Introduction
Cairo’s Museum of Islamic Art (متحف الفن الإسلامي) is, by collection size, the largest Islamic art museum in the world — home to more than 100,000 artifacts spanning 1,400 years of Islamic civilisation across the Arab world, Persia, Turkey, and beyond. It sits in the heart of historic Cairo, a few minutes’ walk from the great mosque of Amr ibn al-As and the bustling commercial district of Bab al-Khalq.
The museum’s collection includes extraordinary Quran manuscripts — including Mamluk illuminated Qurans of the highest quality, early Kufic fragments, and calligraphic works spanning every major Arabic script tradition — alongside metalwork, ceramics, woodwork, textiles, and glass that document the material achievements of Islamic civilisation at its global height.
What Is the Cairo Museum of Islamic Art?
The Museum of Islamic Art Cairo (Mathaf al-Fann al-Islami) was founded in 1881 — making it one of the oldest Islamic art museums in the world — and housed in its current building (completed 1903) near Bab al-Khalq in central Cairo. Its collection of 100,000+ artifacts is the largest by item count of any Islamic art museum anywhere.
| Feature | Details |
| Full name | Museum of Islamic Art (متحف الفن الإسلامي) |
| Location | Bab al-Khalq Square, Port Said Street, Cairo, Egypt |
| Founded | 1881 |
| Collection size | 100,000+ items |
| Building | 1903; neoclassical exterior; Islamic interior decoration |
| Recent closures | Damaged in 2014 bombing; reopened 2024 following restoration |
| Admission | Check current price at museum; moderate fee |
| Website | islamicarts.gov.eg (verify current status) |
Important note for 2026 visitors: The museum was damaged in a 2014 car bombing near the Egyptian Interior Ministry (adjacent to the museum). Restoration work was extensive; the museum reopened in stages. Verify current opening status and hours through the Egyptian Ministry of Tourism or the museum’s official channels before planning a visit.
The Quran Collection
The Cairo Museum’s Quran collection is among the most significant in the Arab world, reflecting Egypt’s central role in Islamic manuscript history — home to Al-Azhar, the world’s oldest continuously operating university, and the site where the authoritative 1924 Cairo Edition of the Quran was produced.
Key Quran holdings:
Mamluk illuminated Qurans:
Egypt was the centre of Mamluk manuscript production (13th-16th centuries), and the Cairo Museum holds significant examples of Mamluk Quran illumination — large-format manuscripts with gold arabesque headings, Muhaqqaq text calligraphy, and the characteristic deep blue and gold palette of the Mamluk tradition.
Early Kufic manuscripts:
The museum holds early Quranic manuscripts in Kufic script from the 8th-10th centuries — the angular, geometric script that dominated Quran production before the Naskh tradition established by Ibn al-Bawwab in 1001 CE became standard.
Calligraphic panels and friezes:
Quranic verses in architectural calligraphic panels — carved in wood, cast in metal, and painted on ceramic tiles — form a significant part of the collection. These contextualise the Quranic text within the built environment of Islamic civilisation, showing how Quranic words were incorporated into mosques, palaces, and public buildings.
The Al-Azhar connection:
Cairo’s Museum of Islamic Art exists in the shadow of Al-Azhar — the most influential Islamic scholarly institution in Sunni Islam, whose 1,000-year history of Quran scholarship and the 1924 Cairo Edition standardisation are directly relevant to the manuscripts the museum holds. Understanding the museum’s collection benefits from understanding Al-Azhar’s role in Quranic textual authority.
The Broader Collection: What to See
The museum’s 25 display halls cover Islamic art across all media and periods:
| Hall/Section | Content | Highlights |
| Manuscripts | Quran and literary manuscripts | Mamluk Qurans; early Kufic fragments |
| Woodwork | Carved wood architectural elements | Mosque minbars; mashrabiyya screens; Quran stands |
| Metalwork | Bronze, brass, inlaid metalwork | Mamluk candlesticks; Fatimid bronze objects |
| Ceramics | Islamic ceramics from 7th-19th century | Lustre tiles; Iznik imports; local Egyptian pottery |
| Textiles | Islamic fabrics and embroidery | Tiraz bands with Quranic text; Mamluk textiles |
| Glass | Islamic blown and gilded glass | Mamluk mosque lamps — among finest surviving examples |
| Coins | Islamic numismatics | Umayyad to Ottoman |
| Jewellery | Islamic personal adornment | Fatimid gold; Mamluk jewellery |
| Arms and armour | Islamic military objects | Mamluk and Ottoman weapons |
| Architectural elements | Carved stone, plaster, and wood elements | Fatimid carved plasterwork; Mamluk mashrabiyya |
The Mamluk mosque lamps:
The museum’s collection of Mamluk gilded glass mosque lamps — produced in Cairo and Syria between the 13th and 15th centuries for mosque illumination — is one of the finest in the world. These lamps, decorated with gold enamel in Quranic inscriptions and geometric patterns, represent Islamic glass production at its peak.
The Fatimid section:
The Fatimid Caliphate was centred on Cairo (969-1171 CE), and the museum holds significant Fatimid artifacts — rock crystal objects, carved ivory, lustre pottery, and bronze objects from this Ismaili Shia caliphate that made Cairo one of the Islamic world’s greatest cities.
The Building and Its History
The current museum building was completed in 1903 under the direction of the Egyptian Khedive, designed in a neoclassical style with an elaborately decorated Islamic interior. The interior decoration — Moorish arches, geometric tile patterns, carved stucco — reflects the late 19th-century scholarly interest in Islamic architectural vocabulary that also produced the Victoria and Albert Museum’s Islamic galleries in London.
The 2014 bombing:
In January 2014, a car bomb targeted the adjacent Egyptian Interior Ministry building. The explosion damaged the museum’s façade and interior, destroying or damaging hundreds of artifacts and causing structural damage to the building. International donors (including the United Arab Emirates, the European Union, and UNESCO) funded the restoration, which took a decade. The museum reopened progressively, with full reopening in 2024.
The restoration:
The restoration process not only repaired damage but improved the museum’s display standards and educational interpretation. The reopened museum offers a substantially improved visitor experience compared to its pre-2014 state.
Practical Information: Location, Hours, Tickets
| Feature | Details |
| Address | Bab al-Khalq Square, Port Said Street, Central Cairo |
| Nearest landmarks | Adjacent to Egyptian Interior Ministry; near Khan el-Khalili bazaar |
| Admission | Check current pricing (EGP; moderate fee); foreigners typically pay higher rate than Egyptian nationals |
| Hours | Verify with museum or Egyptian Ministry of Tourism before visiting; previously Sat-Thu 9am-5pm |
| Getting there | Central Cairo; accessible by metro (Saad Zaghloul station nearby); taxi from most Cairo hotels 15-30 min |
| Photography | Check current policy; previously permitted in most galleries |
Visitor note: Cairo’s traffic and the museum’s central location mean allowing extra time for travel. The area around Bab al-Khalq includes Khan el-Khalili bazaar — one of Cairo’s most famous markets — making a museum visit naturally combinable with a broader Old Cairo experience.
Cairo as an Islamic Art Destination
The Museum of Islamic Art is one component of an extraordinary Islamic art and heritage circuit in Cairo:
| Institution | Distance from Museum | What to See |
| Al-Azhar Mosque and University | 15 min walk | 1,000-year-old centre of Islamic scholarship |
| Khan el-Khalili | 10 min walk | Historic bazaar; traditional Islamic crafts |
| Sultan Hassan Mosque-Madrasa | 20 min taxi | Greatest Mamluk architecture in Cairo |
| Al-Rifai Mosque | Adjacent to Sultan Hassan | Royal mausoleum; Islamic architecture |
| Citadel of Saladin | 25 min taxi | Ayyubid and Mamluk citadel; panoramic Cairo views |
| Old Cairo (Coptic Cairo) | 20 min taxi | Pre-Islamic and early Islamic history; coexistence |
Cairo offers the deepest immersion in Mamluk-era Islamic civilisation available anywhere in the world — the Museum of Islamic Art, Sultan Hassan Mosque, and the Egyptian Museum together document Cairo’s extraordinary position at the heart of medieval Islamic culture.
For Islamic School Groups
The Cairo Museum of Islamic Art is an exceptional destination for Islamic school groups visiting Egypt — but practical planning is essential given Cairo’s complexity as a city.
Curriculum value:
- Mamluk Islamic art — the artistic tradition of the Mamluk Sultanate that ruled Egypt and the Levant (1250-1517)
- Quranic calligraphy across 1,400 years
- Islamic science, metalwork, and textile traditions
- The relationship between Al-Azhar scholarship and Quranic manuscript production
Practical guidance for groups:
Arrange a licensed guide for group visits — the museum’s interpretation in English can be limited, and a knowledgeable guide substantially enhances the educational value. Egyptian tour operators specialising in cultural and Islamic heritage tours can arrange combined visits to the Museum of Islamic Art, Al-Azhar, and Mamluk mosques.
Conclusion
The Cairo Museum of Islamic Art, reopened after its restoration, represents one of the Islamic world’s most significant cultural repositories — 100,000 artifacts spanning 1,400 years of civilisation, in a city that was itself one of Islam’s greatest capitals under the Fatimid and Mamluk dynasties. For Muslim visitors to Egypt, combining this museum with Al-Azhar and the Mamluk mosques of Old Cairo provides an Islamic heritage experience that no other city can match.
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