National Museum of Yemen
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The National Museum of Yemen in Sana'a, Yemen, was founded in 1971[1] in Dar al-Shukr (Palace of Gratefulness) which is one of the Yemeni Imam Palaces. It is located near Qubbat al-Mutawakkil Mosque dome in Al-Tahreer Square in the city center.
The Museum recently moved to a nearby building called Dar Al-Sada (Palace of Happiness). The relocation was made to the newly renovated Palace because it offers the necessary space to accommodate the increasing number of artifacts throughout the history of Yemen.
The museum contains artifacts of ancient Yemen collected from different archaeological sites. The National Museum consists of the four-story building and its room has been reserved for the presentation of rare artifacts and monuments. The exhibits include the artifacts of a Yemeni Imam, artifacts from Marib, ancient Kingdoms of Yemen and artificat from the Islamic States era.
Dar al-Shukr was converted into National Heritage Museum in 1991 but has been closed since years ago due to the lack of preparations and overhaul.
The museum housed over 30 thousand antiquity pieces as per 2007.[2]
See also
References
- ^ "Dr. Tom's Traveling News and Trivia - National Museum in Sana'a, Yemen, reopens". Archived from the original on 2008-12-04. Retrieved 2010-02-10.
- ^ Almotamar.net -Yemen's National Museum houses 30 thousand antiquity pieces