Details, Explanation and Meaning About Jerash

Jerash Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

Jerash (ancient "Antioch-on-the-Chrysorhoas", also known as Gerasa) was a city of the Graceo-Roman Decapolis, its ruins now located in the Gilead region of northwest Jordan.

The origins of the city are in the Iron Age and even a Bronze Age predecessor. The Graceo-Roman originated in the 2nd century BC; after 63 BC it was a city of the Roman Empire. Initially it was part of the province of Syria but in AD 106 the Romans annexed the Nabataean kingdom and created a new province called Arabia and including both Gerasa and Philadelphia (modern Amman).

The city finally reached a size of about 80 ha within its walls. The site was largely abondonned from at least the 12th century AD until a small Circassion settlement was established in the late 19th century. The result has been spectacular survival of the ruins. Excavation and restoration has been almost continuous since the 1920s.

There are a large number of striking monuments: Hadrian's Arch, a circus/ hippodrome, two immense temples (to Zeus and Artemis), the nearly unique Oval Piazza with a fine colonnade around it, a long colonnaded street, two theatres (the Large South Theatre and smaller North Theatre), two baths, a scatter of small temples and an almost complete circuit of city walls. In its later history, Chritianity came to dominate religion and is represented by at least 14 churches, many with superb mosaic floors.

A key moment in its history would have been the visit by the Emperor Hadrian (AD 117-138) in 127-128. A remarkable Latin inscription records a religious dedication set up by members of the imperial mounted bodyguard "wintering" there. Soon after, a local worthy paid for the construction of the great Arch of Hadrian on the south side of the city on the road coming in from Philadelphia (Amman).

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