Turin

Egyptian Museum in Turin

One of the main attractions of Turin is the Egyptian Museum (Museo Egizio), which houses the largest in Europe and the world's second collection of exhibits dedicated to the history and culture of Egypt. While in Turin, try to find time to visit this museum, you will not regret it. In terms of wealth and value of the exhibition, it is second only to the Egyptian Museum in Cairo.

Appearance story

The Egyptian Museum in Turin dates back to the XVIII century, from the moment when the Sardinian king Carl Emanuel III began to collect a collection of objects related to Egypt. The first exhibit of the collection was a tablet brought to the king from the temple of the Egyptian goddess Isis. After she was in the hands of the king, he sent the scientist Vitaliano Donati to Egypt to search for other similar antiquities. Through the efforts of Donati, the collection was replenished with 300 ancient artifacts.

However, the official date for the creation of the Egyptian Museum is called only 1824, when Karl Felix, the then king of Sardinia, decided to acquire the Egyptian collection of Bernardino Drovetti, who, holding the post of Consul General of France in Egypt, gathered many antiquities. At that time, the “Egyptian theme” was very popular in Europe, and the museum’s collection was quickly expanded. Famous Egyptologists such as Francois Champollion (French: Jean-François Champollion) and Ernesto Schiaparelli (Ernesto Schiaparelli) contributed. The formation of the collection continued until the twentieth century. The last major acquisition at the museum was a miniature temple, delivered in the 60s from Nubia.

Until 2012, the Egyptian Museum was in the same building as the famous Galleria Sabauda art gallery. Then the gallery "moved" to one of the premises of the Royal Palace (Palazzo Reale; Palazzo Reale), and the museum received an additional area - including part of the basement. The museum building itself on the eve of the Winter Olympics in Turin was rebuilt and restored.

The most interesting exhibits

The exposition of the Egyptian Museum includes more than 30 thousand exhibits. Of the greatest value are items recovered from the burial of the most beautiful of women who lived on Earth - the famous Queen Nefertiti. This jewelry, crests, household items and other things that, according to the ideas of the ancient Egyptians, the deceased queen in the afterlife could need.

Of great importance to historians, archaeologists and just lovers of Egyptian antiquity are various papyri. The most famous is the “Royal Papyrus” - a scroll listing all the historical and mythological characters that have ever ruled Egypt.

The scroll not only mentions the names of the rulers, but also briefly describes their main achievements. The total length of the papyrus is about 170 centimeters, but it is not a whole scroll, but a lot of fragments of different sizes (some of them a little more than a centimeter). This happened due to the fact that the fragile scroll, when transported to Turin, crumbled into small fragments, and the restorers had to work hard to preserve it.

Another curious scroll kept in the museum’s collection is the Turin erotic papyrus. For a long time, a scroll longer than 2.5 meters was kept in storage and was not appreciated by historians.

Now it is included in the main exhibition. The scroll consists of 27 erotic drawings, which are interspersed with illustrations of satirical content. The papyrus map 280x41 centimeter in size is also stored in the same museum: it is the oldest geographical map in the world.

In the sculptural hall of the museum you can see statues of pharaohs and sphinxes. On the second floor there is an extensive collection of mummies, mummification tools and fragments of scrolls included in the Book of the Dead.

Another interesting part of the exposition of the Turin Egyptian Museum is a collection of objects that were placed in the burial places of ancient Egyptian officials: gold jewelry, dishes, tools and even food. The museum stores bread baked more than three thousand years ago. Now it looks more like a lump of clay, but what is surprising is that it has generally survived to the present day.

Schedule, ticket price

The Egyptian Museum in Turin is located at Via Academia delle Scienze, 6 - it is in the very center of the city, so it will not be difficult to find it. The museum is open every day from 8:30 to 19:30, except for the weekend - Monday - and Catholic Christmas on December 25.

Tickets can be bought at the box office of the museum or on its official website: www.museoegizio.it. Their cost is:

  • without benefits - 7.5 euros per person;
  • for preferential categories of visitors - 3.5 euros. The preferential categories include visitors aged 18 to 25 years, teachers and persons accompanying visitors with disabilities;
  • disabled people, military, children and adolescents under 18 years old, older people over 65 are entitled to visit the museum for free.

Watch the video: At the Egyptian Museum in Torino, Italy (December 2024).

Popular Posts

Category Turin, Next Article

Pope visits Holy Land for the first time
Politics

Pope visits Holy Land for the first time

According to the media in Italy and the Vatican, Pope Francis intends to make his first trip to the Holy Land. In late spring, namely from May 24 to 26, the pontiff plans to visit Jerusalem in May, as well as Bethlehem and the capital of Jordan, Amman. This was also stated by the Pope during his Sunday address: "I want to announce that from May 24 to May 26, with God's help, I will make a pilgrimage to the Holy Land."
Read More
Hemp caused a split in the Italian parliament
Politics

Hemp caused a split in the Italian parliament

Legalization of marijuana: to be or not to be? A bold bill was introduced by Luigi Manconi (Democratic Party of Italy). League reaction: “Now let's prostitution as well” Some say that this is the way to legalize hard drugs. Others are convinced that hemp is no more harmful to health than alcohol or cigarettes.
Read More
Hospitalized former leader of the Democratic Party of Italy
Politics

Hospitalized former leader of the Democratic Party of Italy

Pier Luigi Bersani, who was at the helm of the Democratic Party of Italy until April 2013, was urgently hospitalized on Sunday in an extremely difficult situation. The day before yesterday morning, a 62-year-old politician himself appeared in a local hospital in the city of Piacenza complaining of poor health, and in particular, a severe headache.
Read More
Vatican plans to declassify Holocaust archives
Politics

Vatican plans to declassify Holocaust archives

Pope Francis intends to open part of the secret archives of the Vatican during the Holocaust in order to find out what role the Catholic Church played in the mass destruction of an entire nation. According to the American publication The Sunday Times, such information was provided to reporters by a close friend of the Pope, Argentine rabbi Abraham Skorka.
Read More