Etihad Museum
The Etihad Museum tells the story of the founding of the United Arab Emirates in 1971, when seven independent emirates merged into a single nation.
About Etihad Museum
The Etihad Museum tells the story of the founding of the United Arab Emirates in 1971, when seven independent emirates merged into a single nation. The building is modern and striking (shaped like a manuscript, with a roof designed to evoke the UAE flag), and the exhibitions inside use documents, photographs, film footage, and interactive displays to reconstruct the negotiations that created the country.
The museum is built on the site where the UAE constitution was signed, and the Union House next door (where the actual signing took place) has been preserved and is included in the visit. Seeing the original documents and the simple room where seven rulers agreed to form a nation gives the whole story a tangible, human scale that the skyscrapers outside do not.
AED 25 entry (about $7). The visit takes 60-90 minutes. The audio guide is included and worth using, as the political context is not obvious to most visitors. The temporary exhibition space on the lower floor changes regularly and often focuses on specific aspects of Emirati culture and history.
The museum is in Jumeirah, near the Jumeirah Mosque, and the two make a natural pair for a cultural morning. There is no metro access, so a taxi (AED 15-25 from Downtown) is the most practical option. The museum is air-conditioned and a good summer activity.
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