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The most remarkable
buildings in the eastern
Jordanian desert are the
palaces built by the
Umayyad caliphs in the
7th and 8th century.
Most of the castles can
be visited within one
day in a loop from Amman
via Azraq. The Desert
Castles are examples of
early Islamic art and
architecture, built
between 660 and 750. The
majority of the castles
lie on the ancient trade
routes towards Medina
and Kufa. The castles
are partly rebuilt from
earlier remains and
partly new
constructions. The
function and use of the
buildings are not
totally clear, they may
have been a fortress, a
meeting place with the
Bedouins, a caravenserai
or leisure place.
The most popular castles
can be visited in one
day. Qasr Hallabat was
originally constructed
by the Roman emperor
Caracalla, demolished
and rebuilt by the
Umayyads. In the castle
146 Greek inscriptions
had been found, the site
incorporates a mosque, a
huge reservoir and
several cisterns. Well
preserved is Qasr
Kharanah with its high
walls and four corner
towers. At first glance
the construction is
fortress, but it served
most likely as a meeting
place for the Umayyad
caliphs.
The large black fortress
Qasr Azraq, used by the
Romans, Byzantines and
Umayyads, gained its
final building status by
the Ayyubids, and in the
16th century the
Ottomans stationed a
garnison here. But the
most popular occupant
was Lawrence of Arabia,
who at the beginning of
the 20th century had
here his headquarters
during the Arab Revolt
against the Ottoman
Empire.
Qasr Amra is the most
charming of the desert
castles due to its
fresco paintings. Built
by caliph Walid I as a
bathhouse, it consists
of three different
chambers and a hydraulic
structure for the water
supply. The most
impressing are the early
Islamic frescoe
paintings with varied
iconographic themes
depicting hunting and
bathing scenes,
musicians and dancers.
They represent the
formative stage of
Islamic art and
therefore Qasr Amra is
listed as an UNESCO
World Heritage Site.
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