Transcript Slide 1

The Egyptian pharaoh Khufu built the Great Pyramid in about 2560 B.C. to serve as his
tomb. The Great Pyramid is the largest of three Pyramids at Giza, bordering modern-day
Cairo. Although weathering has caused the structure to stand a few feet shorter today, the
pyramid was about 480 feet (145 meters) high when it was first built. It is the only remaining
ancient wonder.
In contrast to the pyramids, the
colossus was the shortest lived of the
seven wonders of the ancient world.
Completed in 282 B.C. after taking 12
years to build, the Colossus of Rhodes
was felled by an earthquake that
snapped the statue off at the knees a
mere 56 years later.
The towering figure—made of stone and
iron with an outer skin of bronze—
represented the Greek sun god Helios,
the island's patron god. It looked out
from Mandráki Harbor on the
Mediterranean island of Ródos
(Rhodes), although it is no longer
believed to have straddled the harbor
entrance as often shown in illustrations.
The Colossus stood about 110 feet (33
meters) tall, making it the tallest known
statue of the ancient world. It was
erected to celebrate the unification of
the island's three city-states, which
successfully resisted a long siege by the
Antigonids of Macedonia.
Constructed on the small island of Pharos between 285 and 247 B.C. Its estimated height
was 384 feet (117 meters)—equivalent to a modern 40-story. The lighthouse was operated
using fire at night and polished bronze mirrors that reflected the sun during the day. It's said
the light could be seen for more than 35 miles (50 kilometers) out to sea. The huge
structure towered over the Mediterranean coast for more than 1,500 years before being
The massive gold statue of the
king of the Greek gods was built in
honor of the original Olympic
games, which began in the ancient
city of Olympia.
The statue, completed by the
classical sculptor Phidias around
432 B.C., sat on a jewel-encrusted
wooden throne inside a temple
overlooking the city. The 40-foottall (12-meter-tall) figure held a
scepter in one hand and a small
statue of the goddess of victory,
Nike, in the other—both made from
ivory and precious metals.
The temple was closed when the
Olympics were banned as a pagan
practice in A.D. 391, after
Christianity became the official
religion of the Roman Empire.
The statue was eventually
destroyed, although historians
debate whether it perished with
the temple or was moved to
Constantinople (now Istanbul) in
Turkey and burned in a fire.
The hanging gardens are said to have stood on the banks of the Euphrates River in
modern-day Iraq, although there's some doubt as to whether they ever really existed.
The Babylonian king Nebuchadnezzar II supposedly created the terraced gardens
around 600 B.C. at his royal palace in the Mesopotamian desert. It is said the gardens
were made to please the king's wife, who missed the lush greenery of her homeland in
The famous tomb at
Halicarnassus—now the
city of Bodrum—was built
between 370 and 350 B.C.
for King Mausolus of Caria,
a region in the southwest of
modern Turkey. Legend
says that the king's grieving
wife Artemisia II had the
tomb constructed as a
memorial to their love.
Mausolus was a satrap, or
governor, in the Persian
Empire, and his fabled tomb
is the source of the word
"mausoleum." The structure
measured 120 feet (40
meters) long and 140 feet
(45 meters) tall.
The tomb was most admired for its architectural beauty and splendor. The central burial chamber
was decorated in gold, while the exterior was adorned with ornate stone friezes and sculptures
created by four Greek artists. The mausoleum stood intact until the early 15th century, when
Christian Crusaders dismantled it for building material for a new castle. Some of the sculptures and
frieze sections survived and can be seen today at the British Museum in London, England.
The great
marble temple
dedicated to the
Greek goddess
Artemis was
completed
around 550 B.C.
at Ephesus,
near the
modern-day
town of Selçuk
in Turkey.
In addition to its
120 columns,
each standing
60 feet (20
meters) high, the
temple was said
to have held
many exquisite
artworks, including bronze statues of the Amazons, a mythical race of female warriors.
A man named Herostratus reportedly burned down the temple in 356 B.C. in an attempt
to immortalize his name. After being restored, the temple was destroyed by the Goths in
A.D. 262 and again by the Christians in A.D. 401 on the orders of Saint John
Chrysostom, then archbishop of Constantinople (Istanbul).