> Um
Al-Jimal :
This strange black
city is located about 20 kilometers east of the
provincial
capital
of Mafraq, 87 kilometers from Amman, and only 10
kilometers from the Syrian border. Umm al-Jimal is now
known as the Black Oasis because of the black basalt
rock from which many of its houses, churches, barracks
and forts were built.
The precise
history of Umm al-Jimal is still unclear, but historians
believe that it was built originally by the Nabateans
around 2000 years ago. Under the Nabateans, the city
played host to a great number of trading caravans.
Indeed, the name Umm al-Jimal means "Mother of Camels"
in Arabic.
The large vacant
area in the town center was reserved for traveling
caravans stopping in Umm al-Jimal. When the Romans took
the city in the first century CE, they incorporated it
into the line of defense for Rome's Arab possessions.
The city lay only six kilometers east of the Via Nova Triana, which connected
Rome's northern and southern
Arabian holdings. Umm al-Jimal may have had as many as
10,000 inhabitants during its heyday.

During the third
century CE, it seems as though local residents faced
some major threat, as they resorted to using tombstones
and other available basalt to construct wall
fortifications.
This wall was then
refortified during the fourth century CE. Most of the
buildings of Umm al-Jimal were practical and residential
in nature, with little evidence of the systematic layout
that can be seen, for instance, at Jerash. After
surviving a number of catastrophic events including the
Persian invasion, plagues, and minor earthquakes, the
city was destroyed by a massive earthquake in 747 CE.
There are no
accommodations in either Mafraq or Umm al-Jimal.
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