ENG - Official visits
- Visit of the French press at Meroe (2010)
- Visit of the Managing Director of the Louvre (2008)
(January 22-26, 2010)
On the occasion of the exhibition “Meroe, Empire on the Nile” (March 26 – September 6, 2010) at the Louvre museum, the SFDAS welcomed a team of French journalists last winter for an in situ exploration of the remains of Meroitic civilization. Accompanied by Guillemette Andreu and Michel Baud, the organizers of the exhibition, as well as Claude Rilly, the director of the SFDAS, they were able to visit the city and the royal necropolis of Meroe, the sites of Naga and Musawwarat and the ongoing excavations of the Louvre at Muweis.
Their articles perfectly summarize the enthusiasm and amazement they felt in front of these millenary relics and their vivid accounts complete the evocation of the kingdom of Meroe by the objects exhibited at the Louvre.
Were part of the expedition:
Hubert Lizé for Le Parisien: “Les pharaons noirs règnent au Louvre”
Cyril Le Tourneur d’Ison for Le Figaro Magazine: “Méroé, l’empire des pharaons noirs”
- Annick Colonna Césari for L’Express: “Aux sources de Méroé”, March 25-31 2010
Jérôme Coignard and Manolo Mylonas for Connaissance des Arts: “Méroé, sur la route des pyramides d’Afrique”, April 2010
Philippe Régnier for Le Journal des Arts: “A la rencontre de Méroé”, n°322, April 2-15 2010
Florence Evin for Le Monde: “Les trésors de Méroé dévoilés au Louvre”, March 21-22 2010
Jean-Luc Marty for Géo
(February 16-18 2008)
Henri Loyrette, Managing Director of the Louvre museum, came to Sudan for the third time from February 16 to 18, 2008. Guillemette Andreu, chief curator and head of the Department of Egyptian Antiquities, Benoît de Saint Chamas, Advisor to the Managing Director, Frédéric Jousset, grand patron of the Louvre museum and Bruno Le Dref, editor in chief at France 2, were also part of the journey.
An expedition was organized to some of the most beautiful sites of Sudanese Nubia. The Louvre delegation was accompanied by Mr. Hassan Hussein Idris (Managing Director of the Department of Antiquities of Sudan), Vincent Rondot, Director of the SFDAS and Vincent Francigny, Researcher at the SFDAS.
V. Francigny © SFDAS
Dongola el-‘Agouz, capital of the Christian kingdom of Makuria, was the first stage of this visit. Thanks to the presence on the site of Professor Wlodzimierz Godlewski, from the University of Warsaw, the paintings of the Holy Trinity monastery (11th century) could be presented to the visitors.
V. Francigny © SFDAS
Next stop, the temple built under pharaoh Amenhotep III in Soleb as well as the rock-cut site of Gebel Dosha and its small speos dug under the reign of Tuthmosis III.
V. Francigny © SFDAS
Flying over the region made us aware of the rich archaeological potential of the Mahas country: Sesebi, Gebel Gorgod, Nauri and its decree of Seti I dated from the year 4.
V. Francigny © SFDAS
Kerma, capital of the first Kingdom of Kush, was the final destination of the journey in Nubia. We visited the site spreading around the deffufa as well as the new museum, inaugurated on January 19 of that year. Among the numerous objects, we admired the statues of Napatan kings found in the cache at Dokki Gel: Taharqa, Tanuetamani, Senkamanisken, Anlamani and Aspelta.
V. Francigny © SFDAS
Not far from the capital of the kingdom of Meroe, the Louvre Museum started excavations under the direction of Michel Baud. The latter was able to present his most recent results since the campaign was then in progress: remains of a royal palace, kilns in a workshop area, etc.
V. Francigny © SFDAS