Categories: Arts and Literature

Tunisia to reopen Bardo national museum shut in 2021 power seizure

TUNIS (Reuters): Tunisia will soon reopen its Bardo national museum, said the Culture Ministry. It was closed two years ago when President Kais Saied shuttered the parliament, which shares the same building.

The ministry did not give a date to reopen the Bardo, located in a historic palace and home to one of the world’s most magnificent collections of ancient Roman mosaics, but said that some restoration work had been carried out.

Saied sent tanks to surround the parliament on July 25, 2021, as he seized most powers in moves his critics called a coup, closing both buildings while he rewrote the constitution and held elections to a new, far less influential, legislature.

The new parliament started work this year but there had been no firm information about reopening the national museum – one of the capital’s main attractions in a country economically dependent on tourism.

After Tunisia’s 2011 revolution the parliament had emerged under the new democratic system as the most powerful elected body and its arcade-ringed chamber became home to some of the most open political debate of any Arab country.

However, many Tunisians came to blame parliament and the main political parties for years of economic stagnation and government paralysis as a succession of coalition governments failed to bring prosperity.

In 2015 an attack by Islamist militants targeted visitors to the Bardo, killing more than 20 people in the building and its environs soon after completing a major renovation.

Enormous mosaics with rich details and vivid colours are displayed throughout the museum including ones showing the Roman sea god Neptune, hunting scenes and spectacular arrays of sea life.

As the home of ancient Carthage and its Punic culture, and as a major Roman colony that helped provide the empire with food, Tunisia is awash with classical-era sites and archaeological remains.

The Bardo mosaics, along with others in the museums at Sousse and by the amphitheatre at El-Djem, are taken from the luxurious villas built during the Roman era and into late antiquity.

The Frontier Post

Recent Posts

Noncitizen voting, already illegal in federal elections, becomes a centerpiece of 2024 GOP messaging

NEW YORK (AP): One political party is holding urgent news conferences and congressional hearings over…

24 mins ago

Fighting rages in Gaza’s Rafah

GAZA (AFP): Heavy clashes and bombardment Saturday rocked Gaza's southern city of Rafah, witnesses said,…

39 mins ago

Austria to resume aid to UN agency for Palestinians

VIENNA (AFP): Austria said Saturday it will restore its funding to the UN agency for…

39 mins ago

Oil tanker hit by missile off Yemen: security firm

DUBAI (AFP): A crude oil tanker was hit by a missile off the coast of…

40 mins ago

North Korea confirms missile launch, Kim Jong Un vows bolstered nuclear force

PYONGYANG (AFP): North Korea has test-fired a tactical ballistic missile equipped with a "new autonomous…

40 mins ago

Israeli leaders split over post-war Gaza governance

JERUSALEM (AFP): New divisions have emerged among Israel’s leaders over post-war Gaza’s governance, with an…

41 mins ago

This website uses cookies.