Travel & tours to jordan with top reya

Travel & tours to jordan with top reya travel and tours jordan petra

25/06/2020

Un mystérieux château perdu dans le désert du Wadi Rum... Son nom, la "French Fortress" 🏰🇫🇷

Connaissez-vous son histoire insolite ? 🤓

Nous vous donnerons la réponse en commentaire dans quelques jours 😉

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Private 8 Day / 7 Night Jordan & Jerusalem(December 16-23, 2019) Day 1: Amman Airport - Amman Our representative will me...
05/12/2019

Private 8 Day / 7 Night Jordan & Jerusalem(December 16-23, 2019)

Day 1: Amman Airport - Amman Our representative will meet you upon arrival at Amman Airport and assist with your entry and visa to Jordan. After meet our driver and transfer to Amman for dinner and overnight at Sparr Hotel 3* or Monarch Hotel 4* or similar.

Day 2: Amman - Madaba - Mount Nebo - Kerak - Petra Breakfast at the hotel, then the driver will meet you and set off for Madaba, the "mosaic city". Discovered in 1884, the mosaic is now world famous. The mosaic map bearing the name of the city, made between 560-565, is the earliest cartographic representation of the Holy Land. The mosaic is now found in the Greek Orthodox Church of St. George. Our next stop is Mount Nebo, where Moses viewed the Promised Land. A temple memorial is set up here in memory of Moses. We then continue to the fortress at Al Karak (Kerak), one of the largest crusader castles established in the Holy Land. The castle offers beautiful views of the Dead Sea and the Jordan Valley. End the day in Petra with dinner and overnight at Alanbat Hotel 3* or Petra Moon Hotel 4* or similar hotels.

Day 3: Petra - Wadi Rum Breakfast at the hotel followed by a wonderful day at one of the New Wonders of the World Week: Petra. The former capital of the Nabataean's offers a unique experience for visitors. The ruins of the city carved out of rock, its huge tombs and its enchanting natural environment make it a unique complex. Petra has been one of the UNESCO World Heritage Sites since 1985. We will arrange your entrance fees and with your private guide, start the tour of Petra covering the main attraction of the site at the lower part for 3 hours. You and the guide will start from the main gate all the way through the Siq to visit the Treasury, Street of Facades, the Theatre, all the way down to the Nymphium and Qaser El- Bent. then continue to explore more sites on your own such as the Monastery. After we will continue to Wadi Rum for dinner and overnight at Rum Magic Camp (basic camp with shared bath) or Hasan Zwaidah Camp (private bath and AC).

Day 4: Wadi Rum - Aqaba After breakfast set off to explore the desert. Wadi Rum is a nature reserve in the north-west of Jordan. Since 2011 it has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Red sand, granite mountains, ancient rock drawings, ancient rock inscriptions and the ruins of a Nabatean temple await you. Getting off the jeep will take you on a 2-hour jeep tour. After, we
continue to Aqaba for dinner and overnight at Al Ra'ad Hotel 3* or Lacosta Hotel 4* or similar.

Day 5: Aqaba Breakfast at the hotel, then free time to explore on your own. Dinner and overnight in Aqaba at at Al Ra'ad Hotel 3* or Lacosta Hotel 4* or similar.

Day 6: Aqaba – Allenby Bridge – Jerusalem Breakfast at the hotel then continue the 3.5 hour drive to Allenby Bridge. After crossing and completing the border procedures on the Israel side, meet the Israeli driver and continue to Jerusalem. Overnight in Jerusalem.
Day 7: Jerusalem Old City Tour After breakfast the driver and private guide will meet you and continue to Mount of Olives to view the Old City of Jerusalem, and then we will walk the Palm Sunday Road to the Garden of Gethsemane, and through the Old city of Jerusalem, the Via Dolorosa, and visit the Holy Sepulchure church. Then continue to the Jewish Quarter to the Western Wall. Meet the bus and then drive to Mahahne Yahuda Market . Overnight Jerusalem.
Day 8: Jerusalem - Tel Aviv Airport Breakfast at the hotel then according to your flight details, we will transfer you to Amman Airport for your departure. End of services.
The price includes:
· Meet upon arrival at Amman Airport
· Jordan visa (for non-restricted nationalities) and assistance through the airport formalization
· Private transportation throughout the tour with new, full option A/C tourist vehicle
· English speaking driver throughout the program
· All entrance fees to the sites mentioned in the program
· Private English speaking site guide in Petra for 3 Hours (French speaking if available)
· Private English speaking site guide in Jerash for 2 hours (French speaking if available)
· 2-hour 4x4 safari in Wadi Rum
· 5 nights' stay in Jordan at 3*, or 4* accommodations including dinner and breakfast at the hotels/camp
· 2 nights' stay in Jerusalem at 3* or 4* accommodations including breakfast at the hotel
· Private transportation according to the program in Israel
· Entrance fees to the sites mentioned in the Israel program
· Private English speaking guide on Day 7 in Jerusalem (French if available)
The price does NOT include:

· Lunches and drinks
· Dinners in Israel
· Personal travel insurance and expenses
· Tips for the drivers, site guide in Jerash and Petra, 4x4 driver in Wadi Rum, guide in Jerusalem, hotel/camp staff
· Any other expenses not mentioned

Optional:
· Snorkeling on Day 2 including snorkeling equipment, boat, lunch, transfer to/from the boat: $35 per person

Private 8 Day / 7 Night Jordan  (December 16-23, 2019) Day 1: Amman Airport - Amman Our representative will meet you upo...
05/12/2019

Private 8 Day / 7 Night Jordan (December 16-23, 2019)

Day 1: Amman Airport - Amman Our representative will meet you upon arrival at Amman Airport and assist with your entry and visa to Jordan. After meet our driver and transfer to Amman for dinner and overnight at Sparr Hotel 3* or Monarch Hotel 4* or similar.

Day 2: Amman City Tour - Jerash - Amman (125km) Breakfast at the hotel and then the driver will meet you to start the sightseeing tour of Amman, one of the oldest cities in the world.. Our first stop will be the Citadel, now the site of ruins of different cultures and religions (eg Church of Hercules, Byzantine Basilica, etc.). We will also explore the theater dating back to Roman times and was once able to accommodate 6,000 people and is still a theater of events after its renovation. We then travel to Jerash, which was also in its heyday under Roman rule, then began to decline and began to develop again around the 19th century. Jerash, the second most popular tourist destination after Petra, and the buildings from the Roman and Byzantine periods are in exceptional condition. With your site guide (French speaking if available, otherwise English speaking), on a 2 hour guided tour, stroll through the streets and discover its theaters, temples (Zeus, Artemis, Byzantium), the Oval Forum, and the Hippodrome (carriageway), which can seat up to 15,000 spectators. You then have free time to explore on your own. End the day back in Amman with dinner and overnight at Sparr Hotel 3* or Monarch Hotel 4* or similar.

Day 3: Amman - Madaba - Mount Nebo - Kerak - Petra (360 km) Breakfast at the hotel, then the driver will meet you and set off for Madaba, the "mosaic city". Discovered in 1884, the mosaic is now world famous. The mosaic map bearing the name of the city, made between 560-565, is the earliest cartographic representation of the Holy Land. The mosaic is now found in the Greek Orthodox Church of St. George. Our next stop is Mount Nebo, where Moses viewed the Promised Land. A temple memorial is set up here in memory of Moses. We then continue to the fortress at Al Karak (Kerak), one of the largest crusader castles established in the Holy Land. The castle offers beautiful views of the Dead Sea and the Jordan Valley. End the day in Petra with dinner and overnight at Alanbat Hotel 3* or Petra Moon Hotel 4* or similar hotels.

Day 4: Petra - Wadi Rum (140 km) Breakfast at the hotel followed by a wonderful day at one of the New Wonders of the World Week: Petra. The former capital of the Nabataean's offers a unique experience for
visitors. The ruins of the city carved out of rock, its huge tombs and its enchanting natural environment make it a unique complex. Petra has been one of the UNESCO World Heritage Sites since 1985. We will arrange your entrance fees and with your private guide, start the tour of Petra covering the main attraction of the site at the lower part for 3 hours. You and the guide will start from the main gate all the way through the Siq to visit the Treasury, Street of Facades, the Theatre, all the way down to the Nymphium and Qaser El- Bent. then continue to explore more sites on your own such as the Monastery. After we will continue to Wadi Rum for dinner and overnight at Rum Magic Camp (basic camp with shared bath) or Hasan Zwaidah Camp (private bath and AC).

Day 5: Wadi Rum - Aqaba (85 km) After breakfast set off to explore the desert. Wadi Rum is a nature reserve in the north-west of Jordan. Since 2011 it has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Red sand, granite mountains, ancient rock drawings, ancient rock inscriptions and the ruins of a Nabatean temple await you. Getting off the jeep will take you on a 2-hour jeep tour. After, we continue to Aqaba for dinner and overnight at Al Ra'ad Hotel 3* or Lacosta Hotel 4* or similar.

Day 6: Aqaba Breakfast at the hotel, then free time to explore on your own. Dinner and overnight in Aqaba at at Al Ra'ad Hotel 3* or Lacosta Hotel 4* or similar.

Day 7: Aqaba - Dead Sea (275 km) Breakfast at the hotel then continue to the Dead Sea for a day of pampering and relaxing.
Dinner and overnight at the Dead Sea at Grand East Hotel 4* or similar.

Day 8: Dead Sea - Amman Airport Breakfast at the hotel then according to your flight details, we will transfer you to Amman Airport for your departure. End of services.
The price includes:
· Meet upon arrival at Amman Airport
· Jordan visa (for non-restricted nationalities) and assistance through the airport formalization
· Private transportation throughout the tour with new, full option A/C tourist vehicle
· English speaking driver throughout the program
· All entrance fees to the sites mentioned in the program
· Private English speaking site guide in Petra for 3 Hours (French speaking if available)
· Private English speaking site guide in Jerash for 2 hours (French speaking if available)
· 2-hour 4x4 safari in Wadi Rum
· 7 nights' stay 3*, or 4* accommodations including dinner and breakfast at the hotels/camp
The price does NOT include:

· Lunches
· Drinks in general
· Personal travel insurance and expenses
· Tips for the driver, site guide in Jerash and Petra, 4x4 driver in Wadi Rum, hotel/camp staff
· Any other expenses not mentioned

Optional:

· Snorkeling on Day 2 including snorkeling equipment, boat, lunch, transfer to/from the boat: $35 per person

jordan 8 d _7 n.  with top reya.🇯🇴✈️🏊‍♂️🐎🤩1.amman airprt - amman .2.amman- jerash-ajlun-amman.3.amman -madaba-mount nebo...
02/12/2019

jordan 8 d _7 n. with top reya.🇯🇴✈️🏊‍♂️🐎🤩
1.amman airprt - amman .
2.amman- jerash-ajlun-amman.
3.amman -madaba-mount nebo-dead sea- amman.
4.amman-kerak- petra.
5.petra full day.
6.petra -little petra -wadi rum-aqaba.
7.aqaba free dau.
8.aqaba -amman airport.
+33766275593

program jordan highlight round trip package 7 N/ 8 D.amman jerash ajlun madaba mount nebo dead sea kerak petra wadi rum ...
24/10/2019

program jordan highlight round trip package 7 N/ 8 D.
amman jerash ajlun madaba mount nebo dead sea kerak petra wadi rum aqaba.
003766275593 [email protected]

Jordan petra The city was the capital of the Nabateans -Arabs who dominated the lands of Jordan during pre-Roman times- ...
24/10/2019

Jordan petra
The city was the capital of the Nabateans -Arabs who dominated the lands of Jordan during pre-Roman times- and they carved this wonderland of temples, tombs and elaborate buildings out of solid rock. The Victorian traveler and poet Dean Burgon gave Petra a description which holds to this day -"Match me such a marvel save in Eastern clime, a rose-red city half as old as time." Yet words can hardly do justice to the magnificence that is Petra. In order to best savor the atmosphere of this ancient wonder, visit in the quiet of the early morning or late afternoon when the sandstone rock glows red with quiet grandeur.
For seven centuries, Petra fell into the mists of legend, its existence a guarded secret known only to the local Bedouins and Arab tradesmen. Finally, in 1812, a young Swiss explorer and convert to Islam named Johann Ludwig Burckhardt heard locals speaking of a "lost city" hidden in the mountains of Wadi Mousa. In order to find the site without arousing local suspicions, Burckhardt disguised himself as a pilgrim seeking to make a sacrifice at the tomb of Aaron, a mission which would provide him a glimpse of the legendary city. He managed to bluff his way through successfully, and the secret of Petra was revealed to the modern Western world.
Much of Petra’s fascination comes from its setting on the edge of Wadi Araba. The rugged sandstone hills form a deep canyon easily protected from all directions. The easiest access to Petra is through the Siq, a winding cleft in the rock that varies from between five to 200 meters wide. Petra’s excellent state of preservation can be attributed to the fact that almost all of its hundreds of "buildings" have been hewn out of solid rock: there are only a few free-standing buildings in the city. Until 1984, many of these caves were home to the local Bedouins. Out of concern for the monuments, however, the government outlawed this and relocated the Bedouins to housing near the adjacent town of Wadi Mousa.
Archaeologists believe that Petra has been inhabited from prehistoric times. Just north of the city at Beidha, the remains of a 9000-year-old city have been discovered, putting it in the same league as Jericho as one of the earliest known settlements in the Middle East.
Between that time and the Iron Age (circa 1200 BCE), when it was the home of the Edomites, virtually nothing is known. The Bible tells of how King David subdued the Edomites, probably around 1000 BCE. According to this story, the Edomites were enslaved, but eventually won their freedom. A series of great battles were then fought between the Judeans and the people of Edom. In one of these, the Judean King Amaziah, who ruled from 796 to 781 BCE, "defeated ten thousand Edomites in the Valley of Salt, and captured Sela in battle" (2 Kings 14: 25). The summit of Umm al-Biyara mountain, in central Petra, is often identified as the Sela of the Bible. However, Sela is also sometimes identified as the mountaintop stronghold of Sele', near Buseirah, one of the Edomite capitals north of Petra.
The area’s principle water source, AinMousa (Spring of Moses), is thought by some to be one of the many places where the Prophet Musa (Moses) struck a rock with his staff to extract water (Numbers 20: 10-13). Prophet Aaron, brother of Moses and Miriam, died in the Petra area and was buried atop Mount Hor, now known as JabalHaroun (Mount Aaron).
Sometime during the sixth century BCE, a nomadic tribe known as the Nabateans migrated from western Arabia and settled in the area. It appears as though the Nabatean migration was gradual and there were few hostilities between them and the Edomites. As the Nabateans forsook their nomadic lifestyle and settled in Petra, they grew rich by levying taxes on travelers to ensure safe passage through their lands. The easily defensible valley city of Petra allowed the Nabateans to grow strong.
From its origins as a fortress city, Petra became a wealthy commercial crossroads between the Arabian, Assyrian, Egyptian, Greek and Roman cultures. Control of this crucial trade route between the upland areas of Jordan, the Red Sea, Damascus and southern Arabia was the lifeblood of the Nabatean Empire and brought Petra its fortune. The riches the Nabateans accrued allowed them to carve monumental temples, tombs and administrative centers out of their valley stronghold.
The Seleucid King Antigonus, who had come to power in Babylonia when Alexander the Great’s empire was divided, rode against the Nabateans in 312 BCE. The Nabateans eventually repelled the invaders, and records indicate that they were eager to remain on good terms with the Seleucids in order to perpetuate their trading ambitions. While the Seleucids could not conquer the Nabateans militarily, their Hellenistic culture made a lasting impact upon the Nabateans. New ideas in art and architecture influenced the Nabateans at the same time that their flourishing empire was expanding northward into Syria, around 150 BCE. The term "empire" is used loosely here, for it was more a zone of influence. As the Nabateans expanded northward, more caravan routes and, consequently, trading riches, came under their control. It was primarily this, rather than territorial acquisition or cultural domination, that motivated them.
The growing economic and political power of the Nabateans began to worry the Romans, and in 63 BCE Pompey dispatched a force to cripple Petra. Nabatean King Aretas III either defeated the Roman Legions or paid a tribute to keep peace with them. Later, the Nabateans made a mistake by siding with the Parthians in their war with the Romans.
After the Parthians’ defeat, Petra had to pay tribute to Rome. When they fell behind in paying this tribute, they were invaded twice by the Roman vassal King Herod the Great. The second attack, in 31 BCE, saw him take control of a large swath of Nabatean territory, including the lucrative northern trading routes into Syria. With their trading empire reduced to a shell of its former glory, the Nabatean Empire staggered on for almost another century and a half. The last Nabatean monarch, Rabbel II, struck a deal with the Romans that as long as they did not attack during his lifetime, they would be allowed to move in after he died. Upon his death in 106 CE, the Romans claimed the Nabatean Kingdom and set about transforming it with the usual plan of a colonnaded street, baths, and the common trappings of modern Roman life.
Much of what is known about Nabatean culture comes from the writings of the Roman scholar Strabo. He recorded that their community was governed by a royal family, although a spirit of democracy prevailed. Strabo also notes the materialism of the Nabateans.
With its incorporation into the Roman Empire, Petra began to thrive once again. The city may have housed 20,000-30,000 people during its heyday. The fortunes of Petra began to decline with the shift in trade routes to Palmyra in Syria and the expansion of seaborne trade around Arabia. The city was struck another blow in 363 CE, when the free-standing structures of Petra were thrown to the ground in a violent earthquake. Fortunately, Petra’s greatest constructions were preserved, carved as they are into the rock faces.
It is not known whether the inhabitants of Petra left the city before or after the fourth century earthquake. The fact that very few silver coins or valuable possessions have been unearthed at Petra indicates, however, that the withdrawal was an unhurried and organized process. One theory holds that the city of Petra was primarily a religious and administrative center, used occasionally as a fortress during times of war. The preponderance of temples and tombs supports this theory, which holds that as the dead began to consume more and more of Petra’s space, the living relocated to other caves or tents outside the inner confines of the "holy" city.
It seems clear that by the time of the Muslim conquest in the seventh century CE, Petra had slipped into obscurity. The city was damaged again by the earthquake of 747 CE, and housed a small Crusader community during the 12th or 13th century. It then passed into obscurity and was forgotten until Johann Ludwig Burckhardt rediscovered it for the outside world in 1812.
The entrance to Petra is just past the town of Wadi Mousa. Petra is open from roughly 06:00 until 18:00, and 20 dinars is the cost of a one-day adult ticket for non-Jordanians. From the Government Rest House, where you can stock up with film, a map of the ancient city, food and souvenirs, the path leads down to the Siq (the narrow winding valley that leads in to Petra). There you will see dozens of local Bedouins with horses that you can hire to transport you the 1.5 kilometers or so down to the actual Siq.
Even before you reach the Siq, you will notice three square free-standing tombs on your right. No evidence of bones has been found, but it may be that these are a type of tombstone. Further along on the left, built high into the cliff, stands the Obelisk Tomb, which once stood seven meters high. Five graves were found inside the tomb, four represented by pyramid-shaped pillars and the last by a statue between the middle pillars. Closer to the Siq, rock-cut channels once brought the waters of EinMousa through ceramic pipes to the inner city as well as to the surrounding farm country. When designing a new dam, excavators uncovered the Nabateans’ ancient dam and used it as a model for the modern one.
As you enter the Siq, the path narrows to about five meters and the walls tower over 200 meters overhead, casting enormous shadows on the niches that once held icons of the gods Dushara and al-Uzza. The icons were meant to protect the entrance and hex unwelcome visitors. The entrance to the Siq was once topped by a ceremonial arch built by the Nabateans. It survived until the late ninth century, and you can still see remains of it as you enter the gorge. The original channels cut in the walls to bring water into Petra can also be seen, and in some places the original terracotta pipes are still in place.
After winding around for 1.5 kilometers, the Siq suddenly opens upon the most impressive of all Petra’s monuments -al-Khazneh (Arabic for "the Treasury"). One of the most elegant remains of antiquity, it is carved out of solid rock from the side of a mountain, and stands over 40 meters high. Although it served as a royal tomb, the Treasury gets its name from the legend that pirates hid their treasure there, in a giant stone urn which stands in the center of the second level. Believing the urn to be filled with ancient pharoanic treasures, the Bedouins periodically fired guns at it: proof of this can be seen in the bullet holes which are clearly visible on the urn. Much speculation has gone into the barely distinguishable reliefs which can be seen on the exterior of the Khazneh, although consensus is that they represent various gods. The Khazneh’s age has also been debated, with estimates ranging from 100 BCE to 200 CE.
As the Siq turns right and leads down toward the city, the number of niches and tombs increases, becoming a virtual graveyard in rock arching around behind the 8000-seat Amphitheater. Originally thought to have been built by the Romans after their defeat of the Nabateans in 106 CE, it is now believed that the Nabateans cut the Amphitheater out of the rock around the time of Christ, slicing through many caves and tombs in the process. Under the stage floor were store rooms and a slot through which a curtain could be lowered at the beginning of a performance. Through this slot a marble Hercules was discovered several years ago.
After the Amphitheater, the wadi widens out and you soon come to the main city area, which covers about three square kilometers. Up on the right, carved into the rock of JabalKhubtha, are the Royal Tombs. The first is the Urn Tomb, with its open terrace built over a double layer of vaults. The room inside measures 20 by 18 meters, and the patterns in the rock are striking. The Urn Tomb commands an impressive view and was once used as a church in Byzantine times. Next along is the Corinthian Tomb, allegedly a replica of Nero’s Golden Palace in Rome. Finally, the Palace Tomb is a three-story imitation of a Roman palace and one of the largest monuments in Petra. The tomb had to be completed by attaching preassembled stones to its upper left-hand corner. Around the corner to the right is the Mausoleum of SextusFlorentinius, a Roman administrator under Emperor Hadrian.
Continuing down the Siq, several restored columns mark the sides of the paved Roman colonnaded street. During the Roman era, columns lined the full length of the street, with markets and residences branching off on the sides. The slopes of the hills on either side are littered with the remains of the ancient city.
Along the colonnaded street you will see the ruins of the public fountain, or Nymphaeum. At the northwestern end of the colonnaded street is the triple-arched Temenos Gateway, which was originally fitted with wooden doors and marked the entrance into the courtyard, or "temenos", of the Qasr al-Bint. To the right of the Temenos Gateway, or Triumphal Arch, is the Temple of the Winged Lions. This was named after the carved lions that adorn the capitals of the columns. The temple was dedicated to the fertility goddess Atargatis, who was the partner to the main male god, Dushara.
Several hundred meters to the right of the street, near the Temple of the Winged Lions, is an immense Byzantine Church rich with mosaics. Each of the side aisles of Petra Church is paved with 70 square meters of remarkably preserved mosaics, depicting native as well as exotic or mythological animals, as well as personifications of the Seasons, Ocean, Earth and Wisdom. The church is thought to have been a major fifth- and sixth-century cathedral, throwing into question theories of Petra’s decline during this era. In December 1993, a cache of 152 papyrus scrolls in Byzantine Greek and possibly late Arabic were uncovered at the site. The scrolls, which constitute the largest group of written material from antiquity found in Jordan, are currently being deciphered and are yielding a wealth of information concerning the Byzantine period in the area. The Petra Church and its mosaics are currently being excavated and preserved.
Passing through the Temenos Gateway, one enters the piazza of the Qasr bint al-Faroun (in Arabic, "Palace of the Pharoah’s Daughter"). This Nabatean construction dates from around 30 BCE, and is also known as the Temple of Dushara, after the god who was worshipped there. It was probably the main place of worship in Nabatean Petra, and it is the only freestanding structure in Petra. The Qasr was in use up until the Roman annexation, when it was burned. Earthquakes in the fourth and eighth centuries destroyed the remainder of the building.

Bethany Beyond the JordanThe site of John the Baptist's settlement at Bethany Beyond the Jordan, where Jesus was baptize...
23/10/2019

Bethany Beyond the Jordan
The site of John the Baptist's settlement at Bethany Beyond the Jordan, where Jesus was baptized, has long been known from the Bible (John 1:28 and 10:40) and from the Byzantine and medieval texts.
The site has now been identified on the east bank of the Jordan River, in the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, and is being systematically surveyed, excavated, restored, and prepared to receive pilgrims and visitors. Bethany Beyond the Jordan is located half an hour by car from Amman.
The Bethany area sites formed part of the early Christian pilgrimage route between Jerusalem, the Jordan River, and Mount Nebo.
The area is also associated with the biblical account of how the Prophet Elijah (Mar Elias in Arabic) ascended to heaven in a whirlwind on a chariot of fire.
History
God has granted to the land of Jordan many special places. The north of the country can boast of the homeland of the Prophet Elijah, and in the northern and central regions they take pride in the fact that Christ performed many miracles there and preached in their towns. The south is also very proud that John the Baptist was martyred in “Mekawer� Castle, which is south of Madaba. In the Jordan River John baptized Jesus and there he met five of his disciples, including Peter. From here he set out preaching about the Kingdom of God, beginning the public part of his life.
Moses
Upon Mount Nebo, God revealed Himself to Moses, as He had previously revealed Himself at Sinai, and Moses stood and looked over the Promised Land stretched out in front of him. He saw the Jordan River before him, descending from the heights of Mount Hermon into the depths of the Jordan valley.
Joshua
After Moses passed away, Joshua, the son of Nun, crossed with the Israelites into the Promised Land.
Elijah and Elisha
But soon after their entrance into the Holy Land the people turned from the worship of God and took to worshipping strange gods. God sent to them many prophets to bring them back to true belief in His oneness and observance of His commandments. One of the most famous prophets was Elijah, who lived during the time of the rule of King Ahab in Israel. Ahab and his wife oppressed Elijah, and when Elijah grew old, God inspired him to leave and settle in what is today Jordan. So he left with his appointed successor, Elisha, who carried on his spirit and message. When they arrived at the River Jordan, Elijah struck it with his cloak and parted the waters of the river. He and Elisha crossed the dry land, and as they were speaking together upon the other side of the river, a fiery chariot came and carried Elijah into the heavens. (2nd Kings: 2)
John the Baptist
Again, hundreds of years passed and John the Baptist appeared at Bethany (Bayt ‘Anya) on the far side of the Jordan River (John 1:28 & John 10:40). He continued the path of faith and took the message from Moses representative of the Holy Law and from Elijah – representative of the prophets of the Old Testament (Luke 1:17). John was the last prophet in the manner of the Old Testament prophets and the first prophet of the New Testament. He called the people to repent in preparation for the arrival of Christ, the Redeemer, and began to baptize in the Jordan River and the surrounding springs. The baptism he administered was a symbol of repentance and belief in God. Fleeing the authorities because of his sermons, he made for Bethany beyond the Jordan. He would sleep and rest in a cave close to the springs of “Saphsaphas†(what is today known as the Valley of Kharrar). The Bible states that here people from Jerusalem, Judea and the surrounding regions of the Jordan flocked to John for baptism. Jesus visited John here.
Then the Jews in Jerusalem sent some of the Scribes and Pharisees to question John, and John said to them, I am not the Messiah, I am only a voice crying out in the wilderness saying, Follow the path of God and make firm His pat.
Jesus left Nazareth, until he reached Bethany beyond the Jordan and went to John for baptism. Jesus joined in the line of penitents asking for baptism, yet he was pure, free from all sin. He was the one who would say to the Jews, “Who among you can provide evidence that I have committed a sin.” John knew of Jesus from the revelation and inspiration of the Holy Spirit (John 1:32). John, however, objected to baptizing Jesus saying, “I am the one that needs you to baptize me!” But upon Jesus’ continued insistence, John acquiesced and baptized Jesus in the Jordan River. Therefore, the water of the Jordan River became holy and all the waters that flow along the baptism site were purified, reviving the souls of people at every place and time.
As Jesus was coming out of the water, he saw the heavens open up and the Holy Spirit descending like a dove. He heard a voice from above say, “You are my beloved son with whom I am well-pleased.” Then the Spirit took Jesus into the wilderness where he remained for forty days, and where Satan tempted him. In the wilderness Jesus dwelt among the wild beasts, but the angels looked after him.
After Jesus came back from the wilderness to Bethany beyond the Jordan, He found John sitting with two of his students. When John saw Jesus he said to his students, “This is the Lamb of God who will take away the sin of the world.” (John 1:29) Hearing this, the two students decided to follow Jesus and were in turn followed by three others, among them Peter.
Jesus carried the torch of faith from John the Baptist, the torch that had also been carried by Moses, Elijah and the other prophets. From Bethany beyond the Jordan Jesus declared the good news of God, saying, “The Hour draws near and the Kingdom of God is at hand! So, repent and have faith in the good news of God!”
After returning to Jerusalem, a dispute arose between Jesus and the Jews during the festival of the renovation of the Temple. When this happened Jesus fled back across the Jordan to Bethany where John was still baptizing. The people warmly received Jesus and many came to him from the surrounding towns and villages, from Salt, Amman, Madaba and Hisban. They brought their sick to him. He cured them, and many people came to believe in him.
From Bethany beyond the Jordan, Jesus returned to Jerusalem only to have to flee again, this time to Ephraim (al-Tayyibah) near Ramallah. Later he returned to Jerusalem on Palm Sunday, and the events of his passion, death and resurrection would follow.

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