Iraq al-Amir

`Iraq al Amir
`Iraq al Amir is located in Jordan
`Iraq al Amir
`Iraq al Amir
Location in Jordan
Coordinates: 31°55′N 35°45′E / 31.917°N 35.750°E / 31.917; 35.750
Country Jordan
GovernorateAmman Governorate
Time zoneUTC + 2

'Iraq al-Amir or Araq el-Amir (Arabic:عراق الأمير - literally, "Caves of the Prince") is the name shared by a town and nearby caves, within the municipality of Amman in the Jordan Valley. Located about 15 km southwest of the town of Wadi as-Seer, it has a population of about 6000 people, mostly members of the Abbadi tribe. It is located on hills with high and medium altitude, in an area with many springs and famous for its olive trees and other forest trees.

There are many caves in the hills which were inhabited during the Copper Age. There are also remarkable Roman-Byzantine architectural remains. It is a large cave church – closed because of on-going excavations –, and a second church built outside right in front of it. The entrance of the cave can be identified by a façade decorated with a pediment with crosses. The site is called Mugharat al-Kaniseh (Cave of the Church) by the local community.[1]

A view of the town

About 500 metres south of the town stands an archaeological site known as Al-Iraq, dominated by a partially restored Hellenistic period palace known as Qasr al-Abd, which is dated to the late 2nd century BCE. Most scholars agree that Qasr al-Abd was built by the Tobiads, a notable Jewish family of the Second Temple period.[2] This identification is based on a Hebrew inscription found in a nearby burial cave that mentions the name "Tobiah".[3]

Iraq Al-Amir is a stop on the Jordan Trail. It is a side trip of Region 3, Salt to Wadi Zarqa (84.4 km). It is 22.3 km from Salt or 15.2 km from Fuheis. From Iraq Al-Amir, the trail makes its way to Husban (19.5 km away). [4]

  1. ^ "Al-Bassah Cave & Church, Iraq al-Amir. Art Destination Jordan".
  2. ^ Richardson, Peter; Fisher, Amy Marie (2017). Herod: king of the Jews and friend of the Romans (Second ed.). Routledge. p. 231. ISBN 978-1-138-80392-3. OCLC 969202269. Retrieved 17 February 2022.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  3. ^ Lapp, Paul W. (1962-02-01). "Soundings at 'Arâq el-Emîr (Jordan)". Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research. 165 (165): 16–34. doi:10.2307/1355728. ISSN 0003-097X. JSTOR 1355728. S2CID 163617159.
  4. ^ "Jordan Trail Region 3: As-Salt to Wadi Zarqa Ma'in". Retrieved January 6, 2024.