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Ajloun:
73
km north of Amman, and a short journey northwest from
Jerash, through a beautiful
pine-forest and olive groves, brings you to the town of
Ajloun, where Hadrian stayed over the winter of 129-30
AD, and built himself an arch well outside the town,
leaving unbonded its sides for future city walls to come
out to meet it.
Here you will find
the Castle of Ajloun or Qalaat Errabadh (Arabic for
"Hilltop Castle"), from which there is a splendid view
westwards into the Jordan Valley. It looks like a
Crusader fortress, but it was built by Muslims in
1184-85 as a military fort and buffer to protect the
region from invading Crusader forces. It was built on
the orders of the local
governor, Ezz Eddin Osama bin
Munqethe, a nephew of the Ayyubid leader Salahuddin
Al-Ayyoubi
(Saladin),
as a direct retort to the new Latin castle of Belvoir
(Kawkab El-Hawa) on the opposite side of the valley
between the Tiberias and Besan, and as a base to develop
and control the iron mines of Ajloun.
This superb
example of Arab and Islamic architecture was built as a
rectangle with four square towers and an entrance on the
south side dominating a wide stretch of the north Jordan
Valley and passages to it. From its hilltop position,
the Castle of Ajloun protected the
communication
routes between
south
Jordan and Syria, and was one of a chain of forts, which
lit beacons at night to pass signals from the Euphrates
as far as Cairo.
Two years after it
was completed the fortress's original purpose had
already been outlived, for Salahuddin defeated the
Crusaders at the battle of the Horns of Hattin in 1189,
which marked the beginning of the end of their
occupation of the Holy Land.
In 1214-15 the
Castle of Ajloun was enlarged by Aybak bin Abdullah,
majordomo
of the Caliph Al-Muazham Isa; in 1260 it fell
to the Mongols, but was later rebuilt by the Egyptian Mamluks. No longer needed for military purposes, it was
used as an administrative center responsible to
Damascus. Some of the stones
with which the castle was built have crosses carved into
them,
giving credence to a tradition, recounted by a 13th
century Arab historian that: "an ancient monastery once
stood on the site, inhabited by a Christian named
Ajloun; when the monastery fell into ruin, the castle
took its place and the name of the monk".
The castle today
is beautifully preserved and is a popular attraction for
foreigners & Jordanians alike. The structures, towers,
chambers, galleries and staircases that form part of the
town as well as the beautiful scenery that surrounds the
hills nearby will captivate you.
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