AJA Open Access
July 2026 (130.3)
Museum Review
The Reopened Bardo National Museum in Tunis, Tunisia
By Helen Dixon
This review addresses the reopened (in 2023) Bardo National Museum in Tunis, a government-funded archaeological museum in Tunisia’s capital city. As of June 2025, several galleries had been reorganized or completely redone, but a few rooms remained closed as the renovations continued. Key collections—like one of the world’s largest assemblages of mosaics—are stunning, if perhaps under-interpreted. The updated presentation offers unique insight into the Late Classical and Late Antique Mediterranean worlds, as well as the early history of Islam in the Maghreb. Although labels throughout the museum currently provide uneven guidance for nonspecialist visitors, the renovations have established a strong foundation for further improvements in accessibility and interpretive depth, particularly in areas such as women’s history, African history, and the contemporary reception of the past. The complex legacies of Carthage and Rome, as well as Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, are presented as a pluralist cultural vision, in powerful conversation with grand Western narratives about the ancient Mediterranean and the spread of monotheism. The museum’s dominant metaphor can be said to be the mosaic, an assemblage of meaningful stories, each presented as a medallion in the larger pattern of Tunisian identity.