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Jordan's Many Treasures
Jordan's Many Treasures
By Jeffrey
Laign
C
amels coexist with
Cadillacs. Bedouins brew cardamom coffee on campfires alongside modern highways. Gleaming skyscrapers flank
ruins dating from the dawn of recorded time.
Jordan is an ancient land in a new millennium. Jordan is full of history, but she also offers comfortable
hotels, safe streets and world-class restaurants.
Among Jordan's most famous
biblical sites are Mount Nebo, from which Moses is said to have glimpsed the
Promised Land; and Bethany, the Jordan River bank where scholars believe that
Jesus was baptized.
Exploring Jordan
Amman
Start off in Amman, Jordan's bustling capital.
It's a clean, modern city, with first-rate stores and restaurants. But the
city's crowning glory - The Citadel - dates back to the days when Hercules was
worshiped.
From Amman you are within easy driving
distance of any tourist destination in
the country. Foremost is Petra. A UNESCO World Heritage Site, Petra was built by
the Nabataeans, an Arab people who settled here more than 2000 years ago
and dominated trade routes of the ancient world.
Deep within a narrow desert gorge, Petra
is an amazing conglomeration of cliff-hewn tombs, baths, temples and administrative buildings, the
most famous of which is the stunning Treasury.
But with a history stretching back more than
10,000 years, Jordan is full of other wonders.
Jerash Jerash is called the "Pompeii of the East"
and is considered one of the
best-preserved Roman provincial cities in the world. As you wander among ruins in the
Hills of Gilead, you may imagine how this once-thriving metropolis must have looked
when Roman Emperor Hadrian visited in 129 CE.
Madaba
The main attraction here is a vivid 6th-century Byzantine
mosaic map of the Holy Land covering the floor of the Greek Orthodox Church of
St. George. The masterpiece is composed of more than 2 million bits of colored
stone.
Kerak
The 12th-century Crusader castle here is a
maze of stone-vaulted halls and seemingly endless passageways.
Dead Sea Four hundred meters below sea level, this famed valley is
the lowest point on earth. Rich in minerals, the sea yields nutrients used by
the many spa resorts here. The valley also is the site of five biblical cities,
including Sodom and Gomorrah.
Wadi Rum
"Godlike," is how T.E. Lawrence, better known
as Lawrence of Arabia, described this vast, starkly beautiful desert. Among the mountain
gorges Bedouins sip mint tea as camels graze.
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