Wekalet Al-Ghuri is within an architectural group built at the end of the Mamluk era, and its importance is because it was built during the time of a Circassian Mamluk, Al-Ashraf Abu al-Nasr Konsowa al-Ghuri, who ruled Egypt from 1501 to 1516 and had graduated through his intelligence until he took over the rule of Egypt and is the last of the Mamluk sultans, so with the end of his era came the Ottoman invasion.
Wekalet Al-Ghuri built his important architectural group in the history of architecture, which consists of Al-Ghuri Agency, Al-Ghuri Mosque, Dome, Sabeel, Book, and Al-Ghuri School located at the end of Al-Ghuriya Street at its intersection with Al-Azhar Street and takes the form of a distinctive architectural block where it takes a single extension whose lines appear in all parts of this architectural block.
Tanoura Folkloric Show
Is one of the companies of the General Authority of Cultural Palaces (Ministry of Culture) of Egypt. It was formed in February 1988 at the Al-Ghouri Heritage Palace and performs regularly throughout the year. It also participates in all national events in the Arab Republic of Egypt, as well as in the foreign cultural exchange program and international festivals. The company has visited and performed in Japan and the USA. Austria-Hungary-Italy-Sweden-Norway-Denmark-France. Norway, Denmark, Finland, France, China, North Korea, South Korea, Hong Kong, Morocco, Tunisia, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Yemen, Romania, Czech Republic, India, the United Kingdom, Canada, Turkey, the Netherlands, Australia, Kenya, Greece, and Singapore.
The company performs to the accompaniment of folk musical instruments (Rababa, Salamiya, Mezamar, Sajat, Tabla) and a folk minstrel who relies on spontaneity and religious chants to accompany the dance.
The dance elements of the band are based on the Tanoura dancer (Al-Lefif) and dancers (Al-Hanatiyah) who dance with the percussion instrument (Muzhar), and all the band members are dancers and musicians who are spontaneous artists who learned the arts of dancing, playing, and singing from their parents and grandparents.