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Jerash is the best
example of a Roman
provincial city in the
Middle East, 50 kms
north of Amman. It was
initially built by
Alexander the Great in
332 BC and started to
prosper after conquered
by the Roman general
Pompey in 63 BC. Jerash,
also known as Gerasa,
was made a city of the
Decapolis. The Decapolis
was a prosperous
confederation of ten
Roman cities formed
during the first century
BC as centers of Greek
and Roman culture with
strong commercial,
political and cultural
interests.
Recent excavations
showed that Jerash was
already inhabited during
the Bronze Age, so its
heydays had been in the
2nd century with a
population of minimum
20,000. The Roman
Emperor Trajan
constructed roads
throughout the
provinces, more trade
came to Jerash and the
town prospered. To honor
the visit of Emperor
Hadrian in 130 AD, a
triumphal arch was
built. The so called
Hadrian' Arch is from
where visitors start the
Jerash tour.
You pass the Hippodrome
offering space for up to
15.000 spectators and
the impressing Oval
Plaza with 56 Ionic
columns. From here you
can walk to the Temple
of Zeus and the Temple
of Artemis, the goddess
of nature and hunt,
which columns are 12
meters high and each
drum weighs 20-40 tons.
In Jerash you find also
an 800 meters long
Colonnaded Street, two
theatres and a Nymphaeum,
the main fountain.
In the year 330, Emperor
Constantine proclaimed
Christianity as the
state religion of the
Byzantine Empire. As
consequence numerous
churches were
constructed in Jerash
and from 350 AD, a large
Christian community
lived in Jerash, and
more than thirteen
churches were built,
often with mosaic
floors, some of them are
still to see.
Due to the Persian
invasion in 614 AD
Jerash declined. The
city continued to
flourish during the
Umayyad Period, but in
746 AD, a major
earthquake destroyed
much of Jerash. During
the period of the
Crusades, some of the
monuments like the
Temple of Artemis, were
used as fortresses.
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