Tourist climbs to the top of 4,500-year-old Great Pyramid of Giza

A German tourist has scaled to the top of the Great Pyramid of Giza, risking damage to the corroding monument in the name of a great photo.

Andrej Ciesielski travelled from Munich to Cairo with the intention to scale one of the three giant pyramids.

He recorded the eight-minute climb to the top of the 4,500 year old pyramid on Monday, and the video has since gone viral.

Andrej Ciesielski performed the daredevil stunt while on holiday in Cairo. Photo: Andrej Ciesielski
Andrej Ciesielski performed the daredevil stunt while on holiday in Cairo. Photo: Andrej Ciesielski

While climbing the pyramids is illegal, the video editor and keen photographer said the pictures were worth the risk of up to three years in jail.

Writing in a blog, the 18-year-old described how he walked around the complex, waiting for the right moment to start the climb.

He said he went unnoticed for several minutes, until other tourists saw him half-way through the 146-metre ascent.

The 18-year-old from Munich has a fascination with heights and risky photography. Photo: Andrej Ciesielski
The 18-year-old from Munich has a fascination with heights and risky photography. Photo: Andrej Ciesielski

“That’s how the police spotted me,” he wrote.

“They shouted something in Arabic I think but I didn’t care and kept going while listening to music.”

When he reached the top, Andrej recorded the spectacular view and took photos documenting just how steep the pyramids are.

“Climbing down took me 20 minutes,” he wrote on his blog, adding that he put ‘safety first’.

Even from halfway up the pyramid, the tourists below look miniscule. Photo: Andrej Ciesielski
Even from halfway up the pyramid, the tourists below look miniscule. Photo: Andrej Ciesielski

Since the video has gone viral, many have marvelled at his feat and complimented his stunning photographs.

“I bet it was a good experience… I am Egyptian and I wish I can climb it,” a local woman wrote.

“I'll do this when I go Egypt,” a user wrote, confirming a fear that many social media users voiced online.

Andrej's view from the top of the Great Pyramid. Photo: Andrej Ciesielski
Andrej's view from the top of the Great Pyramid. Photo: Andrej Ciesielski

Large portions of commenters are worried the video will entice copycats and result in corroding the historical wonder.

“There is a difference between climbing random buildings and preserving history. These types of photos can be awesome and you've made some nice work but this one was just way too selfish considering how disrespectful it is,” one man wrote on Facebook.

The keen photographer displays his death-defying stunts on Facebook. Photo: Facebook/Andrej Ciesielski
The keen photographer displays his death-defying stunts on Facebook. Photo: Facebook/Andrej Ciesielski

“Typical arrogant western tourist. I'm so sick of seeing these thoughtless vandals everywhere I've travelled over 50 years. Learn some respect people. Just because you have no values is no reason to disregard others values,” another said.

“He should be locked up!! Trampling on untouched territory,” a woman commented.

Andrej, 18, has copped criticism over his climb of the ancient wonder. Photo: Facebook/Andrej Ciesielski
Andrej, 18, has copped criticism over his climb of the ancient wonder. Photo: Facebook/Andrej Ciesielski

When Andrej reached the bottom of the pyramid, police took him to a local station where he was questioned.

He said they inspected his camera and he was released after several hours.

Related:

Russian daredevil hangs from 40-storey building

Russian daredevil OlegCricket claims he had complete faith in his friend not to drop him as he dangled off a 40-storey building.



Mystery man climbs tall tree and does a handstand

A man has scaled a tall tree to do an impressive handstand stunt on top of it.

"Spiderman" climbs 200m tower for Nepal quake victims

Alain Robert, dubbed France's "Spiderman", climbed a 210-metre (689-feet) tower in Paris on Tuesday as an act of solidarity with the victims of last week's earthquake in Nepal.

RAW: Fathers' rights activists climb Buckingham Palace

Video posted on Facebook shows activists climb onto the roof of Buckingham Palace as police try to deal calmly with the situation.