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Within an hour's drive
from Madaba along the
King's Way, you find
Machaerus, the hilltop
stronghold of Herod the
Great, King of Judea.
His son Herod Antipas
inherited the fortress.
He ordered here the
beheading of John the
Baptist after Salome's
fateful dance.
The fortress Machaerus
was originally built by
the Hasmonean king
Alexander Jannaeus
around 90 BC, destroyed
by the Romans and
rebuilt by Herod the
Great in 30 BC to be
used as a military base
in his territories east
of the Jordan River. His
successor was his son
Herod Antipas, well
known for hos role
leading to the death of
John the Baptist.
Antipas decided to
divorce and marry the
wife of his brother,
Herodias. John the
Baptist critized in the
public this behaviour,
so Herod Antipas
imprisoned him at
Machaerus. After
Herodias' daughter
Salome danced before the
king she was rewarded
with the death of John
the Baptist.
In the course of history
Jewish rebels took
control over the
fortress during the
First Jewish Revolt,
defeated by the Roman
army in the 70s the
fortress was destroyed,
leaving only the
foundations intact. The
remains are today some
ruins of the Herodian
palace, including rooms,
a large courtyard, and
an elaborate bath, with
fragments of the mosaic
floor. From here you
have a panoramic view
over the Dead Sea and
the surrounding areas.
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