Qasr Azraq

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The ruins of Qasr Azraq
The ruins of Qasr Azraq

Qasr Azraq (Arabic,قصر الأزرق)is a large fortress located in present-day eastern Jordan. It is one of the desert castles and is located on the highway to Iraq, 13km north of the Azraq (Jordan) junction and about 100km east of Amman.

[edit] Architecture

The castle is constructed of the local black basalt and is a square structure with 80 metre long walls encircling a large central courtyard. In the middle of the courtyard is a small mosque that may date from Ummayyad times. At each corner of the outer wall, there is an oblong tower. The main entrance is comprised of a single massive hinged slab of granite, which leads to a vestibule where one can see carved into the pavement the remains of a Roman board game.

[edit] History

The strategic significance of the castle is that it lies in the middle of the Azraq oasis, the only permanent source of fresh water in approximately 12000 square kilometres of desert. Several civilizations are known to have occupied the site for its strategic value in this remote and arid desert area.

The area was originally inhabited by the Nabataean people and around 300 BCE fell under the control of the Romans during the reign of Diocletian. The Romans built a stone structure using the local basalt stone that formed a basis for later constructions on the site, a structure that is also believed to been used by the Byzantine and Ummayyad empires.

Qasr al-Azraq underwent its final major stage of building in 1237 CE, when the Mamelukes redesigned and fortified it. The fortress in its present form dates back to this period.

In the 16th century the Ottoman Turks stationed a garrison there, and T.E. Lawrence (Lawrence of Arabia) made the fortress his desert headquarters during the winter of 1917, during the Great Arab Revolt against the Ottoman Empire. His office was in the chamber above the entrance gatehouse.

[edit] References

Coordinates: 31°52′49″N, 36°49′39″E