
deTraci Regula
National Archaeological Museum of Athens
The Egyptian Collection
44 Patission
Exarcheia area
GR - Athens 10682 (Greece)
Phone: +30-1-8217717, 8217724
Fax: +30-1-8213573
Near the Omonia Station on the Metro.
Hours: July 1st - Oct 31st
12:30pm to 6:45 pm Mondays
8am-7pm Tuesday-Sunday
Hours: Nov 1st- March 31st
10:30am-5pm Mondays, 8:30am-3pm Tuesday-Sunday
Tickets: 2000 drachma general admission
1000 drachma for youths under 18, European Union senior
citizens over 65, EU and many other university students. Free
admission Sundays between November and March, and on some
holidays.
Egyptian collection page:
antiquities, this museum also possesses a less-heralded but
satisfying
Egyptian Collection of 280 objects selected from over 4000
possessed by the museum. While most of the objects displayed
are not exceptional, the sheer quantity is cheering and
highlights include a charming rose granite statue of the royal
scribe Rahotep from Sakkara, an array of scarabs and small
objects, funerary equipment, and an early carving of a
hippopotamus. There are also a few Fayum portraits, vases, and
statues. Virtually all periods are represented by an object or
two.
My own visit here several years ago was brief, and like
most, I heard of it by accident and then flew up the central
stairs after already
spending several hours viewing the magnificent collection of
Greek art
below. It was a bit of a "culture shock" in its
truest sense, but it was
also intriguing to be able to easily compare traces of
possible Egyptian influence on the large, early statues of the
kouroi downstairs and other objects throughout the
museum. While the subject of Egyptian influence on Greek art
and culture is a controversial one today, many of the ancient
Greeks themselves were happy to claim an Egyptian connection,
whether or not it was a well-founded one.
Of interest to some will be several Graeco-Roman period
representations of the Egyptian deity Isis, in the Roman
period rooms. The image of the sistrum-bearing Isian priestess
Alexandra is particularly delightful.
To get the most out of your visit, keep an eye out for
Tzachou-Alexandri's The World of Egypt in the National
Archaeological Museum, Athens (Kapon Editions,
1995), as the standard guidebooks available for the museum
generally omit the Egyptian collection entirely.
For information on Greek travel, please visit my Greece for
Visitors
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