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How incredible King Tutankhamen collection is being restored for new Egyptian museum

From gilded coffins to golden amulets, many of the Grand Egyptian Museum’s items have not undergone restoration since their 1922 discovery

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The golden funerary mask of ancient Egyptian King Tutankhamen is displayed in the Tutankhamen gallery at the Egyptian Museum in Cairo’s central Tahrir Square on June 11, 2025. The Tutankhamen collection to be displayed at the Grand Egyptian Museum was retrieved from several museums and storage sites, including the Egyptian Museum. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

As a teenager, Eid Mertah would pore over books about King Tutankhamen, tracing hieroglyphs and dreaming of holding the boy pharaoh’s golden mask in his hands.

Years later, the Egyptian conservator found himself gently brushing centuries-old dust off one of Tut’s gilded ceremonial shrines – a piece he had only seen in textbooks.

“I studied archaeology because of Tut,” Mertah, 36, said. “It was my dream to work on his treasures – and that dream came true.”

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Mertah is one of more than 150 conservators and 100 archaeologists who have laboured quietly for over a decade to restore thousands of artefacts ahead of the long-awaited opening of the Grand Egyptian Museum (GEM) – a US$1 billion project on the edge of the Giza Plateau.

Originally slated for July 3, the launch has once again been postponed – now expected in the final months of the year – due to regional security concerns.

Visitors walk next to a 3,200-year-old colossal pink-granite statue of King Ramses II at the entrance of the Grand Egyptian Museum in Giza, Egypt, on February 7, 2025, ahead of the museum’s planned opening later in the year. Photo: AFP
Visitors walk next to a 3,200-year-old colossal pink-granite statue of King Ramses II at the entrance of the Grand Egyptian Museum in Giza, Egypt, on February 7, 2025, ahead of the museum’s planned opening later in the year. Photo: AFP

The museum’s opening has faced delays over the years for various reasons, ranging from political upheaval to the Covid-19 pandemic.

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