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Harpocrates Publishing |
A Short Guide to the Gręco-Roman Museum,
Alexandria |
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The author Jean-Yves Empereur |
Founded
in 1892, the Gręco-Roman Museum of Alexandria holds a vast collection,
gathered together over more than one hundred years. The thousands of artifacts
of all sizes and materials exhibited in the Museum's halls offer an accurate
and varied panorama of all aspects of Graeco-Roman civilisation as it
manifested itself in the land of Egypt. From the founding of Alexandria
in 331 BC, this experience was to cover a millennium. The Greek or Ptolemaic
period lasted three centuries: centuries of opulence, artistic creation
and technical innovation, which would influence the whole of the ancient
world. Alexandria stood as a lighthouse for the Mediterranean basin and
as a very real threat to the supremacy of Rome. It subsequently became
the capital of a Roman province and was one of the most active centres
of the growth of Christianity, which, in less than four centuries, was
to dominate the country, smothering, often violently, the last glimmers
of pagan science and philosophy. The birth of the Coptic Church in the
4th century brought a more national form to art, as will be discovered
in the later halls of the Museum. A visit here is part of a journey through
the history of this country and complements visits to the three museums
of Cairo which present the other eras of Egypt's heritage: The Egyptian
Museum (Pharaonic), The Coptic Museum and The Islamic Museum.
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Copyright © Harpocrates
Publishing, 2004 |
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