Discover The Seven Wonders Of The Ancient World And Learn The Stories Behind Them

Published December 5, 2021
Updated November 4, 2024

From the Great Pyramid of Giza to the Lighthouse of Alexandria, take a breathtaking journey through the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.

The list of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World was compiled by the Greek writer Antipater of Sidon in a poem in 140 BCE. He, along with Philo of Byzantium, Strabo, Herodotus, and Diodoros of Sicily, is responsible for providing the descriptions of these sites.

Though only one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World remains intact, these gardens, statues, and tombs were the crème de la crème of ancient times:

The Seven Wonders Of The Ancient World: Great Pyramid Of Giza, Egypt

Great Pyramid Giza

kallerna/Wikimedia CommonsThe Great Pyramid of Giza in 2010.

The Great Pyramid of Giza was built as a tomb for the Egyptian pharaoh Khufu in 2560 BCE. The 481-foot monument was built over a 20-year period with two million blocks of stone — each weighing an average of more than two tons.

For nearly four millennia, it remained the tallest building in the world. It lost that title only in the Middle Ages when the English Lincoln Cathedral surpassed it in 1300.

Giza Pyramid Seven Wonders Of The Ancient World

Mgiganteus1/Wikimedia CommonsA close up of the pyramid’s ancient stones.

The interior has three chambers – the King’s Chamber, the Queen’s Chamber, and the unfinished lowest chamber – and ascending and descending passages.

What we see today isn’t quite the wonder the ancients would have beheld. On the day it was finished, the pyramid’s surface would have been smooth and pale — but time has worn away the limestone casing, fragments of which can still be seen toward the great structure’s base.

The original Great Pyramid was also 20 feet taller than it is today; we’re missing its pyramidion, the sacred capstone that would have crowned the tomb.

Base Of Giza Pyramid

Johnny 201/Wikimedia CommonsThe base of the pyramid.

The Great Pyramid of Giza is also a wonder in the literal sense — the mystery of how it was built and exactly who built it has puzzled historians and archaeologists for millennia.

Its stones come from distant quarries, some as far as 500 miles away, and the pyramid itself was built with astonishing precision; the structure’s measurements are as accurate as a 21st-century architect with modern tools could achieve.

And yet the ancient Egyptians didn’t have wheels, pulleys, or even iron tools. So how did they manage to transport, lift, and shape the stones?

Like thousands before them, today’s archaeologists continue to hope they will unearth the answer.

For now, the world will have to be content to marvel at the Great Pyramid, which is both the oldest of the ancient wonders and, curiously, the only one still standing.

author
Kaleena Fraga
author
A senior staff writer for All That's Interesting since 2021 and co-host of the History Uncovered Podcast, Kaleena Fraga graduated with a dual degree in American History and French Language and Literature from Oberlin College. She previously ran the presidential history blog History First, and has had work published in The Washington Post, Gastro Obscura, and elsewhere. She has published more than 1,200 pieces on topics including history and archaeology. She is based in Brooklyn, New York.
editor
Maggie Donahue
editor
Maggie Donahue is a former assistant editor at All That's Interesting. She has a Master's degree in journalism from Columbia University and a Bachelor's degree in creative writing and film studies from Johns Hopkins University. Before landing at ATI, she covered arts and culture at The A.V. Club and Colorado Public Radio and also wrote for Longreads. She is interested in stories about scientific discoveries, pop culture, the weird corners of history, unexplained phenomena, nature, and the outdoors.
Citation copied
COPY
Cite This Article
Fraga, Kaleena. "Discover The Seven Wonders Of The Ancient World And Learn The Stories Behind Them." AllThatsInteresting.com, December 5, 2021, https://allthatsinteresting.com/seven-wonders-of-the-ancient-world. Accessed July 21, 2025.