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Umm Quais, once known as
Gadara, is a ruined
Greco-Roman city, where
visitors have an amazing
view over the Sea of
Galilee and the Golan
Heights. Already
mentioned in the Bible,
in Umm Quais the famous
miracle of the Gadarene
swine took place. Jesus
was healing a demoniac,
cast the demons in a
herd of swines which ran
down into the Sea of
Galilee (Mathew
8:28-34).
Since the 7th century BC
Gadara was settled, due
to the close location to
trade routes between
Syria and Palestine.
First under Ptolemic,
later Seleucid rule, the
Roman took over in 63
BC. Gadara became a
member of the Decapolis
cities, renowned as a
cultural centre with a
cosmopolitan atmosphere.
The poet Meleagros
compared it even with
Athens. It was the home
of several classical
poets and philosophers,
including Theodorus,
founder of a rhetorical
school in Rome. Gadara
continued to be a great
and important city
during Byzantine
Christian times with a
seat of a bishop. With
the conquest of the
Arabs, following the
Battle of Yarmouk in
636, it came under
Muslim rule. Largely
destroyed by an
earthquake around 747,
the city was abandoned.
Umm Qais has impressive
ancient remains, such as
the stunning black
basalt theatre with
space for 3000 visitors,
the basilica and
adjacent courtyard
strewn with carved black
sarcophagi, the
colonnaded main street
and a side street lined
with shops, an
underground mausoleum,
two baths and a
Nymphaeum. Highlight is
the view over 3
countries – Jordan,
Israel and Syria.
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