Luxor Museum
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| Luxor Museum |
Luxor Museum is located in the Egyptian city of Luxor
(ancient Thebes). It stands on the corniche, overlooking the
River Nile, in the central part of the city.
Inaugurated in 1975, the museum is housed in a small,
purpose-built building. The range of artefacts on display
is far more restricted than the country's main collections
in the Museum of Antiquities in Cairo; this was, however,
deliberate, since the museum prides itself on the quality
of the pieces it has, the uncluttered way in which they are
displayed, and the clear multilingual labelling used.
Among the most striking items on show are grave goods
from the tomb of Tutankhamun (KV62) and a collection of 26
exceptionally well preserved New Kingdom statues that were
found buried in a cache in nearby Luxor Temple in 1989. The
royal mummies of two pharaohs - Ahmose I and Ramesses I -
were also put on display in the Luxor Museum in March 2004,
as part of the new extension to the museum, which includes
a small visitor centre. A major exhibit is a reconstruction
of one of the walls of Akhenaten's temple at Karnak.