Petra Map & Monuments
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JORDAN -
ANCIENT TOWN OF PETRA |
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GENERAL
INFORMATION
Petra was one of the most
important cities in the Middle East, 2000 years
ago. It is located in modern day Jordan and was
the capital of the Nabataei people. It was a great
trading centre and became a very wealthy town. It
took the Romans many years to conquer as the only
way into the town is through a very narrow gorge,
approximately one kilometre in length, called
‘Wadi-Musa’. Consequently, Petra was easy to
defend and dangerous to any attacker. |
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The town is now a wilderness
inhabited by members of the Bedouin Tribe
and visiting tourists. Many of its magnificent
buildings have survived as they were carved from
the sandstone valley sides. These buildings are
decorated in great detail and clearly show how
technologically advanced the Nabataei people
were. |
The Treasury -
taken from the gorge |
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The most impressive building is
called the ‘Treasury’. Anyone visiting Petra will
not fail to be impressed at its sight as they come
out of the gorge into the open valley. It is an
immense size and eight/nine people stood shoulder
to shoulder can pass through its only entrance
without any difficulty. The rooms are very large
and they are perfectly carved out of the sandstone
(cuboid in shape). |
The
magnificent Treasury building |
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Over twenty thousand people lived
in Petra at its height and when the Romans
eventually conquered it in A .D. 105 rather than
destroy it they continued to carve buildings and
tombs into the valley sides. At the end of the
valley is ‘the nine hundred steps’. This is only
for the ‘fit and well’. The walk up these is
arduous but well worthwhile as it ends with the
view of a very large monastery, again, carved from
the sandstone cliffs. |
The monastery at the
top of the nine hundred steps |
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Many influence, are apparent in the architecture of Petra;
Assyrian, Egyptian, Hellenistic and Roman. Most of the
visible remains date from the
Roman period, yet somehow bear a unique Nabataean
stamp. It is mostly the rock-cut tombs which remain
today, though freestanding temples built of stone, the
Qasr Al-Bint Temple and the Temple of the Winged Lions
can also be seen.
1 Djin Blocks |
10 Corinthian Tomb |
19 Qasr Al-Bint |
28 High Palace of
Sacrifice |
2 Obelisk Tomb |
11 Palace Tomb |
20 Unfinished Tomb |
29 Lion
Monument |
3 Al-Siq |
12 Sextus Florentinus
Tomb |
21 Al-Habees
Museum |
30 Garden Temple
Complex |
4 The Treasury |
13 House of
Dorotheos |
22 Petra Archeological
Museum |
31 Triclinium |
5 Street of
Facades |
14 The Nymphaeum |
23 Lion Triclinium |
32 Renaissance
Tomb |
6 The Theater |
15 Colonnaded
Street |
24 Al-Deir |
33 Broken Pediment
Tomb |
7 Aneisho Tomb |
16 Byzantine
Church |
25 Turkmanian Tomb |
34 Roman Soldier
Tomb |
8 Urn Tomb |
17 Winged Lion
Temple |
26 Conway Tower |
35 Snake
Monument |
9 Silk Tomb |
18 The Arched Gate |
27 Moghar
Annassara |
36 Crusader
Fort |
The Bab Al-Siq Area As
one makes one's way through the gorge, on horseback or
on foot, to the entrance of Al-Siq or narrow defile, the
first monuments one sees are three massive Djin blocks. There are about 40
such monuments to be found in Petra. Their significance
is as yet uncertain. They are
generally thought to have been an early form of
Nabataean tomb, though their proximity to running water
may signify that they were related to the worship of
water, bearer of fertility.
Opposite the Djin blocks are two monuments, the
Obelisk Tomb and the Bab Al-Siq Triclinium, which stands
below it. Although they are found in close proximity to
one another, they appear to be unrelated, dating from
various periods and standing on a slightly different
axis. The Obelisk Tomb takes its name from the four
Obelisks which decorate its upper storey.
The Obelisk was a common Nabataean funerary symbol and clearly
demonstrates Egyptian influence. An inscription in both
Greek and Nabataean to be found opposite it, refers to a
family tomb built by Abdmank
which may well be the Obelisk tomb itself.
The Bab Al-Siq Triclinium, constructed at a later
date and more classical in style, is the first of
approximately 100 similar monuments to be found
throughout the site. These were rock-carved rooms with
benches running around three sides of their interior,
situated near tombs, so as to act as dining rooms for the funerary
banquets which appear to have been an essential ritual
in burying and commemorating the dead.
There are many large tombs in the Outer Siq, some of
them bearing obvious traces of earthquake damage. The Tomb of the 17 Graves clearly
demonstrates how the graves were cut into the rock
floor. Also noteworthy are the five small commemorative
Obelisks and two Nabataean inscriptions carved onto the
walls.
As the Outer Siq opens out, the Street of Facades becomes visible.
Whole streets, 4 rows, one above the other, of Assyrian
type monuments with double bands of crow-step decoration
run along the cliff face. It isn't known whether these
served as houses or tombs but they appear to be of an
early date.
Beyond the Street of Facades lies the Theater, which was constructed
in the early 1st century AD by Nabataeans and enlarged
and improved by the Romans
shortly after their annexation of the Kingdom in 106 AD.
This they did by ruthlessly gouging away a street of
houses or tombs in order to extend the rear of the
auditorium, which could then accommodate 3000 people.
This also improved the acoustics of the theater and
supported a drain, which took the run-off water around
the sides of the theater. The standard Roman-design
theater today lies open to the Outer Siq, but would
originally have been enclosed by a wall and completely
cut off from the street.
The
Treasury "A beam of stronger light breaks in
at the close of the dark perspective, and opens to view, half seen at first
through the tall narrow opening, columns, statues, and
cornices of a light and finished taste, as if fresh from the chisel,
without the tints or weather stains of age, and executed
in a stone of a pale rose color, which was warmed at the
moment we came in sight of them with full light of the
morning sun".
Little has changed the Treasury since the Hon.
Charles Irby and Mr. James Mangles, commanders in the
British Royal Navy, described their first sight of it in
1818. "We do not know with what
It is justly the most
famous monument in Petra, perhaps from the impact
of the first glimpse of that luminous strip at the end
of the towering penumbra of the Siq.
Suddenly we emerge into a natural courtyard face to
face with the glowing perfection of the Treasury. Its
elaborately carved facade is
alive with a cast of Nabataean deities and mythological
characters - equestrian figures of the Dioscuri (Castor
and Pollux) whose role in the Greek myths was to guide
the souls of the dead to the Elysian Fields; dancing
Amazons wielding axes; winged Victories; Medusa heads;
eagles and various mythical creatures. All are funerary
symbols.
At the center of the
tholos - the round section between the broken
pediment at the top of the facade - is the eroded relief
figure of a goddess holding a cornucopia in her left
arm. This has been identified as Al-Uzza, the great goddess of
Petra, who was commonly assimilated with the Greek Aphrodite, goddess of love; here
she includes the attributes of Tyche, the Greek goddess of
fortune, and of Isis, the
supreme goddess of the Egyptian pantheon who, as the
wife of Osiris, also presided
over the underworld and the spirits of the dead.
Though all the figures are eroded, the flowers,
leaves and fruits on the friezes, pediment and capitals
still look, miraculously,
almost as crisp as the day they were carved.
In Arabic the Treasury is called El-Khazneh, or Khaznet Far'oun,
Pharaoh's Treasury, from an ancient
myth that treasure had been concealed here by a
powerful black magician, popularly identified with a
wicked and fabulously wealthy Pharaoh: who else but he
who proceeded the Pharaoh who drove prophet Moses (pbuh)
and his followers out of Egypt and chased them here to
Petra?! At this point, it seems, the Pharonic treasure
had become an impediment.
Not this monument alone, but the whole of Petra, was
believed to be a storehouse
of Pharaoh's wealth, deposited here by deep magic; but
this, the most sumptuous monument, must surely have
housed his greatest riches. The urn at the top was
deemed the most likely repository, and every Bedouin who
owned a gun would take a shot at it as he passed, in the
vivid hope that if he hit the right spot all the
treasures of Pharaoh would cascade down upon him. The
result is a sadly battered urn and not a whiff of
treasure.
So ferociously did the Bedouin of the 19th century
believe in the existence of treasure, and in magical
powers, that they suspected
all western travelers of being magicians who had come to
spirit away the hidden wealth out of reach of
themselves, the rightful heirs and owners.
"Nor are they satisfied with watching the stranger's
steps", as Burckhardt wrote in 1812: "They believe that
it is sufficient for a true magician to have seen and
observed the spot where the treasures are bidden... in
order to be able afterwards, at his ease, to command the
guardian of the treasure to set the whole before him".
Small wonder that those early visitors were given
such an unwelcoming reception.
The Treasury's original purpose remains elusive -
except that it was not a Treasury. Some scholars believe
it was a royal tomb, with the king's burial place in the
small chamber at the back; others, a temple, pointing to
its temple-like facade and the lack of burial holes -
for them the rear chamber was the sanctuary, complete
with ritual ablution basin.
Yet others suggest it was a memorial mausoleum, perhaps for the
cult of the deified Obodas I.
The funerary symbolism of the carvings on the facade
certainly points to some association with the dead.
The date of the Treasury is also unclear, and has to
be assessed on stylistic grounds, providing yet more
theories. It is tempting to suppose that its ornate
carving points to a later period, but Petra has proved a
graveyard for such neat solutions.
Some scholars suggest around 25 AD, under Aretas IV who initiated much
construction and urban planning, and who may have
brought craftsmen from Alexandria. The consensus now
favors the reign of Aretas III
Philhellene (86-62 BC), a time of great expansion
and exposure to Hellenistic ideas.
Whenever it was carved, and for whichever Nabataean
king, Hellenistic ideas were here brilliantly
transformed into a design that kept a distinctively
Nabataean flavor. And whatever its purpose, the sitting
of the Treasury at the end of the forbidding twilight of
Al-Siq was clearly designed to
strike wonder into all who entered the Nabataean
capital.
The Royal Tombs From
the theater a stairway leads to the Royal Tombs set into
the rock-face of the Jabal Al-Khubtha. These tombs,
thought to be those of several Nabataean kings, are
certainly amongst the most impressive of the 500 tombs
to be found in Petra.
The Urn Tomb was probably
constructed around 70 AD. It is preceded by a deep
courtyard with colonnades on two sides. High up in the
facade there are 3 niches which give on to small burial
chambers. Their inaccessibility would have made them
relatively safe from tomb robbers.
Inside there is a massive single chamber which may
originally have served as a triclinium for funerary
banquets, but which was adapted in 446 AD to serve as a
Byzantine church, the vaults
of which can still be seen below the tombs. to compare
this scene ", they added; "perhaps there is nothing in the world that
resembles it".
The small Silk Tomb is
remarkable for the swirls of different colored rock
which make up its facade. Then comes the Corinthian Tomb, which combines
various elements of both the Nabataean and the classical
architectural styles. Next to it is the broad, 3-storey
high Palace Tomb, interesting
in that its lower part was cut from the rock, while some
of its upper storey was constructed with masonry when
the cliff itself proved to be too low.
En route to the Sextus
Florentinus Tomb, it is worth noting the large
rock-carved cistern which served the city by storing
water piped from another huge cistern near the modern
Petra Forum hotel, a considerable distance away.
The Sextus Florentinus Tomb, constructed in 130 AD,
is one of the few tombs which can be accurately dated.
Over the doorway a Latin
inscription informs us it was constructed for
Sextus, Roman Governor of the Province of Arabia, by his
son at his father's specific request.
It too combines Nabataean and Roman elements,
although unfortunately it has been badly eroded. It is
interesting that this high-ranking Roman official should
have wanted a rock-cut tomb in typically Nabataean
style.
The City Center The
first thing to be seen in the city center is the remains
of the Nymphaeum, standing in
the shade of a tree. Very little is left, but one can
imagine from similar monuments elsewhere (the Nymphaeum
in Jerash, for example) what this public fountain, with
plays of water to delight both the ear and the eye,
would have looked like.
It was situated at the confluence of two
watercourses, dedicated to the water nymphs and was
probably one of the improvements made to the city after
the Roman annexation.
A short way beyond the Nymphaeum, the Colonnaded Street begins. Only
a short stretch remains of the 6 meter wide paved road,
which also seems to have been constructed shortly after
the Roman annexation of Petra to replace an earlier
Nabataean track.
We should imagine the street as running through an
important commercial section of the town, with shady
porticoes on each side. The hillsides on both sides of
the street would at the time have been covered with
buildings serving a variety of purposes. The Colonnaded
street led past the Temple of the
Winged Lions on the northern bank of the stream,
which was crossed at that point by a bridge over the
wadi (valley).
The temple is at present under excavation, but it has
already been established that it was built around 27 AD
and was probably dedicated to the main Nabataean Goddess
Al-Uzza, the consort of the
Chief God, Dushara.
Some workshops for metal and stone have been found in
the complex and these were probably in use later in the
1st century AD when the temple was remodeled. The
stone-built temple was totally destroyed in the
earthquake of 363 AD.
The Colonnaded Street ends at the
Arched Gate, probably built in the 2nd century
AD, after the completion of the street, to act as a
ceremonial entrance to the sacred precinct (temenos) of
the Qasr Al-Bint Temple.
The triple arched gate, which would originally have
been closed with huge wooden doors, is of standard
Greco-Roman design, but decorated with zoomorphic and
geometric motifs showing marked Nabataean features. It
is an interesting example of the blend of different
cultures.
Once through the Arched Gate one is standing within
the sacred precinct of what is today known as the Qasr
Al-Bint Temple. This is the only substantial stone-built
structure in Petra still standing. Constructed some time
around 30 BC - 40 AD, it was built to impress.
Set upon a raised podium, its massive 23 m high walls
still dominate the precinct, which also housed an
open-air altar. It was the most
important temple of the town, dedicated to
Dushara, the chief God of the Nabataeans, who later
became assimilated with the more familiar Greek god of
wine, Dionysus, especially important in Petra due to the
custom of funerary banquets where wine would have been
drunk.
Inside, the temple is divided into 3 rooms of which
the middle room would have served as the holy of holies. This would have
had a raised platform bearing a representation of the
god Dushara. The typical Nabataean way of representing
their deities was by a stone god
block (betyle) with a stylized portrayal of the
eyes, nose and mouth.
Later, under Greco-Roman influence, they began to
depict their gods in statue
form. We know from other sources that the
interior of Dushara's temple gleamed with the many gold
offerings, which filled it. The temple was damaged in
the late 3rd century AD, but, remarkably, the main walls
remained standing in spite of several subsequent
earthquakes.
Al-Habees The small but
interesting museum is to be
found in an unusual Nabataean structure with 5 windows,
set into the hillside of Al-Habees. Beyond the museum,
on the other side of the hill, is situated the Habees High Place.
This has all the standard facilities of a high place;
an altar, benches, a water cistern and approach
stairway, but on a small scale, suggesting that it was
perhaps a private place of worship.
It commands breathtaking views over the Wadi Sayyagh,
one of Petra's most beautiful wadis, especially in
spring and autumn. Some was down the wadi is to be found
a stone quarry which the Nabataeans exploited.
On the summit of Al-Habees, is situated a 12th
century AD Crusader fortress.
Continuing around the hillside one comes across the Columbarium, an intriguing
Nabataean tomb fitted with hundreds of shallow niches,
the purpose of which remains uncertain.
Shortly after this, and visible from the Qasr Al-Bint
below, is the Unfinished Tomb
which clearly demonstrates the Nabataeans' technique of
construction, excavating their rock-cut buildings from
the top and working downwards.
High Place of
Sacrifice The steep half-hour climb from the
theater up to the High Place of Sacrifice on the summit
of the Attuf Ridge is well worth the effort. Paths and
stairways, which were part of the original Nabataean
processional way, lead upwards through spectacular
mountain scenery until the long, flat summit is reached.
The most immediately obvious monuments as one reaches
the top are the two 7 m high rock
obelisks which were made by carving away the
surface of the mountain to leave only these 2
protuberances; a formidable undertaking.
The obelisks stand some 30 m apart on an east/west
alignment and probably represent the 2 most important Nabataean gods,
Dushara and his consort Al-Uzza. Across the gully lies
the High Place of Sacrifice, the best preserved of all such sacred
places of the ancient world.
This may have been created by the Nabataeans, as the
high quality of the stone work would indicate, or it may
date back to their predecessors, the Edomites. The rock
was leveled to form a shallow courtyard with benches
(triclinia) on the north, east and south sides facing
the altar platform, on which animal sacrifices were
made.
These sacrifices represented the renewal of the close
relationship between man and his gods and blood was, of
course, a symbol of life. A betyle probably once stood
on the top of the altar platform.
A nearby cistern would have provided the water
necessary to the ritual. After enjoying the sensational
views over the never-ending
folds of hills, one may descend to the city center by a
different processional way, which follows the Wadi
Farasa.
The first monument of interest is the Lion Monument. The lion was
associated with the goddess Al-Uzza and this fountain
would have provided refreshment for the pilgrims
following this processional way up to the High Place.
The water would appear to have spouted from the
Lion's mouth and it was then carried down the hillside
through the rock-cut channel visible alongside the
stairway.
At the bottom of the stairway one reaches the Garden Temple Complex. On an
upper terrace stand a hall and a cistern which once held
water brought from the springs 4 km away. This water was
subsequently distributed throughout the city center by
means of a network of cisterns, channels and pipes.
The portico of the temple on the lower terrace is
formed by 2 engaged and 2 round free-standing columns,
examples of which are rarely found in Petra. Many small
wall-niches lead us on to the Roman
Soldier Tomb with its triclinium opposite it.
Although now separate, these 2 monuments would once
have been joined by a porticoed courtyard to form a
sepulchral complex. In the niches of the tomb's facade
there are fragments of figures in Roman military dress,
which give the tomb its name.
These figures, the size of the tomb and the classical
style of its architecture would suggest it was built
after the Roman annexation of 106 AD for a person of
considerable importance.
The funerary banqueting hall (triclinium) opposite
is notable as having the only
carved interior decoration in Petra, with fluted engaged
half-columns. The colors of the natural rock are also
amongst the most striking in the city.
Nearby are the Renaissance
Tomb and the Broken Pediment
Tomb. The path then passes many other tombs and
houses set out in streets of different levels before
reaching the city center.
Al-Deir (The
Monastery) The modern name of Al-Deir comes
from the fact that the Nabataean structure was perhaps
used by Christians in the Byzantine period. However, the
processional way, which we follow upwards from the
restaurant near the museum, through the Wadi Al-Deir for
an hour, is Nabataean.
It is a tiring climb made
worthwhile not only by the other monuments to be seen en
route, but also by the mountain scenery and splendid
views. After a short walk one reaches the Lion Triclinium set in a small
side wadi. It is so called because of the 2 badly eroded
lions carved either side of the doorway.
Lions, it will be recalled, were associated, in
Nabataean sculpture, with the goddess Al-Uzza. The
higher one climbs the more impressive the views become
until one finally emerges at the
Hermitage, chambers excavated in the rock,
decorated with many carved crosses.
From this point there is a magnificent view back to
the city center and the Royal Tombs. A short climb
through the narrow passage brings one out suddenly onto
the large open area in front of Al-Deir where no doubt
the faithful congregated after completing the
processional walk.
Al-Deir itself is cut into the mountainside but not
dominated by it. One really needs to see a human figure
at its base to appreciate the huge
scale of the largest facade in Petra.
The doorway alone is over 8 m high. The temple/tomb
is devoid of decoration, but striking in its simplicity
and magnitude. It was no doubt an
extremely important site of pilgrimage with its
carefully orchestrated processional way terminating in
the vast open area in front. A short way beyond, one is
rewarded by magnificent views
from a new perspective in the direction of the Wadi
Araba to the west.
Siq Al-Barid or Little
Petra The Siq Al-Barid is located to the north
of Petra, only a 10 minute drive away. A classical
temple stands guard outside the miniature siq which
would appear to have been an
important suburb of the city of Petra, situated
at the point where several ancient caravan routes met,
linking Wadi Araba with Gaza, Egypt and the
Mediterranean coast.
The narrow file, only some 350 m long, is crammed with tombs, temples,
triclinia, houses, water channels and cisterns, in
brief, a "Little Petra". Of
particular note are the remains of painted frescoes on plaster dating
from the 1st century AD, which are to be found in one of
the biclinia. |