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 3 of 4)
The pricier real estate was on the hill behind the temple, well above the hubbub of the main thoroughfare and with sweeping views to the north and south. Tuttle points out piles of rubble that once were free-standing houses, shops and neighborhood temples. A Swiss team recently uncovered, near the crest, an impressive Roman-style villa complete with an elaborate bath, an olive press and frescoes in the style of Pompeii. At the base of the hill, adjacent to the Great Temple, Leigh-Ann Bedal, a former student of Joukowsky's now at Pennsylvania State University in Erie, uncovered the remains of a large garden. Complete with pools, shade trees, bridges and a lavish pavilion, the lush space—possibly a public park—is thought to have been unique in the southern part of the Middle East. It resembles the private ornamental gardens built to the north in Judea by Herod the Great, who lived until 4 B.C. Herod's mother, in fact, was Nabatean, and he spent his early years in Petra.
By the fourth century A.D., Petra was entering its decline. Joukowsky takes me on a tour of the newfound spa, which includes marble-lined walls and floors, lead pipes and odd-shaped stalls that might have been toilets, all indications of prosperity. But the growing sea trade to the south had sucked away business, while rival caravan cities to the north such as Palmyra challenged Petra's dominance by land. Then, on May 19, A.D. 363, a massive earthquake and a powerful aftershock rumbled through the area. A Jerusalem bishop noted in a letter that "nearly half" of Petra was destroyed by the seismic shock.
Scholars long assumed the catastrophe marked the end of the city, but archaeologists have found abundant evidence that Petra remained inhabited, and even prospered, for another three centuries or so. Almost 100 years after the earthquake, local Christians built a basilica now famed for its beautiful and intact mosaics of animals—including the camel, which made Petra's wealth possible—just across the main street from the Great Temple. Some 150 scrolls—discovered when the church was excavated in 1993—reveal a vibrant community well into the seventh century A.D., after which the church and, apparently, most of the city was finally abandoned.
Forgotten for a millennium in its desert fastness, Petra reemerged in the 19th century as an exotic destination for Western travelers. The first, Swiss adventurer Johann Ludwig Burckhardt, visited in 1812 when it was still dangerous to be a foreign Christian deep within the Ottoman Empire. Disguised as a Persian pilgrim, he marveled at Petra's wonders but could not linger, since his curiosity aroused the suspicions of his local guides. "Great must have been the opulence of a city which could dedicate such monuments to the memory of its rulers," he wrote. "Future travelers may visit the spot under the protection of an armed force; the inhabitants will become more accustomed to the researches of strangers, and then antiquities...will then be found to rank among the most curious remains of ancient art."
Petra has lately fulfilled that prophesy. It is now Jordan's top tourist destination, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors a year. Hollywood's Indiana Jones sought the Holy Grail in one of Petra's caves in a 1989 film, dramatizing the site for a worldwide audience. The 1994 peace treaty between Jordan and Israel made mass tourism possible. Foreigners began coming to Petra, and devout Jews began making pilgrimages to nearby Jebel Haroun, which, according to tradition, is the site of the prophet Aaron's tomb. The nearby village of Wadi Musa has been transformed from a straggling collection of run-down mud-brick houses into a boomtown of hotels (the Cleopetra) and stores (the Indiana Jones Gift Shop). Petra is also a top contender in an international contest to name the New Seven Wonders of the World. Candidates were nominated by a panel of experts, and winners will be chosen by votes. (You can vote online at new7wonders.com.) Winners are scheduled to be announced next month.
Despite all the publicity and the parade of tourists, much of Petra remains untouched by archaeologists, hidden under thick layers of debris and sand built up over the centuries. No one has found the sites of the busy marketplaces that must have dotted Petra. And although local inscriptions indicate that the Nabateans worshiped a main god, sometimes called Dushara, and a main goddess, the Nabateans' religion otherwise remains mysterious.
So while the work by Joukowsky's team has revealed much about ancient Petra, it will be up to a new generation of researchers like Tuttle to tackle the many rubble piles—and mysteries—that still dot the city's landscape. "We really know next to nothing about the Nabateans," says Tuttle as he surveys the forbidding landscape. "I hope to spend most of my professional life here."
Tuttle and his colleagues will be assisted by Bedouin skilled in uncovering and reassembling the past. Bedouins lived in Nabatean caves for at least a century, until the 1980s when the government pressured most to move to a concrete settlement outside the ancient city to make way for visitors who come to explore the site. My guide, Suleiman Mohammad—who worked at the Great Temple before switching to the more lucrative tourist trade and who married a Swiss tourist—tells me he is grateful to have so many foreign visitors. But not all Bedouin are so lucky, he says. In the harsh country outside Petra, he points to a group far out in the desert: "They have no shoes, wear tattered clothes, and just have goats—there are no tourists out there!"
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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