Posts tagged “Byzantine Ruins

Petra.46 – The Church

As you see two shots above, we’re now just downhill from the Blue Church, under that roof. Which I assume is there to protect these mosaics, which are pretty cool when you think how long they’ve held up in this climate :-).


Petra.45 – The Blue Church

We’ll be showing you some Byzantine ruins today and tomorrow, still following more or less the sequence in which I saw and photographed things after I left the overlook above “The Treasury.” You can see why they call this the blue church :-). In two of the shots below you’ll see a modern tent-like rooftop, which covers what seems to be the main church – check the map and you’ll see these are just next to each other. Mosaics from beneath that roof coming tomorrow :-). In another shot, you’ll see the cliff face with the “Royal Tombs,” as in one of the photos I showed yesterday. I also mis-stated a bit yesterday: in the first photo below, you’ll see another ruin between these columns and the mountain — that’s also the Winged Lion Temple.


Jerash.10 – Byzantine Church Ruins

It’s possible I mis-labeled the above photo, but I’m quite confident it came from the same hillside as the Fountain Courtyard and all those other churches named after saints, just above the Cathedral. Ditto all the other pics here, although many of them are looking out through columns at other buildings you’ll recognize – Hippodrome, Hadrian’s Arch, South Theater, etc.


Jerash.9 – Artemis’s Temple

 


Jerash.8 – Byzantine Cathedral

On the map (last Jerash post), the cathedral and its uphill neighbors, the fountain court and the several churches named after various saints, look close together. As the photo just below shows, though, in fact these are built on a hill. I hope I’ve properly identified and grouped the photos from all these Byzantine-era ruins up and down this hillside 🙂


Jerash.7 – An Orientation

Call me anal-retentive or obsessive, but I just hate to throw photos at you that I can’t identify better than just “Jerash.” If these Jerash photos are just lovely visuals for you, then do simply enjoy, and ignore the text. But a few folks have posted comments or written me emails with delight at learning of the existence of this fascinating site. Like me, they’d never heard of it.

I’ve devoted more time now to actually sorting and combing through all my Jerash photos, and decided that I’d like to give you a better orientation. You may not believe it, but I’ve even deleted quite a few photos…and still have a lot left to show you! This city grew during Roman times because there was a local mine, and I think it was on important trade routes that went from Petra northward toward the truly important hub in Damascus. It’s not as massive as Petra – I spent a bit less than three hours there, whereas I spent more than 17 inside Petra.

I’ve decided in this post to show you a map and to orient you a bit more. So far I’ve shown you the southern areas, where you enter the compound now: the grand entry at Hadrian’s Arch, the expansively open and moody Hippodrome, some of the columns and atmosphere of the Lower & Upper temples to Zeus. As you see from the map here, these are all one small corner at the southern end of this ancient city. From the hill of the Zeus temple (behind which is the South Theater), the main path takes you down to the Forum, a vast open oval plaza defined by columns which are largely still quite intact. From the Forum, you walk north into the Cardo Maximus, a long colonnaded street which would have been full of life and vendors, temples and  businesses back in Jerash’s heyday, I suppose. In Jerash.5 I showed you precisely this: the Forum with the Cardo Maximus stretching off through the ancient city to the north and east, and today we’ll show you some of that.

Today that Cardo Maximus main street is full of tourists and tour groups, with the occasional food stall selling Potato-Corn. 😊 (Which I chose not to sample, tempted though I was.) This is where it grew very complicated for me to identify which building I was looking at. In some cases I snapped a photo of the info signs as I took photos. Thus I knew, for example, that clusters of photos taken around the same time as I snapped the signs for the Temple to Artemis, The Cathedral, and the Fountain Court are likely related to those items. You have those to look forward to in future posts – they’re later on the route. Today, we’re orienting you and myself.

I do need to add a caveat, though, that the names I’ve given these photos are likely accurate, but certainly not guaranteed. In cany case, I do hope you enjoy all these Jerash pics and posts. My current plan is try to post the rest of Jerash and Amman before I return for the final swathe of Petra photos. Do add Jordan to your bucket list. And when you go, do plan more than a day in Petra, and  at least a day to explore Jerash and Amman as I did. And get a true printed guidebook before you go – that was one of my very best decisions, and I can recommend Lonely Planet which really helped guide me well in both Petra and Jerash…and also Amman. That evening rainy-day bike stop at the book store the day before I flew out was well worth it! 😊

Last tip: if you really do want to follow this and imagine it as an arm chair virtual visit, then it’s definitely best to view these on a full computer with a large screen in the desktop view. This way, you can easily click on the link for “Jerash” at the bottom of each post (if you’re viewing this on a computer now, it’s right below this – Jerash, then Jordan) — and then you’ll see only the Jerash photos without having to sort through any other series or posts. I do that myself when I need to check what I’ve already shown you. Phones are PERFECT if your goal is just “get a quick sense of what Paul’s been seeing.”  But on a phone you won’t know much detail even if I’ve shared it, because often the answer is visible only on what wordpress calls the “full site,” in a link you’ll find at the very bottom of your phone screen, probably 😊.


Jerash.2

So Jerash is certainly not as enormous nor as awe-inspiring as Petra, but it’s pretty darn big and has a remarkable number of fairly-intact structures, and simply gazillions of gorgeous columns, beautifully weathered (as in below)and with lovely hilly backdrops (ibid). As an intermezzo before your armchair tour-guide returns you to Petra, not too shabby, eh? Oh,and btw, as in Petra, succeeding generations of empires also built stuff here, so you’ll see some Byzantine churches, and some of the shot below is Byzantine. But note, in the shot below, that you are also seeing Hadrian’ Arch, which is the entance to the whole complex — it’s near the middle, just left of the tall column. I’ve conveniently placed another photo taken from inside, but closer, so you can look for the right roofline profile :-).