Jump to content

Al-Muwaqqar

Coordinates: 31°48′56″N 36°5′39″E / 31.81556°N 36.09417°E / 31.81556; 36.09417
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Fayenatic london (talk | contribs) at 17:02, 12 December 2022 (Copying from Category:Umayyad palaces to Category:Umayyad architecture in Jordan using Cat-a-lot). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Al-Muwaqqar
الموقر
District
Location of district in Amman
Location of district in Amman
Map
Coordinates: 31°48′56″N 36°5′39″E / 31.81556°N 36.09417°E / 31.81556; 36.09417
Country Jordan
GovernorateAmman Governorate
Time zoneUTC + 2

Al-Muwaqqar (Template:Lang-ar) is a district in the Amman Governorate of north-western Jordan.[1] The village contains the scant ruins of an Umayyad palace, the Qasr al-Muwaqqar, one of the desert castles. Little remains of the palace today except several acanthus leaf capitals and gauge of a water reservoir.[2]

The district is the headquarters of the 3rd Armored Division and a police training center. Most of the families which are staying in the region are from Bani Sakhr, like Al-Khraisha, Al-Arabid, Al-Jbour, Al-Qudahh.

Archaeology: Qasr al-Muwaqqar

The village of contains the ruins of an Umayyad complex, the Qasr al-Muwaqqar, a qasr-type fortified palace also known as a desert castle. Almost nothing remains of the palace today except several acanthus-leaf capitals and[2] a water level gauge for a palace cistern, inscribed with Kufic signs which indicate a maximum level of over thirty feet (c. 10 metres), very impressive for the arid climate of the area.[3]

Two distinct qusur, Muwaqqar and Mushash

Despite some name confusion, which combined the two names into one, the following are two distinct Umayyad sites which contain qusur (plural of qasr): al-Muwaqqar and Qasr al-Mushash.[4] They lay 19.4 km apart on the historical caravan route between Amman and Azraq via Qusayr 'Amra, on which all these localities acted as way stations.[4]

See also

References

  1. ^ Maplandia world gazetteer
  2. ^ a b Al-Muwaqqar at AtlasTours.net
  3. ^ Jordan's Desert Castles, Aramco World magazine, March 1963, pp. 10-13 (see p. 11)
  4. ^ a b Bartl, Karin (2016). McPhillips, Stephen; Wordsworth, Paul D. (eds.). Water management in desert regions: Early Islamic Qasr Mushash. University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 50-68 [see p. 63]. ISBN 9780812292763. Retrieved 19 July 2019. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)