
Discover the Featured Artefacts of July at Egyptâs National Museums
From the legacy of the Rosetta Stone to the echoes of ancient friendship, Egyptâs museums celebrate July with rare and remarkable artefacts.
In a nation where every stone tells a story, Egyptâs museums continue to breathe life into history with their monthly tradition of showcasing âArtefacts of the Month.â This July, the Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities reveals a fresh collection of selected masterpieces across museums nationwide, each piece chosen by public vote and tied to milestones in Egyptâs archaeological legacy and cultural diplomacy.
Two dates frame this monthâs selection: July 15, marking the 226th anniversary of the discovery of the Rosetta Stone, an artefact that transformed our understanding of ancient Egyptian writing and July 30, the International Day of Friendship, reflecting shared cultural memory across borders.
From hieroglyphic hymns carved in stone to Ottoman inscriptions in elegant calligraphy, the selected artefacts span millennia and regions, from Fayoum to Aswan. They capture scenes of devotion, royalty, education, and everyday lifeâoffering Egyptians and global visitors alike a curated path through time and belief.
Among this monthâs highlights:
⢠Thoth and the Book of the Dead take center stage at Cairoâs Gayer-Anderson Museum, while King Faroukâs throne carved in granite and inlaid with copper hieroglyphs graces the Royal Carriages Museum.
⢠The divine realm of Osiris emerges at Cairo Airportâs Terminal 3 in a painted stela, while a stunning 26th Dynasty coffin of Arte-Hor rests nearby in Terminal 2.
⢠At the Imhotep Museum in Saqqara, inscriptions from Pepi Iâs pyramid unveil early Egyptian theologyâarguably the worldâs oldest religious texts.
⢠From the black granite of Shabakaâs offering stela in Sohag, to canopic jars in Luxor, Meroitic scripts in Aswan, and a Byzantine Iliad tablet in Alexandria, the diversity of pieces illustrates the complexity of Egyptâs ancient and multicultural narrative.
Each artefact stands not merely as a relic but as a testimony to Egyptâs enduring power as a land of memory, dialogue, and identity.
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