19 lines
1.0 KiB
Markdown
19 lines
1.0 KiB
Markdown
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images = ["/2017/04/DSC_0143.jpg"]
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date = "2017-04-05T08:50:44+03:00"
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title = "Greco–Roman Ruins in Jerash"
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slug = "greco-roman-ruins-jerash"
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tags = ["Jerash","Greek","Roman"]
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categories = ["Architecture"]
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description = "Jerash is the most well-preserved of Jordan's Greco–Roman sites."
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author = "Alan Orth"
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{{< figure src="/2017/04/DSC_0143.jpg" title="Row of columns at the Oval Forum in Jerash" alt="Row of columns at the Oval Forum in Jerash" >}}
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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.
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The ruins in Jerash are one of those legacies. Complete with arches, colonnades, hippodrome, baths, theaters, temples, and more, Jerash is the most well-preserved of Jordan's Greco–Roman sites.
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