Egypt unveils restored Tutankhamun galleryPublished17 December 2014Image caption, Four renovated halls in the Tutankhamun gallery in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo have been unveiled. The renovation is part of a seven-year project to refurbish the entire Egyptian Museum.Image caption, The halls, opened by Prime Minister Ibrahim Mahlab, house treasures from the tomb of the boy king which were unearthed in 1922.Image caption, It was one of the most significant archaeological discoveries of the 20th Century. Tutankhamun reigned from the age of eight or nine.Image caption, Tutankhamun's tomb had been untouched for some 3,000 years until the British archaeologist Howard Carter found it after years of excavations.Image caption, Tutankhamun was about 17 or 18 years old when he died. The renovation of the museum is being aided by funds from the European Union and other international donors, AFP reported.Image caption, The Egyptian Museum - first opened in 1902 in Cairo's central Tahrir Square - contains 107 halls with artefacts dating from the prehistoric through to the Roman periods. The majority of the collection is focused on the era of the pharaohs.Image caption, The museum houses approximately 160,000 objects covering 5,000 years of Egypt's past.