Ancient diaries reveal the process of building the Great Pyramid of Giza

The diary from 4,500 years ago of a captain participating in the construction of the Great Pyramid of Giza describes in detail the daily activities, wages and meals of the workers under his command.

Located on Egypt’s Red Sea coast, Wadi al-Jarf was a bustling center more than 4,000 years ago. Wadi al-Jarf’s historical importance was reinforced in 2013 when researchers found 30 of the world’s oldest papyri hidden in man-made limestone caves there. These Red Sea scrolls have special significance in terms of content. Not only do they reveal Wadial-Jarf’s past as a bustling seaport, they also contain first-hand records of a man named Merer, who participated in the construction of the Great Pyramid of Giza, according to National Geographic.

The Wadi al-Jarf site was first discovered in 1823 by British traveler and antiquarian John Gardner Wilkinson. In 2008, French Egyptologist Pierre Tallet directed a series of excavations that helped identify Wadi al-Jarf as an important seaport dating back

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