Thursday, 30 January 2025 PL EN | |

 

Death and life in Ancient Egypt


Death and life in Ancient Egypt

 

In June 2024, our Egyptian exhibition was closed. While we await the opening of a new one, scheduled for 2026, we invite you to explore materials and highlights from the previous exhibition, as well as artefacts from the Egyptian Museum and Collection of Papyri in Berlin, and the State Museum of Egyptian Art in Munich, which were part of our collection for the past 26 years. These exceptional objects were made available to us through a long-standing collaboration with the above institutions, allowing us to share the richness of ancient Egyptian culture with our visitors.

We look forward to continuing this journey of discovery and knowledge.

 

Exhibition of objects from Egyptian Museum and Collection of Papyri in Berlin

 

Exhibition curator: dr hab. Agnieszka Mączyńska; mgr Kamila Dolata-Goszcz

The Egyptian Gallery in the Archaeological Museum was created thanks to cooperation with the Egyptian Museum and Collection of Papyri in Berlin, and the State Museum of Egyptian Art in Munich. It was the idea of professor Lech Krzyżaniak, the director of our museum for over twenty years, whose friendship with Dietrich Wildung and Sylvia Schoske, the directors of the German museums was consolidated during their joint archaeological research in Egypt and the Sudan. It resulted in 1998 in the long-term loan of over one hundred objects presented at the exhibition ‘Death and Life in Ancient Egypt’, which covers all periods of the Ancient Egyptian history and shows various aspects of this unique culture. In 2000 the exhibition was enriched with two royal statue heads from Munich, and in 2002 the Athribis obelisk came from Berlin to be placed in the courtyard of the Górka palace. Since then much happened; the royal heads came back to Munich and some objects from Berlin were sent back, but at the same moment new ones came to Poznań. All these masterpieces of art and crafts, displayed in the Archaeological Museum, help us to understand better the culture of Ancient Egypt, being at the same moment signs of Polish-German friendship and cultural cooperation.

You can find out more about the exhibition by clicking on the respective tiles below.