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European institute interested in Egypt’s 1st underwater museum
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European institute interested in Egypt’s 1st underwater museum
CAIRO: A mission launched by the European Institute for Underwater Archaeology is currently carrying out a feasibility study for the construction of the first underwater museum for Egyptian antiquities on the Mediterranean coastal city of Alexandria.
The museum is designed by French architect Jacques Rougerie, after wining the UNESCO-supervised international competition held to select the design.
The competition featured works four of the world's most prominent architects, according to Zahi Hawass, secretary general of the Supreme Council of Antiquities (SCA).
The feasibility study will be carried out under the supervision of the UNESCO and will be presented to the Egyptian Minister of Culture Farouk Hosny upon completion next September.
According to Hosny, the underwater museum will be of equal value to the city's once Great Lighthouse, identified as one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World by Antipater of Sidon.
The museum will be comprised of two main parts, one above sea level and another completely submerged underwater.
Walking through the glass-windowed museum will be like strolling down the journey of the ancient city and discovering its secrets, said Hosny.
http://dailystaregypt.com/article.aspx?ArticleID=17581
The museum is designed by French architect Jacques Rougerie, after wining the UNESCO-supervised international competition held to select the design.
The competition featured works four of the world's most prominent architects, according to Zahi Hawass, secretary general of the Supreme Council of Antiquities (SCA).
The feasibility study will be carried out under the supervision of the UNESCO and will be presented to the Egyptian Minister of Culture Farouk Hosny upon completion next September.
According to Hosny, the underwater museum will be of equal value to the city's once Great Lighthouse, identified as one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World by Antipater of Sidon.
The museum will be comprised of two main parts, one above sea level and another completely submerged underwater.
Walking through the glass-windowed museum will be like strolling down the journey of the ancient city and discovering its secrets, said Hosny.
http://dailystaregypt.com/article.aspx?ArticleID=17581
Egypt plans world's first underwater museum
Mention underwater archeological treasures and most people will think of shipwrecks full of chests of gold from far corners of the earth.
However, the United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), together with the Egyptian government, is now planning to show the world that underwater archeology can be much more, by building the world's first underwater museum to show the rich cultural and historical heritage that can be found under the Bay of Alexandria in northern Egypt.
The museum will be built by the government of Egypt, while UNESCO has established an International Scientific Advisory Committee to help lay the groundwork. The committee is expected to start preparatory work this month.
The decision by the Egyptian government comes amid growing international awareness of the need to protect archeological sites located underwater.
UNESCO has established the Convention on the Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage, which is expected to become operational by the end of 2008 after its ratification by 20 states.
The Convention highlights the importance of saving submerged cultural property, which has become increasingly vulnerable to pillaging with the development of more sophisticated and affordable diving equipment.
According to the initial plan the new museum, which will be the first of its kind, is to be built partly above and partly under water presenting the planners with an array of challenges. Among issues that need to be addressed is the safety of the visitors while exploring the underwater sections of the museum, and the limitations on visibility.
The submerged part of the complex will enable visitors to see archaeological remains on the seabed, representing an important advance in the development of underwater cultural heritage exhibitions.
"The first underwater discoveries in the Bay of Alexandria were made in 1911, so you see that this is already a long, ongoing issue in one of the most ancient harbors of the world," Ulrike Koschtial, the representative for the UNESCO Convention, told The Media Line.
"The whole Bay of Alexandria actually still houses the remains of very important archeological sites. You have the place of the Pharaohs - the ancient lighthouse of Alexandria - which is one of the seven ancient wonders of the world. You have the Polonike Palace, which was the palace of Cleopatra, and there might also be the grave of Alexander the Great," she said.
Other artifacts recovered from the Bay of Alexandria and adjacent sites will be presented to the public in exhibition sites above water. Adjacent archaeological sites include Abukir Bay, where the vestiges of the sunken cities of Canopus and Herakleion are to be found.
UNESCO director-general, Koïchiro Matsuura, welcomed the initiative in a news release.
"This project will certainly enhance appreciation of underwater cultural heritage and raise awareness of the urgent need to protect it from looting. Until UNESCO's Underwater Cultural Heritage Convention enters into force, there is no specific international law that can protect it against treasure hunters. I truly hope the convention will enter into force in the coming months," he said.
http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1228728146173&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull
However, the United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), together with the Egyptian government, is now planning to show the world that underwater archeology can be much more, by building the world's first underwater museum to show the rich cultural and historical heritage that can be found under the Bay of Alexandria in northern Egypt.
The museum will be built by the government of Egypt, while UNESCO has established an International Scientific Advisory Committee to help lay the groundwork. The committee is expected to start preparatory work this month.
The decision by the Egyptian government comes amid growing international awareness of the need to protect archeological sites located underwater.
UNESCO has established the Convention on the Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage, which is expected to become operational by the end of 2008 after its ratification by 20 states.
The Convention highlights the importance of saving submerged cultural property, which has become increasingly vulnerable to pillaging with the development of more sophisticated and affordable diving equipment.
According to the initial plan the new museum, which will be the first of its kind, is to be built partly above and partly under water presenting the planners with an array of challenges. Among issues that need to be addressed is the safety of the visitors while exploring the underwater sections of the museum, and the limitations on visibility.
The submerged part of the complex will enable visitors to see archaeological remains on the seabed, representing an important advance in the development of underwater cultural heritage exhibitions.
"The first underwater discoveries in the Bay of Alexandria were made in 1911, so you see that this is already a long, ongoing issue in one of the most ancient harbors of the world," Ulrike Koschtial, the representative for the UNESCO Convention, told The Media Line.
"The whole Bay of Alexandria actually still houses the remains of very important archeological sites. You have the place of the Pharaohs - the ancient lighthouse of Alexandria - which is one of the seven ancient wonders of the world. You have the Polonike Palace, which was the palace of Cleopatra, and there might also be the grave of Alexander the Great," she said.
Other artifacts recovered from the Bay of Alexandria and adjacent sites will be presented to the public in exhibition sites above water. Adjacent archaeological sites include Abukir Bay, where the vestiges of the sunken cities of Canopus and Herakleion are to be found.
UNESCO director-general, Koïchiro Matsuura, welcomed the initiative in a news release.
"This project will certainly enhance appreciation of underwater cultural heritage and raise awareness of the urgent need to protect it from looting. Until UNESCO's Underwater Cultural Heritage Convention enters into force, there is no specific international law that can protect it against treasure hunters. I truly hope the convention will enter into force in the coming months," he said.
http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1228728146173&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull
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