Life-Link & UNESCO ASPnet Pilot Project 2007/08: Field visit to Petra |
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Often described as the eighth wonder of the ancient world, it is without doubt Jordans most valuable treasure and greatest tourist attraction. It is a vast, unique city, carved into the sheer rock face by the Nabataeans, an industrious Arab people who settled here more than 2000 years ago, turning it into an important junction for the silk, spice and other trade routes that linked China, India and southern Arabia with Egypt, Syria, Greece and Rome. Entrance to the city is through the Siq, a narrow gorge, over 1 kilometre in length, which is flanked on either side by soaring, 80 metres high cliffs. Just walking through the Siq is an experience in itself. The colours and formations of the rocks are dazzling. As you reach the end of the Siq you will catch your first glimpse of Al-Khazneh (Treasury). This is an awe-inspiring experience. A massive façade, 30m wide and 43m high, carved out of the sheer, dusky pink, rock-face and dwarfing everything around it. It was carved in the early 1st century as the tomb of an important Nabataean king and represents the engineering genius of these ancient people. The Treasury is just the first of the many wonders that make up Petra. You will need at least four or five days to really explore everything here. As you enter the Petra valley you will be overwhelmed by the natural beauty of this place and its outstanding architectural achievements. There are hundreds of elaborate rock-cut tombs with intricate carvings - unlike the houses, which were destroyed mostly by earthquakes, the tombs were carved to last throughout the afterlife and 500 have survived, empty but bewitching as you file past their dark openings. Here also is a massive Nabataean-built, Roman-style theatre,
which could seat 3,000 people. There are obelisks, temples, sacrificial altars
and colonnaded streets, and high above, overlooking the valley, is the
impressive Ad-Deir Monastery a flight of 800 rock cut steps takes you there. Inside the site, several artisans from the town of Wadi Musa and a nearby Bedouin settlement have set up small stalls selling local handicrafts, such as pottery and Bedouin jewellery and bottles of striated multi-coloured sands from the area.
It
is not permitted for motorized vehicles to enter the site. But if you
dont want to walk, you can hire a horse or a horse-drawn carriage to take
you through the one kilometre Siq. For the elderly and/or handicapped, the
Visitors' Centre, close to the entrance of the Siq, will issue a special
permit (at an extra fee), for the carriage to go inside Petra to visit the
main attractions. Once inside the site, you can hire a donkey, or for the
more adventurous, a camel - both come with handlers and take designated
routes throughout the site. The Crusaders constructed a fort there in the 12th century, but soon withdrew, leaving Petra to the local people until the early 19th century, when it was rediscovered by the Swiss explorer Johann Ludwig Burckhardt in 1812. |
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Horse-drawn carriages are a great way to get around if you don't feel up to walking. |
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Text: http://www.visitjordan.com/MajorAttractions/Petra/tabid/63/Default.aspx
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