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Ancient Greek historians wrote about it with awe. Herodotus claimed it surpassed even the pyramids. Strabo described it as a structure so vast that without a guide, you’d wander lost forever

Orb image

The Labyrinth of Egypt. Not myth. Not metaphor. A real structure, documented by multiple ancient sources, said to contain 3,000 rooms spread across multiple levels, some above ground, some below. A monument so massive it made the Great Pyramid look like a warm up act.

Then it vanished. Disappeared from history. For two thousand years, nobody could find it.

Until now. Maybe.

Because the scans say it’s there. Right where the ancient texts said it would be. Buried beneath the sand at Hawara, southwest of Amenemhat III’s pyramid. And what the technology is detecting suggests something far stranger than anyone expected.

What Herodotus Actually Said

Herodotus

Let’s start with what we know from ancient sources, because this isn’t some fringe theory built on nothing. This is documented history that somehow got forgotten.

Herodotus visited Egypt around 450 BCE and wrote about the Labyrinth in his Histories. He described it as having two levels, one above ground and one below. Three thousand rooms total. Fifteen hundred on each level.

He was allowed to tour the upper level. He saw the chambers, the corridors, the courtyards. He described passages winding through rooms, rooms leading into more rooms, confusion and complexity beyond anything he’d seen in Greece.

But the lower level? The Egyptians wouldn’t let him down there. They told him it contained the tombs of the kings who built the Labyrinth and the tombs of sacred crocodiles. The underground chambers were forbidden. Off limits. Sacred.

Herodotus wrote: “The upper chambers I myself passed through and examined in detail, but the underground ones I only know from report, for the Egyptians who had charge of them refused absolutely to show me them, saying that there were the burial places of the kings who originally built this Labyrinth, and also of the sacred crocodiles.”

He added that the Labyrinth surpassed even the pyramids in the labor and expense required to build it. This wasn’t a small structure. This was, according to someone who’d actually seen it, more impressive than the most impressive monuments in Egypt.

Strabo, writing around 24 CE, also described the Labyrinth. He said it had as many palaces as there were nomes, or provinces, in Egypt. He described a structure so complex that strangers couldn’t find their way out without guides.

Pliny the Elder mentioned it. So did Diodorus Siculus. Multiple independent sources, spanning centuries, all describing the same massive, maze like structure at Hawara.

Then it disappeared. By the medieval period, nobody knew where it was. The knowledge was lost. The structure buried, destroyed, or so thoroughly hidden that even the location became uncertain.

Petrie Found the Ruins… But Not the Labyrinth

Petrie

In 1888, Flinders Petrie excavated at Hawara. He found Amenemhat III’s pyramid. He found a mortuary temple. He found ruins that he identified as possibly being remnants of the Labyrinth.

But what he found didn’t match the ancient descriptions. The ruins were too small. Too simple. Not remotely on the scale that Herodotus had described.

Petrie concluded that the Labyrinth must have been quarried away over the centuries, its stone blocks reused for other construction. The massive structure reduced to rubble and scattered across Egypt.

That became the accepted explanation. The Labyrinth existed once, but it’s gone now. Nothing left but fragments and memories.

Except the ancient sources specifically said it had underground levels. Chambers beneath the surface. Tombs of kings and sacred crocodiles hidden below ground.

If that part existed, if there really were underground chambers, they wouldn’t have been quarried away. They’d still be there. Buried. Waiting.

The 2008 Mataha Expedition: First Evidence

Labyrinth of Egypt

In 2008, a Belgian Egyptian team called the Mataha Expedition conducted ground penetrating surveys south of the Hawara pyramid using very low frequency electromagnetic sounding.

They detected something. Subsurface anomalies. Elongated and square shaped structures arranged in patterns suggesting rooms, walls, corridors. A large, complex network covering several hectares.

The data indicated a massive underground structure exactly where the ancient texts said the Labyrinth should be.

This wasn’t speculative. This was scientific instrumentation detecting regular geometric patterns beneath the sand. Patterns that don’t occur naturally. Patterns that suggest deliberate construction.

The Mataha team interpreted the findings as evidence of a sub pyramid complex. A labyrinth style structure beneath the surface, potentially matching the underground levels Herodotus wasn’t allowed to see.

They wanted to dig. They wanted to excavate. They wanted to confirm what the scans were showing.

Egypt said no. The project stalled. The data sat. Nothing happened.

The 2015 Satellite Scans: It Gets Weirder

Satellite scan

Around 2015, a private team associated with Merlin Burrows and researchers like Mark Carlotto applied satellite based synthetic aperture radar and ground penetrating radar style imaging to the Hawara site.

What they found aligned with the earlier geophysical data but added new details that made the whole thing stranger.

The scans detected a sprawling underground network, possibly spanning an area equivalent to ten football fields. Chambers. Corridors. Structures arranged in complex geometric patterns.

But more specifically, they detected two chambers beneath the Hawara pyramid itself.

One matched the known burial chamber that Petrie had located in 1888. That was expected. Confirmation of existing knowledge.

The second chamber was deeper. Beyond what Petrie had called the “blind passage,” a corridor that appeared to lead nowhere but that the scans suggested actually connected to something Petrie never found.

A second chamber. Potentially linking the pyramid to the larger labyrinth complex beneath.

The scans also detected what analysts described as a shallow omega shaped or ring like feature around the site. Some interpreted this as a symbolic boundary. Others thought it might be a moat or water management system.

And then there was the object at the center.

The Metal Orb

Orb image

Deep beneath the structure, at what the scans suggest is the heart of the labyrinth complex, there’s an anomaly. Something that returns a signal consistent with dense, metallic composition.

Spherical. Or near spherical. Roughly two meters in diameter based on the radar returns.

The scanning team described it as a metallic orb. An object that shouldn’t be there. That doesn’t fit any known ancient Egyptian construction technique or purpose.

Metal doesn’t preserve well in Egyptian tombs. Organic materials, stone, even wood in the right conditions, sure. But metal objects of significant size are rare. And a two meter metallic sphere buried at the center of a massive underground complex?

That’s not normal. That’s not something you can explain with standard Egyptology.

The team speculated about what it might be. A ceremonial object. A sealed chamber. Some kind of astronomical or symbolic marker. A treasure vault. Nobody knows because nobody’s been allowed to look.

But the scans keep returning the same data. Dense. Metallic. Spherical. At the center of the labyrinth.

The 2023 Follow Up Scans

3D reconstruction

In 2023, another synthetic aperture radar study was conducted. Independent team. Different equipment. Same location.

They corroborated the near surface rectangular anomalies. The patterns of chambers and corridors. The evidence of extensive underground construction.

They stopped short of confirming the deeper claims. The metallic orb. The chambers below ten meters depth. Those remain in the category of “detected but not scientifically verified.”

But they didn’t disprove them either. The data is there. The anomalies are there. The question is interpretation and what you’re willing to claim without physical excavation.

What’s clear is that multiple independent scanning efforts, using different technologies over fifteen years, keep finding the same thing. A massive underground structure. Regular geometric patterns. Evidence of deliberate construction on a scale matching the ancient descriptions.

The Labyrinth is there. Or something is.

Why Egypt Won’t Let Anyone Dig

Here’s where it gets frustrating. Because despite all this evidence, despite the scans, despite the ancient sources, despite multiple research teams begging for permission to excavate, Egypt’s Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities has not issued formal approval for large scale excavation of the Hawara labyrinth.

The official work remains limited to geophysical surveys, conservation efforts on the visible ruins, and small scale trenching in the wider Hawara necropolis. No broad excavation permit for the underground complex. No green light to actually dig down and see what’s there.

Why? Several reasons, depending on who you ask.

The official explanation involves water table concerns. The area around Hawara has a high water table. Excavating large underground chambers risks flooding, structural collapse, and damage to whatever’s down there. Egypt’s antiquities authorities prefer non invasive survey methods and virtual reconstruction before committing to aggressive digging that might destroy what they’re trying to preserve.

That’s reasonable. Legitimate concern. Water management in archaeological excavation is serious business.

But there are other explanations floating around that are harder to verify but make people suspicious.

Several private research teams claim they were operating under non disclosure agreements. That data sharing was restricted. That there’s a national security style sensitivity around the site that goes beyond normal archaeological caution.

Some researchers voice frustration at what they describe as “blocked” excavations. Projects that had funding, that had scientific backing, that had plans ready to go, but that got shut down or indefinitely delayed by bureaucratic obstacles that felt deliberate.

The conspiracy minded interpretation is that Egypt knows what’s down there and doesn’t want it public. That the metallic orb, the scale of the structure, or something else about the labyrinth contradicts the official historical narrative in ways that would be destabilizing to reveal.

The more mundane interpretation is that Egypt is protective of its antiquities, cautious about granting permission to foreign teams, concerned about tomb robbing and cultural heritage exploitation, and genuinely worried about the technical challenges of excavating a water logged site.

Both could be true. Egypt has every right to control access to its archaeological sites. But the pattern of detecting something extraordinary and then being unable to investigate it fully is… frustrating.

Site is not archive friendly. >Ancient Greek historians wrote about it with awe. Herodotus claimed it surpassed even the pyramids. Strabo described it as a structure so vast that without a guide, you’d wander lost forever [Orb image](https://poal.co/static/images/71b3b6724c484c4f.png) >The Labyrinth of Egypt. Not myth. Not metaphor. A real structure, documented by multiple ancient sources, said to contain 3,000 rooms spread across multiple levels, some above ground, some below. A monument so massive it made the Great Pyramid look like a warm up act. > Then it vanished. Disappeared from history. For two thousand years, nobody could find it. > Until now. Maybe. > Because the scans say it’s there. Right where the ancient texts said it would be. Buried beneath the sand at Hawara, southwest of Amenemhat III’s pyramid. And what the technology is detecting suggests something far stranger than anyone expected. >What Herodotus Actually Said [Herodotus](https://poal.co/static/images/32e2901b65f63437.png) >Let’s start with what we know from ancient sources, because this isn’t some fringe theory built on nothing. This is documented history that somehow got forgotten. > Herodotus visited Egypt around 450 BCE and wrote about the Labyrinth in his Histories. He described it as having two levels, one above ground and one below. Three thousand rooms total. Fifteen hundred on each level. > He was allowed to tour the upper level. He saw the chambers, the corridors, the courtyards. He described passages winding through rooms, rooms leading into more rooms, confusion and complexity beyond anything he’d seen in Greece. > But the lower level? The Egyptians wouldn’t let him down there. They told him it contained the tombs of the kings who built the Labyrinth and the tombs of sacred crocodiles. The underground chambers were forbidden. Off limits. Sacred. > Herodotus wrote: “The upper chambers I myself passed through and examined in detail, but the underground ones I only know from report, for the Egyptians who had charge of them refused absolutely to show me them, saying that there were the burial places of the kings who originally built this Labyrinth, and also of the sacred crocodiles.” > He added that the Labyrinth surpassed even the pyramids in the labor and expense required to build it. This wasn’t a small structure. This was, according to someone who’d actually seen it, more impressive than the most impressive monuments in Egypt. > Strabo, writing around 24 CE, also described the Labyrinth. He said it had as many palaces as there were nomes, or provinces, in Egypt. He described a structure so complex that strangers couldn’t find their way out without guides. > Pliny the Elder mentioned it. So did Diodorus Siculus. Multiple independent sources, spanning centuries, all describing the same massive, maze like structure at Hawara. > Then it disappeared. By the medieval period, nobody knew where it was. The knowledge was lost. The structure buried, destroyed, or so thoroughly hidden that even the location became uncertain. >Petrie Found the Ruins… But Not the Labyrinth [Petrie](https://poal.co/static/images/ac6dcc8c0e8d8dcc.png) >In 1888, Flinders Petrie excavated at Hawara. He found Amenemhat III’s pyramid. He found a mortuary temple. He found ruins that he identified as possibly being remnants of the Labyrinth. > But what he found didn’t match the ancient descriptions. The ruins were too small. Too simple. Not remotely on the scale that Herodotus had described. > Petrie concluded that the Labyrinth must have been quarried away over the centuries, its stone blocks reused for other construction. The massive structure reduced to rubble and scattered across Egypt. > That became the accepted explanation. The Labyrinth existed once, but it’s gone now. Nothing left but fragments and memories. > Except the ancient sources specifically said it had underground levels. Chambers beneath the surface. Tombs of kings and sacred crocodiles hidden below ground. > If that part existed, if there really were underground chambers, they wouldn’t have been quarried away. They’d still be there. Buried. Waiting. >The 2008 Mataha Expedition: First Evidence [Labyrinth of Egypt](https://poal.co/static/images/5965616d55596900.png) >In 2008, a Belgian Egyptian team called the Mataha Expedition conducted ground penetrating surveys south of the Hawara pyramid using very low frequency electromagnetic sounding. > They detected something. Subsurface anomalies. Elongated and square shaped structures arranged in patterns suggesting rooms, walls, corridors. A large, complex network covering several hectares. > The data indicated a massive underground structure exactly where the ancient texts said the Labyrinth should be. > This wasn’t speculative. This was scientific instrumentation detecting regular geometric patterns beneath the sand. Patterns that don’t occur naturally. Patterns that suggest deliberate construction. > The Mataha team interpreted the findings as evidence of a sub pyramid complex. A labyrinth style structure beneath the surface, potentially matching the underground levels Herodotus wasn’t allowed to see. > They wanted to dig. They wanted to excavate. They wanted to confirm what the scans were showing. > Egypt said no. The project stalled. The data sat. Nothing happened. >The 2015 Satellite Scans: It Gets Weirder [Satellite scan](https://poal.co/static/images/b89abab2949a86aa.png) >Around 2015, a private team associated with Merlin Burrows and researchers like Mark Carlotto applied satellite based synthetic aperture radar and ground penetrating radar style imaging to the Hawara site. > What they found aligned with the earlier geophysical data but added new details that made the whole thing stranger. > The scans detected a sprawling underground network, possibly spanning an area equivalent to ten football fields. Chambers. Corridors. Structures arranged in complex geometric patterns. > But more specifically, they detected two chambers beneath the Hawara pyramid itself. > One matched the known burial chamber that Petrie had located in 1888. That was expected. Confirmation of existing knowledge. > The second chamber was deeper. Beyond what Petrie had called the “blind passage,” a corridor that appeared to lead nowhere but that the scans suggested actually connected to something Petrie never found. > A second chamber. Potentially linking the pyramid to the larger labyrinth complex beneath. > The scans also detected what analysts described as a shallow omega shaped or ring like feature around the site. Some interpreted this as a symbolic boundary. Others thought it might be a moat or water management system. > And then there was the object at the center. >The Metal Orb [Orb image](https://poal.co/static/images/71b3b6724c484c4f.png) >Deep beneath the structure, at what the scans suggest is the heart of the labyrinth complex, there’s an anomaly. Something that returns a signal consistent with dense, metallic composition. > Spherical. Or near spherical. Roughly two meters in diameter based on the radar returns. > The scanning team described it as a metallic orb. An object that shouldn’t be there. That doesn’t fit any known ancient Egyptian construction technique or purpose. > Metal doesn’t preserve well in Egyptian tombs. Organic materials, stone, even wood in the right conditions, sure. But metal objects of significant size are rare. And a two meter metallic sphere buried at the center of a massive underground complex? > That’s not normal. That’s not something you can explain with standard Egyptology. > The team speculated about what it might be. A ceremonial object. A sealed chamber. Some kind of astronomical or symbolic marker. A treasure vault. Nobody knows because nobody’s been allowed to look. > But the scans keep returning the same data. Dense. Metallic. Spherical. At the center of the labyrinth. >The 2023 Follow Up Scans [3D reconstruction](https://poal.co/static/images/fad273e9aa6cc185.png) >In 2023, another synthetic aperture radar study was conducted. Independent team. Different equipment. Same location. > They corroborated the near surface rectangular anomalies. The patterns of chambers and corridors. The evidence of extensive underground construction. > They stopped short of confirming the deeper claims. The metallic orb. The chambers below ten meters depth. Those remain in the category of “detected but not scientifically verified.” > But they didn’t disprove them either. The data is there. The anomalies are there. The question is interpretation and what you’re willing to claim without physical excavation. > What’s clear is that multiple independent scanning efforts, using different technologies over fifteen years, keep finding the same thing. A massive underground structure. Regular geometric patterns. Evidence of deliberate construction on a scale matching the ancient descriptions. > The Labyrinth is there. Or something is. > Why Egypt Won’t Let Anyone Dig > Here’s where it gets frustrating. Because despite all this evidence, despite the scans, despite the ancient sources, despite multiple research teams begging for permission to excavate, Egypt’s Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities has not issued formal approval for large scale excavation of the Hawara labyrinth. > The official work remains limited to geophysical surveys, conservation efforts on the visible ruins, and small scale trenching in the wider Hawara necropolis. No broad excavation permit for the underground complex. No green light to actually dig down and see what’s there. > Why? Several reasons, depending on who you ask. > The official explanation involves water table concerns. The area around Hawara has a high water table. Excavating large underground chambers risks flooding, structural collapse, and damage to whatever’s down there. Egypt’s antiquities authorities prefer non invasive survey methods and virtual reconstruction before committing to aggressive digging that might destroy what they’re trying to preserve. > That’s reasonable. Legitimate concern. Water management in archaeological excavation is serious business. > But there are other explanations floating around that are harder to verify but make people suspicious. > Several private research teams claim they were operating under non disclosure agreements. That data sharing was restricted. That there’s a national security style sensitivity around the site that goes beyond normal archaeological caution. > Some researchers voice frustration at what they describe as “blocked” excavations. Projects that had funding, that had scientific backing, that had plans ready to go, but that got shut down or indefinitely delayed by bureaucratic obstacles that felt deliberate. > The conspiracy minded interpretation is that Egypt knows what’s down there and doesn’t want it public. That the metallic orb, the scale of the structure, or something else about the labyrinth contradicts the official historical narrative in ways that would be destabilizing to reveal. > The more mundane interpretation is that Egypt is protective of its antiquities, cautious about granting permission to foreign teams, concerned about tomb robbing and cultural heritage exploitation, and genuinely worried about the technical challenges of excavating a water logged site. > Both could be true. Egypt has every right to control access to its archaeological sites. But the pattern of detecting something extraordinary and then being unable to investigate it fully is… frustrating.
[–] 1 pt

There is far too much history being(((obscured, hidden, covered up and restricted))) for it to NOT be a cohencidence.