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Beit Shean Valley

The Beit She'an Valley is an area in the Jordan Valley of northern Israel. It consists of the town of Beit She'an (also spelled Beit/Bet/Beth Shean/She'an/Shan), as well as a number of kibbutzim and other small agricultural communities.

25km

32.479435.5058

Golan Heights

region in the Levant

31km

32.98135.749

Amman

capital of Jordan

70km

31.9511435.92409
Sights (12)

Ajloun Forest Reserve

A 13-km² protected forest run by the Royal Society for the Conservation of Nature. The reserve features multiple hiking trails of varying lengths and degrees of difficulty.

26km

32.3811111135.76472222

Tell Mar Elias

The site of two very old churches and the reputed area where the prophet Elijah was born.

27km

32.3622222235.72222222

Ajloun Castle

An Islamic fortress, built during the period of the Crusades. The castle is located on the top of a mountain just outside the small city of Ajlun. The castle is an interesting maze of passages and levels, and offers a wonderful view of the surrounding area, northwestern Jordan, and off into Galilee.The castle was built in 1184-1885 AD and was one of the few fortresses built to protect the country against Crusader attacks from both the west and the north. It also controlled the area around it, including another of its major objectives, to control the iron mines in the area. The castle is one of the best preserved and most complete examples of medieval Arab-Islamic military architecture.Ajloun Castle dominated the three main routes leading to the Jordan valley and protected the trade and commercial routes between Jordan and Syria, it became an important link in the defensive chain against the Crusaders, who, unsuccessfully spend decades trying to capture the castle and the nearby village.From the top of the castle, visitors can enjoy panoramic views of the Jordan Valley and the highlands of north Jordan. Excavations have recently identified a church that was built on the castle site in the earlier Byzantine period, while restoration and conservation works have made all areas of the castle accessible and safe for visitors. It is recommended to bring binoculars, also, the scenery is promised to be beautiful and as much a part of the reason to visit Ajlun Castle as the castle itself!

30km

32.3252083335.72728056

Qasr Al-Hallabat

human settlement in Jordan

92km

32.0833333336.36305556

Bethany

village recorded in the New Testament as the home of the siblings Mary, Martha, and Lazarus, as well as that of Simon the Leper

95km

31.7714111135.261325

Machaerus

102km

31.5672222235.62416667

Dead Sea

salt lake bordering Jordan and Israel

110km

31.535.5

Umm ar-Rasas

Jordanian archeological site

111km

31.5007861135.92026389

Qasr Al-Kharanah

desert castles located in present-day eastern Jordan

122km

31.7288888936.46277778

Qasr Amra

château

127km

31.80193536.57663

Al-Karak

city in Jordan

138km

31.1833333335.7

Azraq Wetland Reserve

Royal Society for the Conservation of Nature (RSCN) facility that shows you how they are working to preserve the wetlands. You can follow the short, but expensive, Marsh Trail through the main wetlands section to get a glimpse of what they would have been like, complete with ruins of ancient dams.

147km

31.8333333336.81666667
Nature

we will see

Umm Qais

Jordan
Someday we will visit Umm Qais or begin to dream about going there! However, for now its not on our radar. Let us know in the comments if you think that should change!

Umm Qais

Umm Qais is a Roman ruin in Northern Jordan.

Many visitors come to Umm Qais on day trips from the capital, Amman, roughly 110 kilometres (68 mi) to the south, to see its extensive ruins and enjoy its panoramic views. The Sea of Galilee and Tiberias, Israel, are visible, and just across the valley of the Yarmouk River is the southern end of the Golan Heights, Syria, under Israeli occupation since the Six-Day War in 1967. Mount Hermon bordering Lebanon is visible in the distance on clear days.

Gadara (Hebrew: גדרה, Gadʾara, or גדר, Gader; Greek: Γάδαρα Gádara) was situated in a defensible position on a ridge accessible to the east but protected by steep falls on the other three sides. It was well-watered, with access to the Ain Qais spring and cisterns.

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