A large royal storehouse and administrative building unearthed last season to the south-east of the Great Sphinx at Giza has once again focused attention on the Age of the Pyramid Builders. Nevine El-Aref visits the site and learns details of the remarkable discovery Click to view caption Routine excavations on the Giza Plateau by the Chicago Harvard University Giza Mapping Project have unearthed a vast royal complex dating from the reigns of Khafre and Menkaure, builders of the second and third pyramids. It has proved to be the oldest administrative settlement ever found and was clearly used for supervising a vast army of part-time workers recruited to build the pyramid of Khafre. "It is an incredible discovery," Minister of Culture Farouk Hosni said. "It completes our vision of the life of the construction workers during the Fourth Dynasty, 4,500 years ago." "The site is 450 metres south of the Sphinx, below the worker's cemetery discovered by Zahi Hawass," said mission director Mark Lehner, who went on to explain that the royal administrative building was an important central feature of the layout of the Giza Plateau which includes the Wall of the Crow, the Gallery System, the bakeries, and the Eastern Town. "So far the team has excavated about 1,125 square metres," Lehner said. "The royal building itself measures 48 metres east to west, and although only 25 metres of the back of the building have been exposed it is clear that this was the royal structure for storage and administration, part of a vast complex that included dormitories where itinerant labourers might have slept, bakeries and meat processing facilities for feeding them, and a great grain storehouse that supplied the bakeries." The building has yielded evidence of the activities that were carried out there in the form of seals, copper and stone (alabaster) work, and weaving; the latter in the form of pottery loom shuttles and loom weights of mud. Long colonnaded galleries may have been dormitories that could accommodate between 40 and 50 people. "Possibly these were teams that were supervised by an overseer who lived in a large house on the banks of the Nile at the southern end of the galleries," Lehner said. "Altogether the dormitories could shelter up to 2,000 workers, while an estimated 20,000 labourers could have worked in shifts at Giza following the Egyptian pattern whereby noblemen sent teams from their provinces all over the country, including Upper Egypt and the Delta, to share in the great national project of pyramid building," said Zahi Hawass, secretary-general of the Supreme Council of Antiquities (SCA). "The dormitories would probably have been used by the itinerant, rotating labour force." The gallery or dormitory system is flanked to the east, west and south by bakeries, and the evidence of meat processing and salt fish production attest to a healthy diet. Also found were small mud "tokens" that probably represent the special kind of bread eaten by the Egyptians, similar to pita, which appear to have been used for accounting and administrative purposes. The focus of the royal administrative building is a storehouse with large mud brick silos arranged around a rectangular court. These are 1.80 metres below ground level and probably contained grain to supply the numerous bakeries surrounding the dormitory complex. "The rest of storehouses, still unexcavated, mostly lie buried beneath the modern soccer field of the Sphinx Sports Club football field built in 1948," Lehner said. "This Old Kingdom administrative building is a clear indication of the strict system imposed by the ancient Egyptians to control construction of the grand pyramid complexes at Giza," Hawass added. Hawass said a collection of 250 seals carrying the names of the kings Khafre and Menkaure have been unearthed. "The absence of seals bearing the names of Khufu, the builder of the Great Pyramid, may be because the overseer of the administration building of Khafre's pyramid removed all constructions that dated back to his father's reign to the Western side of the Sphinx," he said. The American team has excavated what is believed to be Egypt's oldest known hypostyle hall, the function of which may have been to serve as a communal dining facility. "We found fish bones near low troughs and benches that run the length of the floor of the hall, which appear to be droppings from meals," Lehner said. "Fragments of pottery bowls, lids and stands for vessels point to food consumption rather than preparation." This extremely complex, historically important, and revealing site flanks part of the town of the Pyramid Age extending further east of the excavation site and continuing under the modern town of Nazlet Al-Simman. Even though the latter is less planned than the dormitory system, it may have housed the more permanent work force -- perhaps the skilled craftsmen, artisans, experienced stone masons, quarrymen, overseer and officials employed on various aspects of pyramid construction. "Like today's cities, the town was crowded," Hawass said. "There are traces of streets and alleyways between the houses, and household granaries, bins, and grinding stones for processing grain into flour." Scores of these small granaries and baking areas were found all over the town, and last year the team came upon a centralised storage facility -- a huge storehouse in the royal administrative building. This indicates that there were domestic granaries around the town for permanent residents, and an extensive central storage facility for the mass of itinerant workers. Back in 1994, when Hawass was director of the Giza Plateau, a series of discoveries of tombs built by the people who constructed the pyramids was found. It revealed that many labourers who constructed the mighty pyramids for their Pharaohs nevertheless found time to build and decorate their own tombs, inscribing them with a wealth of information about their lives and working conditions. At the time Hawass described them as revealing that the men fell into different categories. "There were tombs of the workmen and overseers as well as a workmen's camp," he said. He observed that the craftsmen who decorated the tombs lived in one camp, and the men who moved the stones lived in another; the former built their tombs from fine sun-dried brick and also used leftover materials from the royal tombs. "Now, with the discovery of this large administrative building, and a royal storehouse, missing parts of the jigsaw puzzle that makes up Giza and the Age of the Pyramid Builders are falling in place," Hawass said. "We now know that the government in the Pyramid Age constructed galleries to serve as dormitories for itinerant non-skilled temporary workers; that there were formal chambers in each to house their supervisors; and that there was a common dining area to feed them. A truly remarkable picture has emerged from these new discoveries." In 2001 the American team uncovered the Wall of the Crow, a 10-metre-tall and 10-metre-wide construction with a great gate through it (used today by horse and camel riders). It now seems certain that the Fourth-Dynasty Egyptians built the wall to control the flow of people and material from a harbour into the newly-discovered pre- planned settlement area for itinerant workers, with its storage area and production centre for copper instruments, linen and seal production. Now the team has also unearthed the oldest street that linked the workers' town to the pyramid complexes. "Pyramid building was planned like a long- term military campaign," Hawass said. "Everything had to be taken into account. How and when the part-time workers should be recruited, and in what numbers; where they slept, how much healthy food they needed to sustain them, and even a shady area where they could eat."