The Alexandria
National Museum has grown in importance these days, and is now considered one
of Egypt's finest museums. It was inaugurated by President Hosni Mubarak on
December 31st, 2003, and is one more addition to the reasons one should visit
this grand old city.
The national museum is located in a restored palace and
contains about 1,800 artifacts that narrate the history of Alexandria
throughout the ages, including the Paranoiac, Roman, Coptic and Islamic eras.
There are even some more modern pieces, including 19th century glassware,
silverware, chinaware and precious jewels, which provide a sense of the
richness of the court of Mohammed Ali and his descendants. Mummies are shown in
a special underground chamber (basement). Also, some of the items found during
the archaeological underwater excavations in Alexandria are now on the same
floor as the Greco-Roman artifacts
The museum is
housed in the old Al-Saad Bassili Pasha Palace. He was one of the wealthiest wood
merchants in Alexandria during his lifetime. It is located on Fouad Street
(Tariq al-Horreyya), near the center of the city. Construction on the site was
first undertaken in 1926. The palace covers an area of 3,480 square meters,. It
is a white Italian-style mansion that sits in an expansive garden of rare trees
and plants. The palace consists of four floors and an underground shelter,
which was used during World War II air raids. The palace was designed by a
French engineer who used the Italian styles in its construction.
His
three-store palace was a gathering place for the upper class people of Egyptian
society in Alexandria, including notables such as Egypt’s former Prime
Ministers, Ismail Sedqi Pasha and Ali Maher Pasha, along with many others. This
villa was sold to the Americans as a consulate in 1960, and thereafter in 1997,
was purchased by the Ministry of Culture for about 12 million LE. Its
conversion to a museum, including up to date audiovisual equipment, security
and fire protection, cost another 18 million LE. In the preparation of the
Alexandria National Museum, the highest of standards has been adopted,
especially in display techniques and in the design of educational and cultural
galleries.