Section 113 Flowers Fall
I slept soundly all night and woke up early. At five o'clock, I heard someone outside standing on the minaret of the mosque and shouting loudly, "Get up and pray." Nalan Shiqi and Yunluo are hardcore materialist proletariat blindly, covering their heads and continuing to sleep.
Today I plan to go to the Egyptian Museum. The most convenient means of transportation in Cairo is the subway, which is made in France and is fully automatic ticket sales. Each station has exquisite murals, and the train also has several special ladies' cars. Of course, this is not to prevent Japanese stingy hands, but from religious customs.
Nalan Shiqi and Yunluo live near Metro Line 2, walk to Elharam Station to get on the bus, get off at Sadat Station, and come out to the fans of Jiefang Square.
The Egyptian Museum is located on the east bank of the Nile River not far northwest of the Liberation Square. In front of the gate is the famous Nilehilton. The museum is an ancient and luxurious light red two-story building with a small front but a long depth. The museum was originally derived from the initiative of the famous French archaeologist Auguste Maryette.
This old French man did not selfishly go to his hometown with the banner of academics, but instead devoted himself to the protection of cultural relics in foreign countries and foreign countries in the spirit of fearless internationalism. Therefore, the Egyptians voted for Li Baotao and respectfully called this foreigner the "father of Egyptian museums."
The main purpose of building the museum at that time was to prevent the excavated Egyptian national treasures from flowing out. The museum later moved twice and finally moved to its current location in 1902. There are too many Egyptian treasures. Currently, there are more than 300,000 cultural relics collected in the museum, and only 63,000 of them are displayed and exhibited, accounting for only one-fifth of all cultural relics.
This two-story building has been operating overload for many years, and some underground collections have even sunk into the soft ground. So a brand new Egyptian museum is being brewed and prepared near the pyramids of Giza.
The construction site in front of the museum gate was full of potholes and garbage, and the tourist bus was parked and chaotic. In September 1997, two terrorists who were deer-headed and rat-headed were slaughtering outside the door. A German tour group was chased and beaten and suffered heavy losses. Therefore, the place was heavily guarded and the surrounding Egyptian police were well equipped.
He was holding a German MP5 submachine gun in his hand and an Italian m92 pistol on his waist. He was 100 steps per 100 steps per 100 steps per 100 steps per 100 steps per 100 steps per 100. Nalan Shiqi and Yunluo were honest and honest people who bought 60 pounds of tickets, and were prepared to spend a day here with dry food. To the west of the courtyard in front of the museum is Mariette's grave.
The busts of 24 Egyptian academic masters surrounded it. The courtyard contains the "lotus leaves" representing ancient Upper Egypt and the oldest papermaking material in the world representing Lower Egypt. There are also stone tablets and statues standing in the courtyard to sun and rain, and some even scattered deep in the soil layer around the corner.
There are two safety inspections in the gate and the museum. Since shooting is prohibited, the camera will definitely not be brought in and can be kept in the gate storage. There are electronic tour guides renting in English, French and Arabic at the door. Nalan Seqi and Yunluo can only count on the English annotations in the museum and the lonelypla in their hands.
First, precious cultural relics from the ancient kingdom period to the Roman Empire rule are basically placed clockwise according to time. One of the biggest features of the museum is that they reveal the reality of the Egyptians, and they will not be like museums in other countries. They have a thin cultural foundation and are precious and valuable. Just put a few fakes on them.
Except for the Rosetta stone tablet in the first floor lobby, the museum is filled with real guys from four or five thousand years ago. Another feature is that it is poor management. Most of the exhibits basically have no guardrails, the labels are chaotic, and the items are placed at will, so tourists can easily touch them. Don’t count on the binding force of tourists.
After Yunluo reviewed this article, after Yunluo specifically asked the staff in the museum whether the museum was genuine and received the other party's proud affirmation, he still couldn't help but touched the statue of Rahotep and his wife Nofret in 4600. Yunluo promised to only look at it and not touch it in the next time.
Another feature is that the internal security is not strict. The slightly expensive one is just to simply place it in a glass cabinet, and there is no camera or alarm. This is the result of a thief breaking into a museum that doesn't even lock the door in 1996. The official started to strengthen security. Recently, there were brainless miscellaneous people who took advantage of the Egyptian turmoil and even cut the mummy.
What shocked Yun Luo the most was the atrium. It was facing the huge statues of the pharaoh Amenhotepiii and the queen, and the famous Nalmer palette of the first dynasty, which symbolized ancient Egyptian civilization. The enclosed space, gloomy lights, huge stone statues. The scarab Heber Heper.
The standing jackal head and human body Anubis au pussy, dancing eyes with king snakes, sun ships, flying eagles, god cats, everything is spinning around, as if all resurrected by Nalan Shiqi and Yunluo breaking into this newly opened tomb. Professor Jones, Scorpion King, Adella, and Dingding.
A tall and brilliant image suddenly flashed through Yun Luo's mind, possessing Yun Luo's soul made Yun Luo a little confused and fluttering his feet. With so many celebrities in possession, no one can stand it.
Visitors in the basement are forbidden, but you can see the dim light below through the ventilation holes on the first floor. You can't look at it for too long, otherwise you may stretch out a thousand-year-old dry hand to drag you to hell or a bunch of beetles will come out to share your food.
The second floor is a number of exhibition halls displayed according to the theme. The famous Tutankhamungalle exhibition room, Tutankhamungalle, is attracting attention because of its most luxurious exhibits. This 11th generation pharaoh of the 18th Dynasty, was born in a chaotic world, and was promoted to the throne without worries. He died in a year without regrets. He came and went in a hurry and made no achievements in obscurity.
It was not until the cemetery was thrown into the house by British archaeologist Hawad Carter in 1922 that the magnificent burial objects were shaken overseas, and the mystery of the eternal death of his prime was talked about under the front room of the Hall of the People. Yun Luo had no interest in gold, and the disaster in the world was just a pile of metal.
The other is the Mummy Hall, which requires an additional 100 pounds, which displays more than a dozen pharaohs and beautiful men's mummies, protected by precise temperature-controlled glass cabinets. The beautiful men's faces are no longer there, and Ramses II is also lying there in a shriveled manner, because the promiscuous French always have a good impression of the romantic commander.
Therefore, during the treatment of Comrade Ramses, he received etiquette reception at the head of state. Yun Luo was interested in the pots that placed internal organs. The scientific saying was that internal organs rot first, so they should be treated specially. Yun Luo felt that these pharaohs were worried about the country and the people all day long.
I still think of a happy and heartless life like Yunluo in the next life. Animal mummies are also very interesting, such as crocodiles, snakes, fish, cats, monkeys... which are very suspicious of being tested.
You can also stroll around the museum. Nilehilton, built in 1959, is the first modern hotel in Cairo. It was formerly the British colonial army stationed. The British masters once burned documents here with smoke and fire, and were worried about surviving Rommel's crazy attack in 1942.
But it was not as good as the tide of democratic independence of the Egyptian people in 1952, and finally withdrew from Africa in 1956. Further south is the Arab League building, arabeguebuilding, where chiefs with several concubines in the Middle East often enter and exit. To the southeast of Liberation Square is Cairo American University Ame Canuniver Private Tyincairo.
A private university established in 1919, where the campus is not very rich or noble. For example, the Princess Rania of Jordan. At the gate of the hammedmah udh street, she returned to the campus more than ten years ago. Looking at the beautiful women and socialites coming and going, meditating as Princess Baitula walked down to lengthen Lincoln, and rushed towards me with fire.
He cried and shouted that he would not marry me. Haha~ The east of Liberation Square is the abdeenpalace of the Abdeenpalace, which was the key link in the intention of the Governor Ismail in 1863 to reappear in Cairo. Now it has become a small museum full of swords, guns, swords and halberds.
1. The Egyptian Museum (Egyptianantiquitiesmu) is located next to the Liberation Square in the center of Cairo, close to the Hilton Hotel. The ticket is 60 pp. (Egyptianantiquities) and holders of international student ID and teacher ID can be 50% off for the certificate. The mummy museum inside will be charged an additional 100 pp. Photos can be taken in the museum courtyard, and photos are not allowed in the museum.
2. Liberation Square (eltah Rirsqr.), adjacent to the Nile River, is nearby Cairo's bustling commercial street, hotels and hotels for outsiders. It is surrounded by Egyptian museums, opera houses, and Arab League. The subway station name: sadat (the name of the former Egyptian president), which is the transfer point at the intersection of two subway lines in Cairo. It takes 50 le to get here by taxi from the airport.
I haven't visited the night view when I arrived in Egypt. I have been well educated these two days, so I can see what nightlife is there. I went out in the morning and found out with the hotel service staff. I took Metro Line 1 and got off at Darelsalam Station. I walked west towards the sunset to a small pier in Memphis. The sunset on the Nile River is very moving, quiet and peaceful.
Chapter completed!