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Umm Qais, situated 110 km north of Amman on a broad
promontory 378
meters above sea level with a magnificent view over the Yarmouk
River, the Golan Heights, and Lake Tiberias, this town was known
as Gadara, one of the most brilliant ancient Greco-Roman cities
of the Decapolis; and according to the Bible, the spot where
Jesus (pbuh) cast out the Devil from two demoniacs (mad men)
into a herd of pigs (Mathew 8:28-34).
In ancient times,
Gadara was
strategically situated, laced by a number of key trading routes
connecting Syria and Palestine. It was blessed with fertile soil
and abundant rainwater. This town also flourished intellectually
in the reign of Augustus and became distinguished for its
cosmopolitan atmosphere, university's scholars, attracting
writers, artists, philosophers and poets, the likes of satirist
Menippos (2nd half of the 3rd century BC), the epigrammist
Meleagros, and the rhetorician Theodoros (14-37 AD). Gadara was
also the resort of choice for Romans vacationing in the nearby
Himmet Gader Springs.
Archaeological surveys indicate that
Gadara was
occupied as early as the 7th century BC. The Greek historian,
Polybius, described the region as being under Ptolemaic control
at the time. The Seleucid ruler Antiochus III conquered it in
218 BC, naming the city Antiochia and Seleucia. In 63 BC, Pompey
liberated Gadara and joined it to the Roman league of ten
cities, the
Decapolis.
Soon after, the fortunes of
Gadara
improved rapidly and building was undertaken on a large scale,
carried out for the love of Pompey's freed man Demetrius, who
had been born there.
During these early years of Roman rule, the Nabataeans
(with their capital in
Petra),
controlled the trade routes as far north as
Damascus.
Unhappy with the competition, Mark Anthony dispatched King Herod
the Great to weaken the Nabataeans, who finally gave up their
northern interest in 31 BC. In appreciation for his efforts,
Rome rewarded Herod with
Gadara.
The city reached its peak of prosperity in the 2nd century
AD. New colonnaded streets, temples, theaters and baths
sprouted. Meleagros compared
Gadara with
Athens,
which testifies to the city's status as a creative center of
Hellenism in the ancient Near East.

Christianity spread slowly among the inhabitants of
Gadara.
Starting from the 4th century, its bishop attended the
ecclesiastical councils of Nicaea, Chaleedon and Ephesos.
Despite his attendance, the city was no longer a seat of
learning. During the 6th century, decline set in, and in 636 AD
a decisive military clash between Byzantines and Arab Muslims
took place not far from Gadara. There is no evidence, however,
of widespread destruction in the city.
Umm Qais's charm still lingers today. A large portion of
the western
Roman
Theater
has survived history's upheavals. Vaulted passageway supports
its rows of seats, built of hard basalt stones. A row of
elaborately carved seats for dignitaries stand near the
orchestra, and in the center was a large headless white marble
statue of Tyche, goddess of fortune and of the city, now
displayed at the local museum.
Across from the theater is the main colonnaded street (cardo),
which was in all likelihood the town's commercial center. Also,
near the black basalt theater is the Terrace, which hosts a
courtyard, a church and a basilica. Further west of the Terrace
and along the east-west colonnaded street (decumanus), ruins of
the Nymphaeum, a bath complex and a well-preserved Roman
Mausoleum can be seen. After a few hundred meters one can barely
make out remains of what was once a Hippodrome. |
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