Al-Joufa Mountain | |
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Coordinates: 31°57′18.5″N 35°57′6.3″E / 31.955139°N 35.951750°E | |
Country | Jordan |
Al-Joufa Mountain is an area in Jordan's capital Amman, south of the Roman amphitheater, and one of the seven mountains that comprise the city. In 1962 Dhaifallah Al-Hamoud, then Secretary of Amman, named it Algeria Mountain to honor the Algerian Revolution.[1]
Despite its proximity to the Roman amphitheater no ancient monuments have been found there to indicate its history, as is the case with the mountain opposite it, Al-Qalaa; Al-Joufa overlooks the royal palaces of Raghadan and Basman from its northern slope.[2] The first Jordanian cabinet building was located at the foot of Al-Joufa Mountain, opposite the Amman Municipality Public Library building, but it was removed.[3] Al-Joufa's main landmarks include the first triangle – an intersection of several streets – near Prince Hassan Secondary School, the middle triangle that represents Al-Joufa's commercial heart, and the last triangle that leads to Um Tineh, the former Druze neighborhood, and connects the last triangle between Al-Taj Mountain and Al-Ashrafieh Mountain.[4]