
Early morning having breakfast at the roof terrace of our hotel in the city of Madaba. Lovely views of both the famous Church in Madaba and a large Mosque. We even had a small shower of rain. Unusual in this part of the Middle East.

We visited the city of Jerash about one hour drive north of Amman.

Jerash is an old and very well preserved Roman city.
Marks cut out in the rock, as can be seen in the picture above was all over the place. Apparently it is a sort of "board game" that roman soldiers passed time with when on duty (and possibly off duty as well..... we assume?). A game played with pips or stones moved around in the holes. Quite similar to many games still played today.

It is impressive that these columns are still standing after all this time. Especially considering that this is a fairly active seismic area.

Recent excavations show that Jerash was already inhabited during the Bronze Age (3200 BC - 1200 BC). After the Roman conquest in 63 BC, Jerash and the land surrounding it were annexed by the Roman province of Syria, and later joined the Decapolis cities. In AD 90, Jerash was absorbed into the Roman province of Arabia, which included the city of Philadelphia (modern day Amman). Emperor Hadrian visited Jerash in AD 129-130. The triumphal arch (or Arch of Hadrian) was built to celebrate his visit.
The city finally reached a size of about 800,000 square meters within its walls.

A list of names and one name is very deliberately removed. We wonder what he did to deserve being erased from history?

There are a large number of striking monuments located in Jerash: the Corinthium column, Hadrian's Arch, a circus/hippodrome, two immense temples (to Zeus and Artemis), the nearly unique oval Forum, which is surrounded by a fine colonnade, a long colonnaded street or cardo, two theaters (the Large South Theater and smaller North Theater), two baths, a scattering of small temples and an almost complete circuit of city walls. Most of these monuments were built by donations of the city's wealthy citizens. The picture above is from the seat of one of the Theaters. Just think of all the roman butts that have been wearing the stone down through the years.

Part of an old Temple dedicated to Bacchus.

Tourists in front of the temple of Artemis.

Again.... still standing..... amazing!




So the romans had water led to the city, advanced drainage systems and bathrooms with running water how long before we had that in Sweden again?

Original pavement of the road. You can still see the stone worn down by chariot wheels and the drainage system below.

Ulrica standing on the cardo.

In ancient Roman city planning, a cardo was a north-south-oriented street in cities or military camps. Sometimes called the cardus maximus, the cardo served as the center of economic life. The street was lined with shops, merchants, and vendors.




































