Nubian Museum

Nubian Museum

Type
book section
Year
2001
The Nubian Museum celebrates the culture and civilization of the Nubian region of Egypt from prehistoric times to the present. It is located in the city of Aswan, on the eastern bank of the Nile, 899 kilometres south of Cairo. The museum is a three-storey building with an outdoor exhibition area. It houses the main finds of the UNESCO salvage campaign carried out at the time of the building of the High Dam, which eventually flooded that whole region. Another major exhibit is a diorama which shows the daily life of Nubian villagers. It is a community museum with an education section that organizes trips, lectures and workshops for schoolchildren, and cultural events for the public at large. In April 2000 the museum was approved by UNESCO as a centre for museology and the preservation and conservation of archaeological remains for Africa and the Middle East.

Citation

“Nubian Museum.” In Modernity and Community: Architecture in the Islamic World, edited by Philippa Baker, 101-112. London: Thames & Hudson, 2001.

Parent Publications

Associated Sites

Authorities

Copyright

Aga Khan Award for Architecture

Terms of Use

CC BY-NC-ND

Country

Egypt

Language

English

Keywords