Reconstructing Petra
Two thousand years ago, it was the capital of a powerful trading empire. Now archaeologists are piecing together a more complete picture of Jordan's compelling rock city
- By Andrew Lawler
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2007, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
No one knows where the Nabateans came from. Around 400 B.C., the Arab tribe swept into the mountainous region nestled between the Sinai and Arabian peninsulas and the Mediterranean Sea. At first, they lived simple nomadic lives, eking out a living with flocks of sheep and goats and perhaps small-scale agriculture. They left little for future archaeologists—not even broken pottery.
The Nabateans developed a writing system—ultimately the basis of written Arabic—though the inscriptions they left in Petra and elsewhere are mostly names of people and places and are not particularly revealing of their beliefs, history or daily lives. Scholars have had to use Greek and Roman sources to fill in the picture. Greeks in the decades after Alexander the Great's death in 323 B.C. complained about Nabateans plundering ships and camel caravans. Scholars believe that such raids whetted the Nabateans' appetite for wealth. Eventually, instead of attacking caravans, the raiders began guarding them—for a price. By the second century B.C., Nabateans dominated the incense trade from southern Arabia. Within several decades, they had assembled a mercantile empire stretching for hundreds of miles. The people who a few generations earlier had been nomads were now producing eggshell-thin pottery, among the finest in the ancient world, as well as grand architecture.
By 100 B.C., the tribe had a king, vast wealth and a rapidly expanding capital city. Camels lumbered into Petra with boxes of frankincense and myrrh from Oman, sacks of spices from India and bolts of cloth from Syria. Such wealth would have attracted raiders, but Petra's mountains and high walls protected the traders once they arrived in the city. The Siq, a twisting 1,000-yard-long canyon that in places is just wide enough for two camels to pass, made the eastern part of the city impregnable. Today it serves as Petra's main entryway. It may be the most dramatic entrance to an urban space ever devised. In ancient times, though, the primary entrance into Petra was likely the road by which I came by donkey.
Writing early in the first century A.D., the Greek historian Strabo reported that while foreigners in Petra are "frequently engaged in litigation," the locals "had never any dispute among themselves, and lived together in perfect harmony." Dubious as that may sound, we do know that the Nabateans were unusual in the ancient world for their abhorrence of slavery, for the prominent role women played in political life and for an egalitarian approach to governing. Joukowsky suggests that the large theater in the Great Temple that she partially restored may have been used for council meetings accommodating hundreds of citizens.
Strabo, however, scorns the Nabateans as poor soldiers and as "hucksters and merchants" who are "fond of accumulating property" through the trade of gold, silver, incense, brass, iron, saffron, sculpture, paintings and purple garments. And they took their prosperity seriously: he notes that those merchants whose income dropped may have been fined by the government. All that wealth eventually caught the attention of Rome, a major consumer of incense for religious rites and spices for medicinal purposes and food preparation. Rome annexed Nabatea in A.D. 106, apparently without a fight.
In its prime, Petra was one of the most lavish cities in history—more Las Vegas than Athens. Accustomed to tents, the early Nabateans had no significant building traditions, so with their sudden disposable income they drew on styles ranging from Greek to Egyptian to Mesopotamian to Indian—hence the columns at the Great Temple topped with Asian elephant heads. "They borrowed from everybody," says Christopher A. Tuttle, a Brown graduate student working with Joukowsky.
One of Petra's mysteries is why the Nabateans plowed so much of their wealth into carving their remarkable facades and caves, which lasted long after the city's free-standing buildings collapsed from earthquakes and neglect. The soft stone cliffs made it possible to hollow out caves and sculpt elaborate porticoes, which the Nabateans painted, presumably in garish colors. Some caves, Tuttle says, were tombs—more than 800 have been identified—and others were places for family members to gather periodically for a meal memorializing the dead; still others were used for escaping the summer's heat.
At its peak, Petra's population was about 30,000, an astonishing density made possible in the arid climate by clever engineering. Petrans carved channels through solid rock, gathering winter rains into hundreds of vast cisterns for use in the dry summers. Many are still used today by the Bedouin. Tuttle leads me up the hill above the temple and points out one such cistern, a massive hand-hewn affair that could hold a small beach cottage. Channels dug into the rock on either side of the canyon, then covered with stone, sent water hurtling to cisterns near the center of town. "There are abundant springs of water both for domestic purposes and for watering gardens," Strabo wrote circa A.D. 22. Steep hillsides were converted to terraced vineyards, and irrigated orchards provided fresh fruits, probably pomegranates, figs and dates.
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Comments (3)
Dear Andrew,
Your article and photos of Petra are both marvellous. Kindly put some more photos of your excursion online. Thanks. Ajay.
Posted by Ajay Pratap on August 7,2010 | 06:31 AM
Petra has been a fascination to me for many years. Somewhere in that city there is what I guess would be called a plaque with ancient Arabic writing on it. Could anyone tell me where that plaque is located? Is it anywhere near the House of the Daughter of Pharaoh? In 1998 I had a web site about my theory that when Moses took the "people" out of Egypt, he took them to Petra. My e-mail at that time was dnichol. My present e-mail address is oricol@iwvisp.com. I would welcome letter about Petra.
Posted by Dorothy Nicholson on September 6,2008 | 06:37 AM
This study clearly shows that all the ideas for modern living existed thousands of years ago. The only thing that was diffeent is the tools they used to create comfort. Modern man loves to think that they are the only ones who create wondes, but cities like these and the Pyramids point to a greatness that is far beyond our capabilities today.
Posted by Samantha Rochard on July 15,2008 | 06:30 AM
I am supprised to see that no one is pointing out that Petra was the hiding place for Esau and the development of the Edomites from the house of Esau. We are now talking about 1500 B.C. They learned to trade water for goods for camel trains of two thousand camels or more that made their way from the gobie desert to the west. At that time when Egypt, Babylon, Jerusalem or Assyria was the final destination whoever controled Petra was in control. The camels needed water to continue. This is where banking developed. A Bill of Exchange or note was given in liu of water purchases and the creditor would be paid upon the return after selling goods to which ever civilization was ruling at the time. The Nabatean civilization as Edomites moved or were forced to move to other destinations; such as re-populating the lands of northern Israel and around Jerusalem at the times when the Hebrew race was going into capativity. However, we must consider that with such a good water supply there must have been a people there when Esau got there. But what was their stage of development is unsure by me at this time. What ever the case Edom had it's stronghold in Petra as the enterance through the Sic has walls 300' high and droping stones on any invading army made enterance almost impossible.
Posted by John Nichols on July 15,2008 | 04:41 AM
Just goes to show how brilliant man was 1,000's of years ago,From the huge cities and fortresses in Anatolia,Turkey 4,000-7,000 BC to the Pyryamids to Petra. Bloody brilliant.. Thanks be to The Archeologist for her dedication,so the world may see mankinds past.
Posted by Randy Smith on May 15,2008 | 01:38 AM
I enjoyed the article, and will only enhance the journey there in March. Thank You Regarding Dr. H. Davis comments: Prophecy has time beat with patience, and is only valued in reflection by a particular group. Anyone can predict the fall of a city and over a long enough period of time be right. Remember it was not the Bible that predicted the fall, it was prophets of the time, and their books placed among the others by a council, a democratic process, nonetheless.
Posted by Chad on February 22,2008 | 02:55 PM
It is interesting that the Bible predicted the final fall of Petra many years before it happened. See:(593-570 BC)Ezekiel 25:12/3;35:1-8;;Jer.49:15-18;Isaiah34:10-15 and the small book of Obadiah. This would be like predicting the fall of New York or Los Angeles today! "Behold I [the Lord]will make you small among the nations,saying You shall be greatly despised.The pride of your[heartPetra] has deceived you, You who dwell in the clefts of the rock, Whose habitation is high: You who say in your heart,'Who will bring me down to the ground?' Though you ascend as high as the eagle, And though you set your nest amoung the stars, From there,I will bring you down",Says the Lord.
Posted by Dr.H.Davis on January 21,2008 | 06:53 PM
Hello. Congratulations for your website. I am a designer working on an incense burner and I am looking for facts that inspire my creativity. I would like to ask you something that will help. Is it true that Petra was founded by nomads who decided to settle down and sell protection and rest to the camel caravans transporting frankincense? Thank you very much.
Posted by Eduardo Garza on January 20,2008 | 03:18 PM