Hotels in Petra
Hotels in Petra are often required for tourists who require short term accommodation. Some may want to stay at large or small hotels. Some may want to stay at high quality hotels. Some may want to stay at hotels that have a good reputation. Some may want to stay at luxury or cheap hotels. Some may want to stay at hotels that are well known.
Hotels in Petra are often required for tourists who need short term accommodation.
Petra is an archaeological site in the Arabah, Ma'an Governorate, Jordan, lying on the slope of Mount Hor in a basin among the mountains which form the eastern flank of Arabah (Wadi Araba), the large valley running from the Dead Sea to the Gulf of Aqaba. It is renowned for its rock-cut architecture. Petra is also one of the new wonders of the world.
The site remained unknown to the Western world until 1812, when it was discovered by Swiss explorer Johann Ludwig Burckhardt. It was famously described as a rose-red city half as old as time in a Newdigate prize-winning sonnet by John William Burgon. In 1985, Petra was designated a World Heritage Site.
Rekem is an ancient name for Petra and appears in Dead Sea scrolls associated with Mount Seir. Additionally, Eusebius and Jerome assert that Rekem was the native name of Petra, supposedly on the authority of Josephus. Pliny the Elder and other writers identify Petra as the capital of the Nabataeans, Aramaic-speaking Semites, and the centre of their caravan trade. Enclosed by towering rocks and watered by a perennial stream, Petra not only possessed the advantages of a fortress, but controlled the main commercial routes which passed through it to Gaza in the west, to Bosra and Damascus in the north, to Aqaba and Leuce Come on the Red Sea, and across the desert to the Persian Gulf.
Excavations have demonstrated that it was the ability of the Nabataeans
to control the water supply that led to the rise of the desert city, in effect
creating an artificial oasis. The area is visited by flash floods and archaeological
evidence demonstrates the Nabataeans controlled these floods by the use of dams,
cisterns and water conduits. These innovations stored water for prolonged periods
of drought, and enabled the city to prosper from its sale.
Although
in ancient times Petra might have been approached from the south (via Saudi Arabia
on a track leading around Jabal Haroun, Aaron's Mountain, on across the plain
of Petra), or possibly from the high plateau to the north, most modern visitors
approach the ancient site from the east. The impressive eastern entrance leads
steeply down through a dark, narrow gorge called the Siq, a natural geological
feature formed from a deep split in the sandstone rocks and serving as a waterway
flowing into Wadi Musa. At the end of the narrow gorge stands Petra's most elaborate
ruin, Al Khazneh (the Treasury), hewn into the sandstone cliff.
A little further from the Treasury, at the foot of the mountain called en-Nejr is a massive theatre, so placed as to bring the greatest number of tombs within view. At the point where the valley opens out into the plain, the site of the city is revealed with striking effect. The amphitheatre has actually been cut into the hillside and into several of the tombs during its construction. Rectangular gaps in the seating are still visible. Almost enclosing it on three sides are rose-colored mountain walls, divided into groups by deep fissures, and lined with knobs cut from the rock in the form of towers.
The History of Petra begins with the Kites and cairns of gazelle hunters going back into the acermaic neolithic. Evidence suggests that settlements had begun in and around there in the Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt. It is listed in Egyptian campaign accounts and the Amarna letters as Pel, Sela or Seir). Though the city was founded relatively late, a sanctuary existed there since very ancient times. Stations 19 through 26 of the stations list of Exodus are places associated with Petra and it is refered to there as the cleft in the rock. This part of the country was biblically assigned to the Horites, the predecessors of the Edomites.
In 106, when Cornelius Palma was governor of Syria, that part of Arabia under the rule of Petra was absorbed into the Roman Empire as part of Arabia Petraea, becoming capital. The native dynasty came to an end. But the city continued to flourish. A century later, in the time of Alexander Severus, when the city was at the height of its splendor, the issue of coinage comes to an end. There is no more building of sumptuous tombs, owing apparently to some sudden catastrophe, such as an invasion by the neo-Persian power under the Sassanid Empire.
Petra declined rapidly under Roman rule, in large part due to the revision of sea-based trade routes. In 363 an earthquake destroyed many buildings, and crippled the vital water management system. The ruins of Petra were an object of curiosity in the Middle Ages and were visited by the Sultan Baibars of Egypt towards the close of the 13th century.
The picturesque site is a popular sight and featured in various works of art such as the movies Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, Passion in the Desert, Mortal Kombat: Annihilation, Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger. It was recreated for the video games Spy Hunter (2001), Lego Indiana Jones and Sonic Unleashed and appeared in the novels Left Behind , Appointment with Death, "The Eagle in the Sand" and "The Red Sea Sharks", in The Adventures of Tintin.
hotels in petra hotels in petra hotels in petra
Hotels
in Petra
An Index with links to almost all our sites
cruises to new zealand from australia
virginia beach hotels oceanfront
Apartments for Rent in Manhattan
Hotels in Myrtle Beach South Carolina
Apartments
for Rent in Manhattan