We visit the Bardo Museum in Tunis, Tunisia. Home to the largest collection of mosaics in the world.
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- Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024
- According to its website (www.www....) the national Bardo Museum in Tunis, the capital of Tunisia, is a jewel of Tunisian heritage and has the largest collection of mosaics in the world.
While on holiday down the coast in Hammamet, Heather and I took the local bus to Tunis and stayed overnight at a hotel in the city centre. In the morning, we took the metro to visit the Bardo Museum. We wandered through the galleries looking at the many ancient artifacts from the prehistoric, Hellenic, Carthaginian and Roman eras.
The museum contains the largest collection of mosaics in the world. The Roman era mosaics are very impressive. It must have taken a great deal of time, expertise and patience to bring together all the thousands of pieces of mosaic tiles.
The Bardo Museum is open six days each week but is closed on Mondays. The entrance charge is very reasonable at only 13 Tunisian Dinars per person, for non-residents.
Its easy to get to the Bardo Museum by public transport. While, Heather and I do speak some French and a little Arabic, we found everyone very helpful and even if you don't speak the language you should give it a go. We took the Tunis Metro on Line 4 from the Barcelone station to the Bardo stop. The museum is only a couple of hundred metres walk up the road from the metro. The tickets for the metro are relatively very cheap; one Tunisian Dinar per trip per person, which is 25p/ 25 Euro cents.
Heather and I enjoyed taking a break from the bustling city and we spent couple of hours admiring the exhibits and enjoying a coffee and pastry in the museum café.
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It is sad that it is empty. Such a stunning museum. As a Tunisian, I've been to Bardo museum many times back when I lived in Tunis.
Asleema. La bes? Ayshik pour votre message. My wife and I thought the mosacs were wonderful. The previous day, we had visited the Carthage Museum at Byrsa Hill but it was closed. It is being refurbished during the winter season. Perhaps the museum in Carthage has more objects to see?
@@mjw021269
Asslema,
Indeed. Also Sousse has a good museum, particularly if you are interested in mosaics.
@@samiryahiaoui Perhaps, next time we visit Tunisia we will visit the museum in Sousse.
The Bardo is an incredible museum. I hope I can go back to it sometime.
Yes, the Bardo Museum is great to wander around, it has wonderful mosaics.
Wow incredible mosaics
Thank you for your comment. If you like Roman mosaics, then the Bardo Museum in Tunis is a great place to visit.
History of Tunisia ❤ (Carthage Kingdom)
Yes, the history of Tunisia is interesting.
@@mjw021269actually yeah it's a 7500 years old country gived so many names a cross the years like Afriqia tarshish Land of Carthage
I didn't know that. Thank you for your comment.
Belle vidéo. Belle Tunisia merci
Merci. De rien. Ma femme et moi ons aimons faire des vacances en Tunisie.
Amazing. Thank you for sharing the video. Did you have a special authorization to visit the museum?
@@jamalshafagoj Hello Jamal. Thank you for your comment. No, we didnt have special permission to visit the museum. The Bardo Museum is open to the public. The entry tickets were not expensive. The tickets are 8Dt for Tunisians, 4Dt for older Tunisians, and 13Dt for foreigners. We could also have paid for a guide but we enjoyed just walking around the museum by ourselves.
The advanced Carthaginian Africa civilization dates back to approximately 4000 BC, the first to write a constitution in the world .This is why this continent was called Africa One of its most prominent kings was Commander Hannibal the first man to invent tactics and the arts of war.
Thank you for watching the video and for your comment.
Was that building a home previously?
Hello. Thank you for your comment. According to the History Hit website, the Bardo Museum was previously a palace.
“The Bardo Museum’s building has a long history of its own, housed in an imposing palace complex. Originally built during the Hafside Dynasty in the 13th century, the palace was subsequently renovated in the 17th and 18th centuries.”
More information is on the museum website:
www.bardomuseum.tn/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=58&Itemid=66&lang=en
@@mjw021269 Thank you!
You’re welcome.
❤