The
'Egypt, The Cradle of Religions' exhibit will be inaugurated tonight at the
Egyptian Museum in Tahrir.
Written By/ Nevine El-Aref.
Egypt’s
Minister of Antiquities Khaled El-Enany will inaugurate Thursday evening the
“Egypt, the Cradle of Religions” temporary exhibition at the Egyptian Museum in
Tahrir. The
exhibition comes as part of the ministry’s framework to organise a series of
temporary exhibits in an attempt to raise cultural and archaeological
awareness.
Elham
Salah, the head of the Museums Department at the Ministry of Antiquities, said
that the exhibition put on show a collection of 57 artefacts that were
carefully selected from the Egyptian Museum, the Coptic Museum and the Museum
of Islamic Art.
The
exhibition aims to shed light on religion in Egypt since ancient times; from
the monotheistic era of King Akhenaten to the appearance of Judaism,
Christianity and Islam.
Among
the objects on display are the Terracotta head of the oldest ancient Egyptian
deity discovered in Beni Salama, the statue of priest Hotep Di If from the
third ancient Egyptian dynasty, a relief of King Akhenaten and his family
worshipping the god Aten, and a relief of the goddess Isis and the god
Harpocrat from the Greaco-Roman era.
Wooden
boxes that were used as holders of the Torah and religious silver pots are also
among the objects on display, as well as icons depicting the Virgin Mary and
Jesus during their voyage to Egypt, and a copy of the Holy Quran and a silver
Islamic-era chandelier decorated with foliage ornaments.
Six
Islamic-era lamps recently recovered after being stolen from Cairo’s Al-Refai
Mosque will be on special display within the exhibition, as well as items that
were recently seized in Egyptian ports before they could be smuggled abroad.
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