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The town Madaba is well
known for its Byzantine
and Umayyad mosaics.
Popular is especially
the 6th century mosaic
map of Palestine in the
floor of the greek
orthodox St. George's
Church. Other
magnificent mosaic
masterpieces from the
Madaba area, mostly
found in old churches,
can be seen in the
Archaeological Park.
Just 30 kms from Amman
Madaba, the biblical
Medeba, is located. In
the 5th century a large
Christian community with
an own bishop had been
living here. In the 19th
century the Latin
Patriarchate of
Jerusalem started with
archaeological
researches. In 1896 the
famous map of the Holy
Land was discovered.
This map was originally
part of the floor of a
Byzantine church, built
during the reign of
emperor Justinian
527-565 AD. It is the
oldest, still existing
map of the Holy Land.
With two million pieces
of local, coloured
stone, the map depicts
hills and valleys,
villages and towns in
Palestine and the Nile
Delta. Most of the
mentioned sites are in
modern Israel, for
example, the map marks
Jericho with palm trees,
Jacob's well in Shechem,
John's baptism of Jesus
in the Jordan River. The
focus of the map is
Jerusalem, you can see
here city walls, the
Cardo and the Church of
the Holy Sepulcher. The
mosaic map was
originally around 15.6 x
6 meters large, only
about a quarter is
preserved.
Beside the Holy Land map
other marvelous mosaics
had been excavated in
Madaba, that's why the
town is known as the
"city of mosaics".
Masterpieces found in
the church of the Virgin
Mary and the Apostles,
the Church of Prophet
Elijah and the
Hippolytus Mansion. You
can watch the
masterpieces in the
Archaeological Park.
Founded in 1992 the
Mosaic School of Madaba,
the only project of its
kind in the Middle East,
trains artisans in the
art of making, repairing
and restoring mosaics.
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