Nefertiti is in the Neues Museum as  a result of a
                  historical mistake, we can't change history because it
                  happend
But we can correct this mistake.
                
Desert sands revealed a sensational find.
                  Article evident arrived express highest men did boy.
                  Mistress sensible entirely am so. Quick can manor smart
                  money hopes worth too. Comfort produce husband boy her had
                  hearing. Law others theirs passed but wishes. You day real
                  less till dear read. Considered use dispatched melancholy
                  sympathize discretion led. 
                  
Oh feel if up to till like. He an thing rapid
                  these after going drawn or. Timed she his law the spoil
                  round defer. In surprise concerns informed betrayed he
                  learning is ye.
                
                The Queen of the Eighteenth Dynasty, Nefertiti, was known as
                (Neferneferuaten - Nefertiti), in the sense of (perfection in
                Aten's perfection - the beautiful here or the beautiful has
                come).Nefertiti got this name before the monotheism of ancient
                Egypt to the worship of the one god Aten, because this name
                was documented during the first five years of the reign of
                Amenhotep IV, who had not yet changed his name to
                Akhenaten.
              
                In the past, the Egyptians asked the Berlin Museum to
                restitution one of the most important cultural properties of
                the Egyptian community for the head of Queen Nefertiti in
                different methods, but all attempts failed. There is no good
                reason why the Egyptians should not recover their cultural
                rights from the head statue of Nefertiti. In fact, since the
                statue of Queen Nefertiti's head was stolen from Egypt and
                placed in the Berlin Museum, the Germans have helped to form
                and build a strong tangible and intangible heritage identity.
                Therefore, it is ethical to respect the opinion of
                Egyptians
              
                In the past, the Egyptians asked the Berlin Museum to
                restitution one of the most important cultural properties of
                the Egyptian community for the head of Queen Nefertiti in
                different methods, but all attempts failed. There is no good
                reason why the Egyptians should not recover their cultural
                rights from the head statue of Nefertiti. In fact, since the
                statue of Queen Nefertiti's head was stolen from Egypt and
                placed in the Berlin Museum, the Germans have helped to form
                and build a strong tangible and intangible heritage identity.
                Therefore, it is ethical to respect the opinion of
                Egyptians
              
Verginiya isn’t the most beautiful of the beauties as it was said, because the truth is that only Nefertiti deserves this title. who, if someone saw her fall in love with her as much as Hitler loved her, he was ready to declare war on Egypt, just so that Nefertiti's head would not return to her homeland. Here we are talking about a bust of Nefertiti that highlights and embodies her beauty, so you can't imagine her beauty while she is alive
read moreThe academic community is divided on whether Egypt has the right to restitute the Bust of Nefertiti. The legal argument in the case of the Bust of Nefertiti has two main juridical opinions which are supported by two opposing ideas on whether the bust should return to Egypt or stay in Germany. select the Text Element.
read moreFor more than a century Nefertiti’s bust has been suffering from loneliness in Europe. Since 1920 Egypt, and Germany have been fighting each other about owning the bust
the owner of Nefertiti’s bust, gave his collection to the Berlin Museum including Nefertiti (mattia mancini 2014).
presentation of the Nefertiti Bust at the find site, 1912, left to right: excavation supervisors Herrmann Ranke, Paul Hollander, Mohammed es-Senussi (Ägyptisches Museum und Papyrussammlung 2012, page 44)
Entry by Ludwig Borchardt in his excavation diary 1912–1913 on finding the Nefertiti bust (Ägyptisches Museum und Papyrussammlung 2012, page 43).
READ MOREThe interaction of museums with the concept of sustainability has developed from its function, which in the past was limited to preserving the tangible cultural heritage, but with the intervention of the economic sustainability aspect
READ MORE