important of these is the change from rough-hewn (yellow)
limestone stone walls in the rest of the shaft to the highly polished
white limestone of the last five metres. This stone is found nowhere
else in the 180 metres of shafts so far explored - but it suggests an
imminent upgrading to something grander, rather than abandonment, as
some Egyptologists would have it. Then there is the evidence of
structural damage (found nowhere else in any of the shafts), suggesting
internal stress in the vicinity - a cavity, possibly - and, as if to
confirm this, the presence of stress-reliving construction techniques
(blocks laid vertically rather than horizontally) in the walls of the
passage near the door.
The "door" also appears free of mortar, while all the joints between the
blocks forming the shaft are mortared. And Gantenbrink lists
eight further points of physical evidence, gathered from months of
analysis of footage that his robot filmed within the four shafts.
"I take an absolute
neutral position. It is a scientific process, and there is no need
whatsoever to answer questions with speculation when these questions
could be answered much more easily by continuing the research. Yet
because of a stupid feud between what I call believers and
non-believers, I am condemned as someone who is speculating. But I
am not. I am just stating the facts. We have a device [ultrasonic]
that would discover if there is a cavity behind the slab. It is a
nonsensical to make theories when we have the tools to discover the
facts."
The problem, according to
Gantenbrink, is that he is not an Egyptologist; he is simply a hired
technician. By definition, therefore, his views have no currency. Worse,
he now feels that he has been bracketed with last years best-selling
pyramid watcher Robert Bauval whose maverick views on pyramids,
pharaohs and the blinkered approach of certain Egyptologists to their
sacrosanct subject have made him persona non grata in the eye of
the archaeological establishment.
But anyone who has read Bauval’s populist investigation into the
secrets of the Great Pyramid would recognize this as a red herring.
The Orion Mystery is an exploration of a quite separate issue
(whether the religion of the pharaohs was sun or start based) and has
nothing to do with concealed chambers. Gantenbrink’s only
contribution to Bauval’s theory was revised calculations of the
angles of the shafts.
Gantenbrink is convinced that the Bauval connection has something
to do with his excommunication and is anxious to distance himself. But
the stonewalling began long before "The Orion Mystery" was
published last year. Incredibly, at the end of March 1993, a full week
after the discovery, not a word had been said to the press. Even
stranger was the fact that the discovery appeared to coincide with the
sacking of the director of the Giza Plateau site, Dr Zahi Hawass
- though at the time rumours suggested that a breach of security
following a visit by Colonel Gaddafi was the trigger.
But in Gantenbrink’s eyes, whatever the reason for Hawass’s
sudden departure, he himself was now the victim of a political feud.
"I was scheduled to meet
the Minister of Culture about the discovery, but it never happened.
A press conference was scheduled. It never happened."
Dismayed and frustrated,
Gantenbrink decided to go it alone, and using British contacts broke
the story in The Daily Telegraph on the 7th of April 1993, and thence
across the world.
Protocol; concerning the pyramids is rigid, and central to this is
strict control of the release of information to the media. The pyramids
are Egypt’s single most important national resource as both cultural
icon and foreign currency earner. Tourist, scientist or film-maker,
everybody pays. A scientific license (a pre-requisite) is contingent on
a number of factors, firstly that all press announcements go through
official Egyptian channels, and secondly that no commercial use is made
of the research. (Commercial licenses are much more expensive and
difficult to obtain.) Clearly by breaking the story Gantenbrink
had broken the first rule. It may also be that, in subsequently making
available the video footage shot ostensibly for scientific research, he
was deemed to have flouted the second, too.
The Egyptian press were at sixes and sevens. First they expostulated
that Gantenbrink’s robot could not have entered the shafts. "German
scientist’s claim a hoax" was the headline in the English-language
Egyptian Gazette of April 20, 1993. A week later, however, they changed
their tune, and hailed a major find.
But the damage as far as Gentenbrink was concerned was done. The
German’s request for a licence to re-investigate the other shaft
leading from the Queen’s Chamber, the northern one with the sharp
bends, which his modified robot could now successfully navigate - and
which he believed would throw crucial light on the "door" controversy -
was refused by the Egyptian authorities.
In an even more bizarre twist to the tale, two months later the man
responsible for sacking Dr Hawass at the time of the discovery of the
slab, Dr Mohammed Ibrahim Bakr, was himself dismissed. But unlike
Dr Hawass, he did not go quietly. In an interview with Egypt’s daily
newspaper Al-Ahram, Dr Bakr said he had been brought down by an official
"mafia" whose aim was to impede the archaeological work for their own
purposes. He also claimed that the Giza Plateau had suffered widespread
thefts of antiquities and financial malpractice’s.
"I wanted these
practices reported to the prosecution authorities but my request was
refused"
Two weeks ago it seemed that
some sort of a rapprochement between Rudolf Gantenbrink and the
Egyptians had been achieved. From the Institute of French Engineers in
Paris, Gantenbrink announced that he had offered the robot, currently
housed at the British Museum, to the Egyptian Authorities. The
exploration could now continue under Egyptian auspices, with an operator
trained by Gantenbrink himself.
But as Gantenbrink made clear to The Sunday Telegraph last
week, his announcement in Paris was less a statement of fact than a
statement of faith. The offer to the Egyptians had been made back in
June. A positive response to this diplomatic, and clearly personally
painful, sacrifice was received in October, and Gantenbrink was
preparing to go to Egypt once more.
In early November, however, came the unimaginable - a two line brush-
off from Dr Bakr’s successor as Secretary-General of the Supreme Council
of Antiquities, Dr Abdul Nour El-Din:
"Thanks for your offer
to train the Egyptian technician..... Unfortunately we are very busy
for the time being, therefore we will postpone the matter."
Gantenbrink now hopes
that by making public is offer to the Egyptians, they will think again.
"The search forthe truth is too important to be ruined by a silly political
game," he says. "My only hope is that they will soon reach the same
conclusion."