Robert Cioffi Reviews The Red Sea Scrolls for the London Review of Books
Professor Robert Cioffi reviewed The Red Sea Scrolls: How Ancient Papyri Reveal the Secrets of the Pyramids by Pierre Tallet and Mark Lehner for the London Review of Books. The authors discuss an archaeological discovery that changed how we view the Great Pyramid of Giza: the papyri of Wadi el-Jarf, written between 2607 and 2605 BCE. These documents name people who worked on the pyramid, how much they were paid, and what their tasks were. As Cioffi puts it, these documents are "a first-hand account of the men who built the Great Pyramid of Giza.”
Cioffi’s review draws on his expertise in papyrology and Egyptian cultural interactions. He writes that while Tallet and Lehner can’t explain everything about the pyramids, they do reveal important facts about the daily life of workers there. Thanks to the papyri, “For the first time in 4500 years, Khufu’s pyramid has its voices again: not of priests or pharaohs but of the men who made it possible.”
Post Date: 05-05-2025
Cioffi’s review draws on his expertise in papyrology and Egyptian cultural interactions. He writes that while Tallet and Lehner can’t explain everything about the pyramids, they do reveal important facts about the daily life of workers there. Thanks to the papyri, “For the first time in 4500 years, Khufu’s pyramid has its voices again: not of priests or pharaohs but of the men who made it possible.”
Post Date: 05-05-2025