Attraction Details
Overview
Graeco-Roman Museum
The Graeco-Roman Museum in Alexandria is the city’s oldest and most comprehensive museum, founded in 1892 and housing one of the most important collections of artifacts from the Hellenistic and Roman periods in Egypt. After a long closure for extensive renovation, the museum has reopened to the public with restored galleries and improved displays, presenting over 40,000 objects from the period when Alexandria was the capital of Ptolemaic Egypt and subsequently a major city of the Roman Empire.
The collection ranges chronologically from the founding of Alexandria by Alexander the Great in 331 BCE through the late Roman and early Byzantine periods, and it includes sculpture, terracotta figurines, coins, jewelry, papyri, mummies with painted portrait panels (the ‘Fayum portraits’), glassware, household objects, and religious artifacts. The blend of Egyptian, Greek, and Roman artistic traditions visible in the objects reflects Alexandria’s position as a melting pot of Mediterranean cultures — a city where Serapis (a deity invented by the Ptolemies to bridge Greek and Egyptian religious traditions) was worshipped alongside Isis, Zeus, and Horus.
Among the museum’s most celebrated holdings are the Fayum mummy portraits — painted wooden panels inserted into mummy wrappings showing the faces of wealthy Alexandrian residents in a style that blends Egyptian funerary convention with Roman panel painting technique — and a remarkable collection of tanagra figurines showing the full range of Hellenistic terracotta craftsmanship.
History & Significance
The Graeco-Roman Museum was founded in 1892 by Giuseppe Botti, an Italian Egyptologist who served as the first director, using objects salvaged from construction projects then rapidly destroying what remained of ancient Alexandria beneath the modern city. The museum’s neoclassical building, constructed in 1895, was designed specifically for the collection and reflects the international scholarly interest in Alexandria’s classical heritage that characterized late 19th-century Egyptology.
Alexandria’s archaeological record has been severely disrupted by continuous occupation of the city since antiquity. Unlike Luxor or Saqqara, where ancient remains lie on or near the surface in areas of low modern density, Alexandria’s ancient city is buried under 5–8 meters of accumulated deposits beneath a modern metropolitan area of over five million people. Museum collecting in Alexandria has always depended heavily on chance finds during construction work rather than planned excavation.
The museum underwent a major renovation project beginning in 2005, closing to the public for an extended period. The reopened museum features restored galleries, improved lighting, new conservation facilities, and a reorganized display program designed to make the Alexandrian cultural synthesis more legible to a general audience.
What to See
Fayum Mummy Portraits
Painted wooden panels inserted into mummy wrappings showing individual Alexandrian faces — the most realistic ancient portraiture from any culture before the Renaissance.
Serapis Sculpture
Statues and busts of Serapis — the hybrid Greek-Egyptian deity created by the Ptolemies — showing the syncretic religious innovation that made Alexandria's religious culture unique.
Tanagra Figurines
A large collection of Hellenistic terracotta figurines from Alexandria and the surrounding region — everyday people, mythological figures, and domestic scenes in miniature.
Ptolemaic Royal Portraits
Marble and granite busts of Ptolemaic rulers showing the evolving blend of Hellenistic and pharaonic conventions in royal self-presentation.
Photo Gallery




Visitor Information
Daily 9:00 AM – 5:00 PM (confirm current hours post-renovation)
⛔ Closed: NeverNo dress restrictions
Photography fee applies
Partially accessible
💡 Visitor Tips
Location & Map
🚕 How to Get There
Located in the Azarita district of central Alexandria; accessible by taxi from the Corniche (10 min) or on foot from Raml Station (15 min walk west along Tariq al-Hurriya).







