alt="Graffiti with Arabic inscription depicting someone putting trash in a trash can"/> <figcaption>
<h4>Graffiti in downtown Amman appeals to the faithful</h4>
</figcaption>
</figure>
<p>There is a popular notion that cleanliness is an important part of the Islamic faith, though you wouldn’t know it from walking around Jordan. I have never seen people throw coffee cups, half-eaten sandwiches, tissues, etc on the street so carelessly—and often times with such <em>finesse</em>—as here in Jordan.</p>
<ahref='https://picturingjordan.com/2017/07/cleanliness-comes-from-faith/'>Read more →</a>
</article>
<articleclass="blog-post">
<header>
<h2class="blog-post-title"dir="auto"><ahref="https://picturingjordan.com/2017/06/emperor-hadrians-arch-jerash/">Emperor Hadrian’s Arch in Jerash</a></h2>
<pclass="blog-post-meta"><timedatetime="2017-06-13T15:24:57+03:00">Tue Jun 13, 2017</time> by Alan Orth in
alt="The Arch of Hadrian welcomes you to Jerash"/> <figcaption>
<h4>The Arch of Hadrian welcomes you to Jerash</h4>
</figcaption>
</figure>
<p>There are apparently two arches built around 130 CE to honor Roman Emperor Hadrian—one in <ahref="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arch_of_Hadrian_(Athens)">Athens</a> and one in <ahref="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arch_of_Hadrian_(Jerash)">Jerash</a>. The former is undoubtedly more studied, but the latter is objectively more beautiful! Maybe it’s the color of the stones in the afternoon light, the unconventional architectural features, or just the sheer size of it.</p>
<ahref='https://picturingjordan.com/2017/06/emperor-hadrians-arch-jerash/'>Read more →</a>
</article>
<articleclass="blog-post">
<header>
<h2class="blog-post-title"dir="auto"><ahref="https://picturingjordan.com/2017/04/greco-roman-ruins-jerash/">Greco–Roman Ruins in Jerash</a></h2>
<pclass="blog-post-meta"><timedatetime="2017-04-05T08:50:44+03:00">Wed Apr 05, 2017</time> by Alan Orth in
alt="Row of columns at the Oval Forum in Jerash"/> <figcaption>
<h4>Row of columns at the Oval Forum in Jerash</h4>
</figcaption>
</figure>
<p>Jordan’s location in the geographical “near east” has exposed the country to dozens of civilizations over the course of history. Over the last three thousand years alone this region has experienced the coming and going of the Persian, Greek, Roman, Nabataean, Byzantine, and Ottoman—to name a few—empires, the legacies of which are often still visible today.</p>
<ahref='https://picturingjordan.com/2017/04/greco-roman-ruins-jerash/'>Read more →</a>
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