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Welcome
To Jordan (Ahlan Wa Sahlan). Jordan is a land of ancient
heritage that until relatively modern times had lived in
the fold of great empire. Most often existing as an
important trading and communications link.
Jordan's millennia of human settlement have left it with
varied archaeological treasures that range from
Neolithic villages and four thousands year old frescoes
to the Greco-Roman splendor of Jerash, the mosaic riches
of Byzantine Madaba and the rock-carved wonders of
Nabataean Petra. These historical sites, combined with a
moderate climate and central location in the Middle
East, make the kingdom idea for tourism. And as the
country is small and communication is good, much can be
seen in a minimum of time.
The Jordanian people are friendly, warm, and hospitable.
You are bound to be attracted by fascinating natural
surroundings under bright blue skies. Memories that can
never be
forgotten.
The modern Jordanian capital city of Amman is only
the latest in a long series of communities that have
flourished on the same spot for thousands of years. One
of mankind's earliest settled farming villages developed
at Ain Ghazal, along the northern entrance to the city
between 7000 - 6000 BC.
Bronze and Iron Age cities continued the tradition,
culminating in the ammonite kingdom in the 12th century
BC Greeks and Romans built their own cities, and the
roman city of Philadelphia has left is mark in the
downtown theater and the forum, and the temple of
Hercules remnants on citadel hill. In the Byzantine and
early Islamic ear, the city continued to play an
important role in the region of modern Jordan.
Among Amman's most noteworthy places to visit are the
archaeological museum on citadel hill, the Jordan museum
of popular traditions and the Jordan folklore museum
flanking the Roman theater, the Jordan craft center and
the Jordan national
gallery.
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East of Amman, you can visit half a dozen desert castles
built by the early Islamic Umayyad caliphs in the 7th
and 8th centuries DD, such as Qasr Amra, Qasr Kharanah,
Qasr El-Hallabat and Azraq Castle. Here are some of the
best-preserved examples of Umayyad art and architecture,
including castles, baths, mosques, water systems and
frescoes. The rest house at Al-Azraq, with its thermal
mineral water baths, is an ideal base for a tour of the
Umayyad desert castles.
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Um-El Jimal (Gem of the black desert)) |
This curious place has extensive ruins of a
Roman-Byzantine-Umayyad town built on an earlier
Nabataean settlement and constructed entirely of black
steel gray basalt. It flourished as a frontier city of
the Roman and Byzantine empires and continued to prosper
in the Umayyad period. It was destroyed by an
earthquake at the Umayyad period.
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Jerash is perhaps the best preserved and most complete
provincial Roman city anywhere in the world. To walk
through the ancient city is to step back into the world
of 2nd century provincial cities along the southeastern
frontier of the Roman Empire.
Jerash, called Gerasa in Roman times, its important not
only for it's individual monuments, but also for it's
strict and well preserved town plan, built around the
colonnaded main street and several intersecting side
street. It's most noteworthy monuments include the
colonnaded street (The Cardo), the south theater, the
temple of Zeus, the Oval Plaza, Hadrian's arch, the Nymph, the Artemis temple complex and the smaller
north, or Odeon.
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Ajloun (Qalat Al Rabadh)) |
Perched a top a solitary mountain in the cool hill of
Ajloun, 14 miles west of Jerash, is Qalat Al Rabadh, a
12th century Arab castle built in defense against the
Crusaders. The massive structure affords a 360-degree
view for as far as the eye can see. Surrounded by a
moat, the castle is in a fairly good state of repair and
its many rooms, which cling to the mountaintop, are
invitingly
mysterious.
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The ruins of Gadara, modern Um Qeis, perch on a splendid
hilltop overlooking the north Jordan valley and the sea
of Galilee, complete with theater, colonnaded streets,
shops, Mausolaea and baths. Half an hour away, north of
the city Irbid, are the remains of the Greco-Roman city
of Abila, still being excavated today.
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The sprawling city of Pella in the north Jordan valley
may be Jordan's richest archaeological site, besides the
excavated remains from the Greco-Roman period, including
a theater. Pella offers visitors the opportunity to see
the remains of a Chalcolithic settlement from the 4th
Millennium BC, Bronze and Iron age walled cities,
Byzantine churches and houses, an early Islamic
(Umayyad) residential quarter, and a small medieval
Islamic (Mamluke) mosque.
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Just 20 minutes south of Amman, on the kings Highway, is
the mosaic filled city of Madaba both private and public
buildings in the city house Byzantine mosaics, but the
most famous is found in the Greek Orthodox church of St.
George. It is the map of the Holy Land, with a large
easily recognized depiction of Jerusalem. It is only
another six-mile where Moses overlook the Dead Sea. A
magnificent panorama of the Holy Land is before you, and
you can the springs where Moses smote the ground to
bring forth water.
The church at Mount Nebo houses sixth century mosaics,
which are being uncovered as you watch. Many believe
this church was built over the burial site of
Moses.
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the Dead Sea offers natural beauty and uniqueness
which humankind did not create but can constantly enjoy
at 1306 feet below sea level. This is the lowest spot on
Earth take swim where it is impossible to sink, read a
newspaper while lying on your back in the sea. Bathe in
the waters that have flowed from the Jordan River and from the hills of Moab and Gilead.
After the fascination of swimming in this briny sea with
outlet, your return trip to Amman through the Jordan Valley,
and climbing slowly up the hills in the sunset will
offer you beauty you will not soon forget.
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South-West
of Madaba are the thermal mineral springs at Zerqa-Ma'in
and Zara, where people come for thermal treatment or
simply to enjoy a soothing hot soak since the days of
Rome, when these were known respectively as the Baths of
Baris and Callirhoe. Anew hotel and thermal Water
Treatment Center at Zerqa Ma'in makes this spot one of
the leading thermal water centers.
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Um Er Rasas is a walled settlement about 30 kilometers
southeast of Madaba. Its main feature is a Byzantine
tower 15 meters high used by early Christian Monk
seeking solitude. Archaeologists have also unearthed the
Church of St. Stephan whose remarkable mosaic floor of
the Umayyad epoch is decorated with Jordanian,
Palestinian and Egyptian City plans.
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Less
than 40 kilometers south of Madaba lies Mukawir, ancient
Machaerus. This was the fortress built by Herod the
great, which after his death passed to Herod Antipas.
Here is where Herod imprisoned John the Baptist, and
where the beautiful Salome danced for Herod, who
presented here with the head of John the Baptist to
honor her Wishes. The remains of the fortress thick
walls, which were largely destroyed by the Romans,
dominate Mukawir, which has splendid view across the
Dead Sea to the hills around Jerusalem. Ten kilometers
west of Madaba is the hilly district of Mount Nebo, on
the western edge of the plateau with a spectacular view
across the Jordan Valley.
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Kerak
is one of the two major Castles in Jordan on a craggy
plateau 4300 feet above sea level, it is majestic
fortress which was built to protect the approach to
Jerusalem the Crusaders managed to hold it for 50 years
until 1189 AD, when Salah Din (Saladin) defeated them
and took the fortification into the fold the Arab World.
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Petra is magnificent, mysterious and always thrilling,
two thousands years ago, the Nabataean carved a city out
of the Rose-Red Rock, and built an empire based on
advanced agricultural techniques and control of area's
strategic trade routes. Petra was protected for several
hundred years by a ring of impenetrable mountains,
breached only by the kilometer-long fissure through the
mountains known as the Siq. When the Romans finally captured
Petra in 106 AD, it was a large, thriving and beautiful
city. An overnight stay at Petra is recommended for
those who have the time to see the city's most important
monuments. These include: The
Treasury (Al Khazneh):
The first monument you encounter as you peach the
end of the Siq and enter the city proper. The
Monastery (Ed Deir) :
An numerous temple situated in a hillside at the end of
an hour's hike. The
Royal Tombs:
A row of six carved monuments from the 1st to 5th.
Centuries, along the inside face of Petra's eastern
monuments. The
high Place of Sacrifice:
At the end of a 45 minutes hike above the theater,
still shows the altar and drains for the blood of scarified
animals. The path down from the high place passes by a series
of important tombs and monuments.
Half an hour north of Petra by a paved road is the
"Suburb" of al Barid, a miniature Petra with a
small Siq, carved tombs and monuments and some painted
ceilings. Near Barid is the village of Beidah, where
humankind made the transition some 10000-year ago from
nomadic hunter-gatherer to settled villager, plant
cultivator and animal domestication.
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Northeast
of Aqaba is one of the world's most famous Wadis, or
Valleys. Wadi Rum is the route T.E: Lawrence and Sheirff
Hussein took in world war I when fighting the Ottoman
armies.
Its wide Valley, bordered by rugged wind and
sand-carved-cliffs, provided the backdrop for much of
the filming of "Lawrence of Arabia".
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Jordan's only seaport is Aqaba, located at the northern
tip of the Red Sea and the southern tip of the Hashemite
Kingdom. World renowned for its placid water, for water
skiing, and its underwater plant life, for the pleasure
of scuba divers. Boasting 360 days of sunshine, Aqaba is
s popular winter and summer resort.
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