
PETRA
The ancient city of Petra is one of Jordan's national treasures
and by far its best known tourist attraction. Located about three
hours south of Amman, Petra is the legacy of the Nabataens, an
industrious Arab people who settled in southern Jordan more than
2000 years ago. Admired then for its refined culture, massive
architecture and ingenious complex of dams and water channels,
Petra is now a UNESCO world heritage site that enchants visitors
from all corners of the globe.
Much of Petra's appeal comes from its spectacular setting deep
inside a narrow desert gorge. The site is accessed by walking
through a kilometer long chasm (or siq), the walls of which soar
200 meters upwards. Petra's most famous monument, the Treasury,
appears dramatically at the end of the siq.
Used in the final sequence of the film "Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade",
the towering facade of the Treasury is only one of myriad archaeological wonders
to be explored at Petra.
Various
walks and climbs reveal literally hundreds of buildings, tombs,
baths, funerary halls, temples, arched gateways, colonnaded streets
and haunting rock drawings - as well as a 3000 seat open air
amphitheatre circa, a gigantic first century Monastery and a
modern archeological museum, all of which can be explored at
leisure.
A modest shrine commemorating the death of Aaron, brother of
Moses, was built in the 13th century by the Mamluke Sultan, high
a top mount Aaron in the Sharah range.
|