Great Pyramid of Giza vandalised
German researchers allegedly scraped pigment from a pharaoh’s cartouche, in an attempt to prove it is a forgery
Following accusations of vandalism and theft at the
Great Pyramid of Giza, two researchers are under investigation in
Germany and six individuals have been detained in Egypt, including the
head of a tour company, archaeologists and local guards. Officials with
the Ministry of Antiquities responsible for the pyramids have reportedly
already been transferred to other positions as punishment for
negligence.
Their hopes of rewriting history were dashed in November, however, when a self-posted trailer on YouTube for a documentary detailing and revealing their exploits, drew almost universal condemnation and angered Egyptian authorities. After the controversy broke, the German embassy in Cairo released a statement emphasising that neither Goerlitz nor Erdmann were associated with the embassy or the German Archaeological Institute. The researchers, who have no archaeological training, also had no affiliation with Dresden University, although they approached one of its laboratories to study the samples taken from the pyramid. The university lab has since stated that it was unaware of the samples’ origin, and now wishes to return them to Egypt. Nonetheless, Mohamed Abdel Maqsoud, the head of the Pharaonic Antiquities section of the Ministry of Antiquities, has stopped any future cooperation with Dresden University, saying that the German researchers broke Egyptian law when they took the samples without permission.
In December, both Goerlitz and Erdmann apologised for their behaviour in a letter addressed to Egypt’s Ministry of Antiquities, offering to pay compensation for the damage and stressing that they did not mean harm to the pyramid. Egypt’s head of antiquities, Mohamed Ibrahim, has so far rejected their apology.
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