Times of Suriname

Egypt reopens museum in northern Cairo

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CHINA The Egyptian Ministry of Antiquitie­s reopened on Saturday Tanta Museum in Gharbiya province north of the capital Cairo for visitors after 19 years of closure.

The fivefloor museum, which has been closed since 2000, is home to over 2,000 prehistori­c, Pharaonic, Greco-Roman, Coptic and Islamic artifacts, almost half of which are ancient coins.

“Tanta Museum is one of the oldest regional museums in Egypt, as it was establishe­d in 1913. Its reopening is part of the ministry’s plan to reopen closed museums nationwide”, said Egyptian Minister of Antiquitie­s Khaled al-Anany in a press conference during the inaugurati­on ceremony.

The minister noted that the museum’s restoratio­n cost about 13 million Egyptian pounds (about 786,000 US dollars) and it will contribute to adding the province to Egypt’s map of tourist destinatio­ns.

- The first floor serves as an entrance of the museum, with a showcased royal head of an Egyptian king dating back to the Late Period of ancient Egypt.

The second and third floors contain the main halls for displaying the archeologi­cal objects, including a headless basalt statue of a king of the 29th Dynasty, a block limestone statue of a priest from the Late Period, a collection of small statues of ancient Egyptian gods, bronze statues of wrestlers from the GrecoRoman Period, as well as Coptic and Islamic artifacts. Mostafa Waziri, head the ministry’s Supreme Council of Antiquitie­s, explained that the museum was open until 1957, then it was closed and later reopened in 1990 until it was closed once again in 2000 due to some problems in the building.

“In July 2017, we started working on repairing the museum. It is distinguis­hed by having artifacts dating back to different eras discovered in the Nile Delta region around the province”, Waziri told Xinhua at Tanta Museum.

The fourth floor of the museum contains a main hall for lectures, symposiums, conference­s and social activities, while the fifth floor has the administra­tive offices. Emad Bedir, the museum’s manager, said that Tanta Museum not only features artifacts but it also holds several activities to increase people’s awareness of their country’s civilizati­on and heritage. “During its closure, we continued holding such activities inside the museum in cooperatio­n with the Ministry of Education, Tanta University, specialize­d civil society centers and orphanages. This role will be maximized after the reopening of the museum”, Bedir told Xinhua. The opening ceremony was attended by the governor of Gharbiya and several parliament­arians from the province. (Xinhua)

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