‘The Secrets of Sunken Egypt’ exhibition returns home after overseas tours

Special ‘The Secrets of Sunken Egypt’ exhibition returns home after overseas tours
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‘The Secrets of Sunken Egypt’ featured 293 artifacts from three Egyptian museums. (Supplied)
Special ‘The Secrets of Sunken Egypt’ exhibition returns home after overseas tours
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Egyptian Minister of Antiquities Khaled al-Anany looks at exhibits on display during the opening of "Tutankhamun's Unseen Treasures" exhibition at the Egyptian Museum in Cairo, Egypt. (REUTERS file photo)
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Updated 17 March 2021
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‘The Secrets of Sunken Egypt’ exhibition returns home after overseas tours

‘The Secrets of Sunken Egypt’ exhibition returns home after overseas tours
  • The exhibition began its worldwide tour at the Institute of the Arab World in Paris in 2015, moving to the British Museum and then onto Zurich’s Rietberg Museum, which was the last stop in its European journey

CAIRO: Ancient Egyptian artifacts that were part of a touring exhibition to Europe and the US have returned home, the country’s Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities has said.

“The Secrets of Sunken Egypt” featured items that had been discovered underwater, in the Mediterranean Sea, in Alexandria.

Mostafa Waziry, secretary-general of the Supreme Council of Antiquities, said the show had achieved great success in all of its host cities.

Waziry added that the exhibition began its worldwide tour at the Institute of the Arab World in Paris in 2015, moving to the British Museum and then onto Zurich’s Rietberg Museum, which was the last stop in its European journey.

From 2018 the exhibition toured the US and took in four destinations: St. Louis in Missouri, the Minneapolis Institute of Art and the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library and Museum in California. The tour ended in the Virginia Museum of Fine Art.

“The Secrets of Sunken Egypt” featured 293 artifacts from the Egyptian Museum in Tahrir, the Alexandria National Museum, the Greco-Roman Museum and the Library of Alexandria Museum, as well as discoveries made by the General Department of Sunken Antiquities.