The Cairo Museum

A new day dawned, and we hit the road to arrive at our first destination of the day: the Cairo Museum. Last time I was in Egypt, we had rushed through it in an hour because of our packed day. While we got to see the highlights, there was much left unseen. Thankfully that was mostly corrected this time, spending about 3 hours there.

The museum is over a century old. The artifacts are jumbled around it, separated by time period and category. They’ve been working on a new museum for over a decade, which should be open “soon”. We weaved our way with the masses of fellow tourists, feasting our eyes on thousands of ancient artifacts. Statues of pharaohs, boats, Tutankhamen’s treasures, wooden models, stone coffins, monuments, paintings, and much more spanning millennia are crammed into a building too small for its grandiose contents.

Here is a small sampling of the museum:

Outside the Cairo Museum
The main hall. The crowds don’t seem to gather here
Djoser, the builder of the step pyramid at Saqqara
A model of a scribe (notice the scroll between his hands)
Models of boats found in tombs, recalling life on the Nile. While idealized, notice what these tell us about ancient Egyptians: what their boats looked like, their clothing, etc.
Akhenaten, the heretic pharaoh. Later pharaohs tried to erase him from history.
A chair from Tutankhamen’s tomb
The Merneptah Stele, named for Pharaoh Merneptah, son of Rameses II. On it is the earliest mention of a people called “Israel”.
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