Egyptian Museum (Cairo)

The world's oldest museum of ancient Egyptian antiquities — a treasure trove of pharaonic history in the heart of Cairo.

9 AM7 PM300 EGP30.0478, 31.2336

The Egyptian Museum in Tahrir Square, opened in 1902, was the first purpose-built museum in the Middle East. It still houses tens of thousands of artifacts spanning 5,000 years of Egyptian history. Following the opening of the Grand Egyptian Museum near Giza, Tutankhamun's treasures and many major pieces have been transferred there, but the Tahrir museum retains an extraordinary collection including the Amarna galleries, Old Kingdom masterpieces, and Greco-Roman artifacts. Its crowded, old-fashioned display style gives it a charm all its own — like exploring an antique cabinet of wonders.

Why Visit

Over a century of Egyptology under one roof — the museum that started it all
Tens of thousands of artifacts displayed in a beautifully worn 1902 building
A more intimate, old-school museum experience than the grand new GEM

What to See

Amarna Room
A fascinating collection of artifacts from the revolutionary reign of Pharaoh Akhenaten and his wife Nefertiti, who upended centuries of religious tradition by introducing the worship of a single sun god, the Aten. The room features colossal statues of Akhenaten in the distinctive elongated art style of the period — exaggerated features, a long face, wide hips, and a protruding belly that broke radically from the idealized pharaonic tradition. Look for the delicate limestone trial pieces showing sculptors' studies of the royal family, and painted pavement fragments from the palace at Amarna. These artifacts document one of the most dramatic cultural revolutions in ancient history, a period so controversial that later pharaohs tried to erase it entirely.
Old Kingdom Galleries
Home to some of the most breathtaking sculptures from the Pyramid Age, including the famous limestone seated scribe with his startlingly lifelike inlaid crystal eyes, and the magnificent diorite statue of Pharaoh Khafre protected by the outstretched wings of the falcon god Horus behind his head. The galleries also contain the wooden statue of Ka-Aper (known as 'Sheikh el-Balad' because the excavation workers thought it resembled their village chief), so realistic that it appears ready to step off its pedestal. The craftsmanship achieved 4,500 years ago — particularly the lifelike expressions and polished stone surfaces — rivals anything produced in the classical world millennia later. These masterpieces offer an intimate encounter with the artistic genius of the Old Kingdom that no photograph can convey.
Greco-Roman Collection
A rich collection spanning Egypt's Hellenistic and Roman periods, featuring the hauntingly realistic Fayum mummy portraits — encaustic wax paintings on wooden panels that were placed over the faces of the deceased during mummification, representing some of the earliest realistic portraiture in Western art. The galleries also showcase Ptolemaic-era sculptures that blend Greek naturalism with Egyptian iconography, creating a uniquely hybrid aesthetic. Artifacts from this multicultural era reveal how Greek, Roman, and Egyptian cultures merged in daily life, religion, and art across several centuries. The collection provides essential context for understanding Alexandria's golden age as the intellectual capital of the ancient Mediterranean.
Jewelry Galleries
An dazzling display of royal jewelry spanning multiple dynasties, from the Middle Kingdom treasures of Princess Sit-Hathor-Yunet to New Kingdom masterpieces — gold pectorals inlaid with carnelian, lapis lazuli, and turquoise, delicate diadems, broad collars, and protective amulets of extraordinary craftsmanship. The goldsmiths' skill is astonishing: techniques including granulation, cloisonné, and filigree were mastered thousands of years before they appeared in European metalwork. Many pieces were designed not just for beauty but for magical protection in the afterlife, with each stone and symbol carrying specific amuletic significance. The jewelry galleries are among the most intimate and rewarding spaces in the museum, offering a close-up look at pieces that adorned Egypt's most powerful rulers.

Historical Details

Foundation
The museum was designed by French architect Marcel Dourgnon, who won an international competition with his neoclassical design, and opened in 1902 in Tahrir Square. It was the first purpose-built museum in the Middle East and became the definitive home of Egyptian antiquities for over a century, housing a collection that grew to over 120,000 objects. The building's pink exterior and grand central atrium became as iconic as many of its contents. Auguste Mariette, the pioneering French Egyptologist who founded Egypt's antiquities service, is buried in a sarcophagus in the museum's garden — a fitting resting place for the man who dedicated his life to preserving Egypt's heritage.
A Museum in Transition
With the opening of the Grand Egyptian Museum (GEM) near Giza, many of the most famous artifacts — including Tutankhamun's entire collection of over 5,000 objects — have been transferred to the new facility. However, the Egyptian Museum in Tahrir Square is far from empty: it continues to house tens of thousands of artifacts that would take days to fully explore, including many masterpieces that never received the attention they deserved when overshadowed by Tutankhamun. The museum is being reimagined with a new curatorial focus, and its old-fashioned, densely packed display style gives it a charm all its own — like exploring a 19th-century cabinet of wonders where treasures hide in every dusty corner.

Visitor Tips

  • Allow at least 2–3 hours; serious enthusiasts could spend a full day
  • Hire a guide — the labelling inside is minimal and a guide brings the collection to life
  • For Tutankhamun's treasures, visit the Grand Egyptian Museum near Giza instead
  • The museum is in Tahrir Square — easy to combine with a walk through downtown Cairo

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Opening Hours

9 AM7 PM

Entry Fee

300 EGP

Period

Museum founded 1902; artifacts from 3100 BC – 30 BC

Location

30.0478, 31.2336

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