Mexican Treasures Inspire Global Awe Inside Storied Anthropology Museum
8 Articles
8 Articles
Foreign and domestic tourists who wanted to visit the world-famous Museum of Anthropology in Mexico City were in for a rude awakening this week when they unexpectedly found the doors closed. “Force majeure,” said the staff of the museum that had just won an important Spanish cultural award on Wednesday.
On June 4, it was officially announced that the National Museum of Anthropology and History won the Princess of Asturias Award of the Concorde 2025, as heir of a long tradition, in defense and preservation of an essential part of the anthropological heritage of humanity and, for its importance as a space that protects the greatness and cultural richness of Mexico. The president of Mexico, Claudia Sheinbaum reported the above and presented a spec…
The National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH) contemplates sanctions against private security companies that would be responsible for safeguarding the cultural heritage of the different museums, as they failed to comply with their reservation, which forced its closure for two days. These companies are SSS Asistencia y Supervisión S.A. de [...] The INAH article considers sanctions against private security companies for failing to comp…
Mexican Treasures Inspire Global Awe Inside Storied Anthropology Museum
Beneath the leafy canopy of Chapultepec Park, Mexico City’s National Museum of Anthropology has guarded the nation’s deepest memories for sixty years. Its newest honor—the 2025 Princess of Asturias Award for Concord—confirms what visitors already feel: these halls still breathe. The post Mexican Treasures Inspire Global Awe Inside Storied Anthropology Museum appeared first on LatinAmerican Post.
Several of the most emblematic museums in the capital of the country, including the National Museum of Anthropology, the Museum of the Great Temple, the Caracol Museum and the Chapultepec Castle Museum, are indefinitely closed due to a lack of security personnel. According to reports, the contracted company [...]
After two days of being closed, the CDMX museums reopened their doors; they lack trained personnel and professional surveillance systems.
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