downside: going to have to include a picture of the Giza pyramids in the slides for the lecture
upside: i get to give people a crash course in why perspective matters in two frames, becausefollowed by
is such a funny sequence
i find most people who haven’t seen it in person don’t know that cairo is RIGHT THERE
I loved these perspectives so I took some of my own when I was in Cairo and yeah, they’re literally just. Right there. Pass em on your way to work, nbd
No, y'all don’t even understand.
There is literally a Pizza Hut across the street from the pyramids.
That Pizza Hut among other things is why Egyptologists laugh their asses off when we see another piece of media where the protagonists get “lost in the desert near the pyramids”, because it’s like… just turn around my dudes you’re only a seven min walk away from the nearest fastfood shop
Yall don’t know how much I adore all of this
@ everyone in the notes going “of COURSE they’re built near the city that just makes sense!!!”
Cairo being that close is a very modern thing on account of the settlement that eventually became Cairo not emerging until 641 AD. Cairo as Al-Qāhirah only exists since 969 AD. During ancient times, Men-nefer (Memphis, roughly 25km south of modern Cairo) would have been the city closest to Giza, but not cuddling up to the plateau the way modern Cairo is.
What the Giza Plateau was close to, however? The Nile.
That’s right my loves, the Nile did change its position in the 4500 years since the building of the Giza pyramids.
The quarry that yielded the stone they were built with was also very close:
image courtesy of @thatlittleegyptologist
So those two things combined with the relative proximity of Memphis are a reason the pyramids were built where they are, rather than the proximity of modern Cairo (which is more because human settlements tend to spread).
(via feltelures)













