PYRAMID, in architecture, a solid massive building, which from a square, triangular, or other base, rises diminishing to a vertex or point.
Pyramids are sometimes used to preserve the memory of singular events; and sometimes to transmit to posterity the glory and magnificence of princes. But as they are esteemed a symbol of immortality, they are most commonly used as funeral monuments. Such is that of Cestus at Rome; and those other celebrated ones of Egypt, as famous for the enormity of their size, as their antiquity. These are situated on the west side of the Nile, almost opposite to Grand Cairo: the base of the largest covers more than ten acres of ground; and is, according to some, near seven hundred feet high; though others make it but six hundred, and some but little more than five hundred. The pyramid is said to have been, among the Egyptians, a symbol of human life; the beginning of which is represented by the base, and the end by the
apex; on which account it was that they used to erect them over sepulchres.