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Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesu s Mausoleum at Halicarnassus Colossus of Rhodes Lighthouse at Alexandria

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Page 1: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient WorldGreat Pyramid at Giza

Hanging Gardens of Babylon

Statue of Zeus at Olympia

Temple of Artemis at Ephesus

Mausoleum at Halicarnassus

Colossus of Rhodes

Lighthouse at Alexandria

Page 2: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

The Great Pyramid at The Great Pyramid at GizaGiza

Page 3: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

Pyramid construction reached its climax with the building of King Khufu’s tomb at Giza. It is known as the Great Pyramid.The Great Pyramid of Giza is about 4,500 years old, and is the only ancient wonder still standing.

The Great Pyramid at GizaThe Great Pyramid at Giza

Page 4: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

Until the early 1800's, the Great Pyramid at Giza was the tallest building in the world! 

The Great Pyramid at GizaThe Great Pyramid at Giza

Page 5: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

The Great Pyramid at GizaThe Great Pyramid at Giza

The Great pyramid was made by hand! It is nearly 800 feet long, 450 feet high. It was built with over two million of blocks of stone.

The average weight of each stone is about 2,500 pounds - around the same weight as a car! 

Page 6: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

TheTheHanginHanging g GardenGardens of s of BabylonBabylon

Page 7: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

There was little argument that the Hanging Gardens of Babylon would be included as a world wonder. It was on nearly everyone’s list.

The Hanging GardensThe Hanging Gardens

The thought of a huge and magnificent garden, towering 300 feet above the desert sands, appealed to the Greeks sense of the incredible.

Page 8: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

The Hanging GardensThe Hanging Gardens

The Hanging Gardens were supposedly built around 600 BCE, along the banks of the Euphrates River in Babylon.

Constructed inside the palace walls, the gardens were built in a series of platforms, or terraces, that created a structure 400 feet long, 400 feet wide, and 380 feet high!  

Page 9: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

The Hanging GardensThe Hanging Gardens

Wandering paths and a series of steps connected the various levels. The gardens were a wonderland of greenery, flowering plants, and waterfalls.

That alone would have greatly impressed the ancient Greeks. But a love story was attached to the gardens that made them even more interesting.  

Page 10: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

It was rumored that the king King Nebuchadnezzar, ordered the gardens built to honor his queen.

The Hanging GardensThe Hanging Gardens

The queen was homesick for her land in the mountains. The gardens were designed by the king to make his queen feel loved and welcomed in her new land of Babylon.

Page 11: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

No one knows if the love story behind the Hanging Gardens of Babylon is true, or if the gardens ever really existed.

The Hanging GardensThe Hanging Gardens

But it was a great story, and the Greeks loved stories, especially stories about war and love.

Page 12: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

TheTheStatueStatueof Zeusof Zeusat at OlympiaOlympia

Page 13: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

There was absolutely no argument about the Statue of Zeus. It was a world wonder – everyone knew that!

The Statue of Zeus at The Statue of Zeus at OlympiaOlympia

Zeus was the king of the ancient Greek gods. Olympia was the city that hosted the Ancient Greek Olympic Games. The statue could have been the size of a peanut, and still the Ancient Greeks would have selected it. But it truly was a magnificent structure.

Page 14: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

The Temple of Zeus was completed in 456 BCE.

The Statue of Zeus at The Statue of Zeus at OlympiaOlympia

Like the Parthenon and the Temple of Artemis, Doric columns were used to support the structure. 

It was built in Olympia to honor Zeus and the Greek Olympic Games.

Page 15: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

The Statue of Zeus at The Statue of Zeus at OlympiaOlympia

Today, little remains of the temple or the once magnificent Statue of Zeus within it. But the spirit of the Olympic Games lives on!

Page 16: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

The Temple of Artemis at The Temple of Artemis at EphesusEphesus

Page 17: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

The Temple of Artemis was first built around 800 BCE in the ancient Greek city of Ephesus, on the coast of what is now modern day Turkey.

The Temple of Artemis at The Temple of Artemis at EphesusEphesus

The temple was destroyed and rebuilt several times. Each time, it was rebuilt more impressively than the temple before it.

The first temple was destroyed around 550 BCE in a war. Years later, the temple was burnt down by a man who wanted to be remembered forever. (The town created a law that said anyone who mentioned his name would be put to death immediately.) 

Page 18: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

The Temple of Artemis at The Temple of Artemis at EphesusEphesusThe temple was under construction (again) when some years later Alexander the Great visited the town. Alexander had seen many beautiful buildings in his travels, but this temple was so beautiful that it impressed even Alexander the Great!

The town did not want to do that, but they did thank Alexander very nicely. (You would too if you were facing Alexander's army!)

Alexander offered to give the town enough money to finishing building it if the townspeople would put his name on it.

Page 19: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

The Temple of Artemis at The Temple of Artemis at EphesusEphesus

In Alexander’s time, the ornately decorated temple was 425 feet long, 225 feet wide, and 60 feet high. 127 columns supported the roof.  

A constant stream of visitors came to see the temple. The townspeople built shops around the temple. Some shops sold little replicas of the temple for tourists to take home.

The city of Ephesus boomed for a while. But it did not last. The temple was destroyed (again) around 200 CE by the Goths.

Page 20: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

The Temple of Artemis at The Temple of Artemis at EphesusEphesusThis time, it was not rebuilt. Construction costs had increased considerably. There was not enough money in the town treasury to rebuild the temple to its former magnificence. 

The remaining pieces slowly sunk in the marshy field until the ruin disappeared from sight altogether.

Page 21: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

The Temple of Artemis at The Temple of Artemis at EphesusEphesusHundreds of years later, in the 1800's, the British Museum sent a team to search for the fabled Temple of Artemis. No one had any idea where the temple used to stand. Short of digging up the whole town and the surrounding countryside, the first team found themselves rather stuck.

Another team, sent out a few years later, dug up the remains of 5 temples, one built on top of the other.

They believed they had found the Temple of Artemis!   

Page 22: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

TheTheMausoleumMausoleumat at HalicarnassHalicarnassusus

Page 23: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

King Mausolus was a ruler of a small kingdom in Asia Minor. He was married to Artemisia, who loved him dearly.

The Mausoleum at The Mausoleum at HalicarnassusHalicarnassus

When the king died, his wife decided to build her husband the most magnificent tomb in the world.

Page 24: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

The tomb was called the Mausoleum at Halicarnassus.

The Mausoleum at The Mausoleum at HalicarnassusHalicarnassus

It was so splendid that the Greeks selected the tomb to be one of the seven wonders of the world. 

Today, there is nothing left of the Mausoleum at Halicarnassus except a story about a queen who loved her husband dearly.

Page 25: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum
Page 26: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

Rhodes is an island in the Mediterranean Sea. Once, it was part of ancient Greece.

The Colossus of RhodesThe Colossus of Rhodes

Alexander the Great conquered Rhodes. When Alexander died, his generals fought for control of the island.

Rhodes was perfectly situated to be a crossroads of trade.

Page 27: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

The people of Rhodes did support one of the generals. But that general won control of Egypt. Another general gained control of Rhodes. To punish the people for not supporting him, he sent his son to level Rhodes.

The Colossus of RhodesThe Colossus of Rhodes

Help arrived from Egypt! The general they had supported sent troops from Egypt to help the people of Rhodes drive the son away.

Page 28: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

With Egypt’s help, the people won! With joy, they melted down the bronze armor and war machinery left behind by the son, and used it to build a giant statue of their patron god Helios, to thank Helios for helping them save their city. 

The Colossus of RhodesThe Colossus of Rhodes

The statue was 110 feet high and stood on a 50 foot base. Each morning, the sun glittered off the bronze plates that covered the statue. It was quite a sight!

Page 29: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

The Colossus of RhodesThe Colossus of Rhodes

Only 56 years after the statue was built, it was toppled by an earthquake. Many pieces fell into the harbor. Some pieces remained on land, including the statue’s thumb.

People traveled great distances to see the huge thumb. They tried to put their arms around it. The thumb was bigger than their arms could stretch. 

Page 30: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

The king of Egypt offered money to rebuild the statue. But the people of Rhodes said no. They believed their god Helios was unhappy with the statue, and had tossed it down in a fit of anger. They left it alone.

The Colossus of RhodesThe Colossus of Rhodes

Many years later, around 600 CE, Arab traders finally removed the remains of the Colossus to use as scrap metal. Legend says ... it took 900 camels to ferry the pieces home. 

Page 31: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

Although the Colossus is no longer in existence, another famous work of art, inspired by the Colossus, is still standing.

The Colossus of RhodesThe Colossus of Rhodes

It is called The Statue of

Liberty!

Page 32: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

TheTheLighthouLighthouse at se at AlexandriAlexandriaa

Page 33: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

Nearly everyone agreed that the Lighthouse should be included as one of the wonders of the world.

The Lighthouse at The Lighthouse at AlexandriaAlexandria

It was built around 290 BCE on the Island of Pharos in the harbor of Alexandria, Egypt.

Page 34: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

The Lighthouse at The Lighthouse at AlexandriaAlexandria

It was a working lighthouse that helped ships find their way safely into harbor.

It was also a tourist attraction.

Page 35: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

In ancient times, visitors could buy food at the observation platform on the first level.

The Lighthouse at The Lighthouse at AlexandriaAlexandria

 

Anyone who wished to do could climb nearly to the top.

There were not many places in the ancient world that visitors could climb a man-made structure, 300 feet up, to view the sea. 

Page 36: Visit the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Great Pyramid at Giza Hanging Gardens of Babylon Statue of Zeus at Olympia Temple of Artemis at Ephesus Mausoleum

The Lighthouse at The Lighthouse at AlexandriaAlexandriaThe Lighthouse at Alexandria stood for over 1500 years.  

Scientists believe an earthquake topped the Lighthouse during the 12th century CE, about 250 years before Columbus discovered America!

Divers today search for remains of the Lighthouse at the bottom of the Mediterranean Sea.