5/5 Bassem A. 3 years ago on Google
The
Nubia
Museum
was
established
in
1997,
and
the
museum
is
located
in
an
archaeological
area
of
the
most
beautiful
areas
in
Aswan,
where
it
occupies
a
high
hill
next
to
the
Nile
scale.
The
architectural
design
of
the
museum
is
distinguished
by
the
Nubian
architectural
style,
which
was
inspired
by
the
designers
from
the
Pharaonic
tombs,
and
the
building
won
the
prize
of
the
most
beautiful
architectural
building
in
the
world
in
2001.
As
for
the
internal
components
of
the
museum,
it
consists
of
three
floors:
Basement:
It
contains
the
main
showroom,
restoration
workshops,
workshops,
antiquities
stores,
a
reception
center
and
an
open
theater.
Ground
floor:
the
main
entrance,
the
exhibition
hall,
the
lecture
hall,
the
VIP
room,
the
security
and
administration
rooms,
and
the
general
manager’s
room.
First
floor:
It
includes
the
cafeteria,
library,
museum,
photographic
rooms,
microfilm,
museum
administration
and
services.
The
Nubian
Museum
is
located
on
an
area
of
fifty
thousand
square
meters,
of
which
seven
thousand
square
meters
are
the
building
of
the
museum
building,
and
forty-three
thousand
square
meters
for
the
external
site
and
the
exposed
display.
Half
of
the
space
on
which
the
museum
building
is
housed
is
dedicated
to
internal
museum
exhibition
halls,
the
other
half
to
warehouses
and
restoration,
the
research
department,
places
of
administration,
and
public
services.
The
Nubian
Museum
in
Aswan
is
considered
one
of
the
most
important
Egyptian
museums
because
it
is
the
unique
open
museum
of
its
kind.
The
Nubian
Museum
plays
a
vital
role
not
only
at
the
level
of
introducing
the
world
to
the
heritage
of
this
region
or
at
the
level
of
preserving
the
antiquities
and
displaying
the
appropriate
presentation
in
them,
but
also
at
the
level
of
supporting
various
research
carried
out
by
Scholars
and
researchers
from
all
parts
of
the
world
about
the
Nuba
region,
through
the
Center
for
Studies
and
Documentation
Centers
located
in
the
museum
and
publishing
more
information
about
"The
Land
of
Gold"
in
Egypt,
past,
present
and
future.
The
Nubian
Museum
comes
to
immortalize
in
its
flanks
and
pillars
all
the
history
and
arts
of
Nubia
through
statues,
sculptures,
inscriptions,
mummies,
tools,
memorial
paintings,
tombstones,
murals,
and
so
on
through
seventeen
display
areas
in
chronological
order,
including:
the
Nubia
region,
the
Nubian
environment,
the
origin
of
the
Nile
Valley,
and
the
prehistoric
era,
The
Neolithic
civilization,
the
pyramids
era,
the
Nubian
medieval
era,
the
Nubian
kingdom
of
Kush,
the
Egyptian
civilization
in
Nubia,
the
family
25,
the
Kingdom
of
Meroe,
the
late
era,
Christian
Nubia,
the
Islamic
Nubia,
the
irrigation
area,
the
International
Campaign
to
save
the
monuments
of
Nubia,
and
finally
the
Folk
Heritage
section
.
For
the
most
famous
monuments
in
the
museum;
It
contains
five
thousand
artifacts
representing
the
stages
of
the
development
of
Egyptian
civilization
and
the
Nubian
heritage,
and
the
museum's
external
display
includes
68
unique
pieces
of
large
statues
and
antique
paintings
of
various
sizes.
Among
the
most
beautiful
and
rarest
of
these
pieces
on
display
is
a
skeleton
of
a
200,000-year-old
man
who
was
found
in
1982
in
the
Idkubate
area
of
Aswan.