About National Museum of Sudan
The National Museum of Sudan or Sudan National Museum, curtailed SNM, is a twofold storied building developed in 1955 and built up as an exhibition hall in 1971. The building and its encompassing patio nurseries house the biggest and most far reaching Nubian archeological accumulation on the planet including objects from the Paleolithic through to the Islamic time frame starting from each site of significance in the Sudan.
Specifically it houses accumulations of these times of the History of Sudan: Paleolithic, Mesolithic, Neolithic, A-Group culture, C-Group culture, Kerma Culture, Middle Kingdom of Egypt, New Kingdom of Egypt, Napata, Meroe, X-Group culture and medieval Makuria. The historical center is situated on the El Neel Nile Avenue in Khartoum in Al-Mugran region close to the spot where the White and the Blue Niles meet. In the historical center garden are revamped a few sanctuaries and tombs moved from the submergence region of Lake Nasser.
The Aswan High Dam worked over the Nile River in Egypt made a repository in the Nubia zone, which stretched out into Sudan's domain undermining to submerge the old sanctuaries. Amid the UNESCO Salvage Campaign the accompanying sanctuaries and tombs were re-raised in the gallery cultivate as indicated by a similar introduction of their unique area encompassing a counterfeit segment of water representative of the Nile.