Jerash (Arabic: جرش) is one of the
governorates of Jordan; it is located north of Amman,
Jordan's capital.
In the first century of the Christian era this
insignificant city (then Gerasa) experienced a fast
ascent under Roman rule and the Pax Romana. It became
part of the Decapolis and grew increasingly competitive
with the older Petra as a commercial town. The
inhabitants won ore in the nearby Ajlun mountains.
Starting in the middle of the First Century this upswing
led to active building and a rich abundance of
architectural monuments, still impressive today. In the
Second Century the Roman expansion wars in Asia led to
further gains. Well-made roads were built to Pella,
Philadelphia (now Amman), Dion and to the provincial
capital Bos(t)ra. Emperor Hadrian visited the city in
the winter of 129-130. In the following centuries the
political situation in this region changed fundamentally
and the city's means declined. During this time also
Christianity was on the ascendant and many churches were
built. Gerasa had its own bishop—still today it is a
Titularbistum—and bishop Placcus (or Plancus)
participated in the Council of Chalcedon. Nicomachus of
Gerasa came from this Gerasa.
History
In a remote, quiet valley among the
mountains of Gilead lie the ruins of Jerash, at one time
a city of the Decapolis, and the only one of that
powerful league through whose streets and monuments we
can wander and see them as they were in its heyday,
untouched except by the hand of time. Greater cities,
such as Gadara and Philadelphia, have vanished almost
without trace, but the remoteness of Jerash has saved it
from being used as a stone quarry for nearby towns and
villages, and it is one of the most complete examples of
a provincial Roman city to be seen anywhere. The setting
adds greatly to the charm of the place, lying as it does
in a valley running rougly north and south and with a
perennial stream running through the centre of it. The
banks of the stream are covered in walnut and poplar
trees, which look green and cool even in the heat of
summer, when the surface of the surrounding hills is
reduced to a harsh brown aridity. On the south the hills
draw away on either side, and the village of Sweileh can
be seen on the far skyline.
The site now lies on a modern highway
that links Amman with the northern boundary of the
Kingdom towards Syria; the drive takes 40 minutes from
Amman at a leisurely speed. As one approaches, it is
after a corner of the highway that he is suddenly faced
with a wonderful view of the ruins with the Triumphal
Arch in the foreground. On the other side of the highway
lies the modern town of Jerash.
The history of Jerash goes back to
prehistoric times, and on the slopes east of the
Triumphal Arch can be found flint implements which show
that here was the site of the Neolithic settlement.
Outside the walls to the north was a small Early
Bronze Age village about 2500 B.C., and on the hilltops
above are remains of dolmens of a slightly earlier
period. There are now no traces of occupation during the
rest of the Bronze Age and the Iron Age, but had there
been settlements anywhere within the area of the Roman
city they would certainly have disappeared or become
buried during the course of its construction. There are
many Iron Age settlements in the vicinity, and it is
unlikely that a place with so fine a water supply
as that of Jerash would have remained unoccupied.
Exactly when the shift was made to the
present position cannot now be determined. The town was
at one time cal]ed "Antioch on the Chrysorrhoas," the
latter, meaning "Golden River," being the
somewhat grandiose name of the little stream which still
separates the eastern from the western section. But the
name "Antioch" is significant, and strongly suggests
that it was one of the Seleucid Kings with the
name Antiochus who was responsible for raising the
little village to the status of great town, probably
Antiochus IV in the early second century B.C.
Inscriptions found in the ruins, however, show that
there were many traditions current as to the founding of
the city, some attributing it to Alexander the Great,
some to the general Perdiccas in the fourth century B.C.
It could also have been accomplished by Ptolemy II (285
- 246 B. C.) when he changed Amman into
the Hellenistic city of Philadelphia. It is possible and
probable that each and every one of these had a finger
in the pie, and that the emergence of Jerash from the
chrysalis village of mud huts to the brightly
coloured butterfly of an Hellenistic town was due rather
to the increasing general prosperity and security than
to the efforts of any one ruler.
At the end of the second or early
first century B.C. we have the first historical
reference to Jerash. It is mentioned by Josephus, the
Jewish historian, as the place to which Theodorus, the
tyrant of Philadelphia, removed his treasure for safe
keeping in the Temple of Zeus, which was then an
inviolable sanctuary, when he had been turned out of
Gadara. But soon after that he lost Jerash to Alexander
Jannceus, the Jewish high priest and ruler (102-76
B.C.), and it seems to have remained in Jewish hands
until the coming of Pompey. It no doubt suffered its
share of the bickering and quarreling which went on
almost continuously among the petty Jewish rulers of the
time.
In the year 63 B.C., Pompey, having
overrun the Near East, divided it up into provinces, and
Jerash and its lands were attached to the province of
Syria.
This was the great turning-point in
the history of the town, and was recognised as such in
its calendar to the very end of its life as an outpost
of Western civilisation, for all its dates are given in
the Pompeian era. The Hellenistic cities had
enjoyed certain rights of self-government,
and these rights were continued under the Pompeian
arrangements, Jerash enjoyed these rights, and early in
the Roman period of its history it joined the league of
free cities known as the Decapalis. From now
until the middle of the first century A.D, Jerash seems
to have had a quiet and peaceful time. It had a
flourishing trade with the Nabataeans at this period,
and many coins of King Aretas IV have been found. But
even before this date Nabataean infiuence had
played its part in Jerash: stones carved in the typical
Nabataean "crowstep" pattern testify that their
type of architecture was known and used there. There is
a bilingual inscription, almost illegible, in
Nabataean and Greek, and other inscriptions refer to a
temple of the "Holy God" Pakidas and the Arabian god. It
can be deduced that this latter is Dushares, the
Nabataean deity, and it is significant that the
inscriptions referring to him and the "crowstep"
stones are all found in the same area, i.e. the
Cathedral and Fountain Court. There are known to be
remains of an earlier temple beneath the Cathedral, in
all probability that of the Arabian god, later
indetified with Dionysius.
Other inscriptions found in the
neighbourhood of the Forum and Zeus Temple show us that
in the first and probably second centuries B.C. the town
extended at least from the Zeus Temple to the Cathedral
area; yet others suggest it may even have included the
area of the Artemis Temple. But until further excavation
is undertaken, nothing more can be said about the town
of the preChristian era.
All this time Jerash must have been
accumulating wealth, for somewhere in the middle of the
first century A.D. we find the city launching out on a
complete rebuilding programme. A comprehensive town plan
was drawn up, the basis of which was the Street of
Columns and the two streets crossing it at the North and
South Tetrapylons. No substantial changes in this plan
were made to the end of its days. An inscription on the
North- west Gate shows that the enclosing city wall was
completed in A.D. 75- 76, thus setting the limits
for the city's growth. A new Temple of Zeus was begun
about A.D. 22- 23 and was still under construction
in 69- 70, aided by gifts from wealthy citizens, who
seem to have taken a pride in contributing to the
embellishment of the town. The South Theatre, next to
the temple, was springing up at the same time, the older
Temple of Artemis was being beautiful with a portico and
provided with a pool, and somewhere a shrine to the
Emperor Tiberius had been erected. In fact, the place
must have been a hive of industry and have been
attaining a degree of wealth such as had not been seen
before and has certainly not been repeated since.
This antlike activity continued and
even increased in the second century, when the Emperor
Trajan extended the frontiers. annexed the Nabataean
kingdom (A.D. 106), and built a fine series of roads.
More trade came to the town, greater wealth was
accumulated, and some of the buildings considered as the
last word in the first century were pulled down
and more elaborate and ornate structures replaced them.
Such a one was the North Gate, rebuilt in A.D. 115.
Annual festivals and contests were inaugurated, and
inscriptions tell of the munificence of one Titus
Flavius Quirina, who gave banquets for both victors and
vanquished.
Two huge thermae, or baths,
were built, without which no decentminded Roman citizen
could contemplate existence for a moment. Their.
functions were much more than those of mere Turkish
baths; they represented the exclusive club life of the
period, were not infrequently used to steam away
unwanted relatives, and provided an admirable setting
for gay parties given by wealthy or merely ambitious
citizens.
The Emperor Hadrian paid a
personal visit to the city, staying there for part of
the winter of 129- 30. His coming was the signal for a
fresh outburst of building activity, and the Triumphal
Arch was erected to celebrate his visit. It seems
probable that the intention was to extend the area of
the city as far as this arch, as the ends are
left rough as though to bond into a wall, but the
project was abandoned as soon as Hadrian left and
attention returned to the centre of the city.
This century saw the golden age of
Jerash, when most of the great buildings one admires to-
day were erected. A huge programme of expansion and
building was undertaken, involving the widening of the
main street from the Forum to the Artemis Temple, and
the replacing of the Ionic columns lining the street
with Corinthian models. The Artemis Temple, with its
grand approach from the east and its great gateway, was
dedicated in 150. The Temple of Zeus was erected in
about 163, the Nymphaeum in 191, a Temple of Nemesis,
now vanished, was built just outside the North Gate, and
another, to Zeus Epicarpus, farther up the valley was
built by a centurion. There are many inscriptions of
this period which record the dedication by citizens of
altars, pedestals, statues, and stelae, and the erection
of buildings now unidentifiable. Others show that there
were many priests for the cult of the living emperor,
and there were shrines to Zeus Helios Serapis, Zeus
Poseidon, Isis, Apollo, and Diana. Still others give the
names of several provincial governors, procurators, and
other officials, and mention the presence of soldiers of
the III Cyrenaica and a tribune of the X Gemina legions.
The peak was reached and passed early
in the third century A.D., when Jerash was promoted to
the rank of colony, and the grade is steadily downhill
after that, with an occasional level stretch or even a
little rise; but the best was over. But it was a gradual
descent closely connected with the fortunes of the Roman
Empire, and for Jerash there were no precipices on the
road. No more buildings were erected in the grand style,
and already by the end of the century we find carved and
even inscribed blocks being carelessly re- used in
building, always a bad sign. The destruction of Palmyra
and the growth of the Sassanian Kingdom in Iraq
effectively put a stop to big- scale commerce and
shifted trade routes away from the east. Cities like
Jerash, almost on the eastern border, must have felt the
effect at once, and with the weakening of Roman
force the old predatory instincts of the Arab tribes
came to the surface again and security became doubtful.
But under Diocletian the Sassanians were defeated and
there was a short level stretch during which some
building, such as the circular plaza and the shops
around the South Tetrapylon, was carried out. The work,
however, was slipshod, though not quite so bad as later
Byzantine building, and many of the inscriptions of the
period are cut on earlier pedestals or columns or even
on top of partly defaced earlier inscriptions.
By the middle of the fourth century
there was a large Christian community in Jerash,
and the Cathedral and the Fountain Court were
flourishing, for the writer Epiphanius states that some
of his contemporaries had drunk from the fountain at
Gerasa, whose waters turned to wine each year at the
anniversary of the miracle of Cana. But from the town
itself there is little history to be gleaned in the
fourth century; inscriptions are conspicuous by their
absence, and the only other outside reference tells that
the Christians were represented at the council of
Selecucia in 359 by the Bishop Exeresius. Bishop Plancus
represented them at the council of Chalcedon in 451, by
which time Christianity must have become the ruling
religion of the town. In 440- 442 some repairs to the
fortifications were carried out; the Church of the
Prophets, Apostles and Martyrs was built in 464- 5, and
that of St. Theodore in 464- 6, when the fountain court
was also remodelled.
Under Justinian, 531- 565, there was a
rise in prosperity, and no fewer than seven churches are
known to have been erected in this period. Inscriptions
record the erection of other public buildings of an
unidentifiable nature, and even the revival of the pagan
Maiumas water festival in 535. Many of the churches have
been excavated, and from the objects found in them and
in related buildings we can get a good idea of the life
of the time. Low though the standard might be in
comparison with former splendours, there was none the
less a fair degree of rather cheap luxury. Appearances
were all that mattered and beauty was only just skin
deep. Gleaming marble and brightly coloured glass
mosaics on the walls of the churches concealed a type of
construction than which it would be hard to imagine
worse. As the main centres of life in this period were
around the churches, it naturally reflected their style.
The gaily dressed women who crowded the shops and
drifted in and out of the churches were adorned with
magnificent strings of beads of precious stones and gold
ear- rings and ornaments, which on close inspection
turned out to be glass imitations and thinly gilded
bronze. Still, it was all very pretty on the surface,
and life was by no means unpleasant or difficult. There
were new baths built by the Bishop Placcus next door to
St. Theodore's Church for the use of parishioners,
perhaps the earliest example of "cleanliness being next
to godliness." The choristers had a club room just
across the road from the church, and the clergy were
provided with extensive and comfortable quarters
adjoining the forecourt.
All this external beauty and comfort
was only achieved at the cost of the earlier buildings,
particularly temples. An orgy of destruction of the
pagan shrines must have gone on, and it seems as though
scarcely one new stone was cut for the construction of
any of the churches. The beautiful courtyard of the
Artemis Temple was desecrated by the building of
potters' kilns there.
The last church of which- we
know at present is that built by Bishop Genesius in 611,
and the Persian invasion of 614 was the beginning of the
end of Jerash. The only remains of this invasion are
goal- posts erected in the Hippodrome just outside the
South Gate for playing polo. The Muslim conquest in
about 635 completed the decline of the city, which,
though it continued to be occupied, gradually shrank to
about a quarter of its original size. A series of bad
earthquakes destroyed many of the churches and
buildings, and as no one could afford to rebuild or even
clear them, they were left exactly as they fell. The
Church of St. Theodore is an excellent example of this.
None the less, the abandonment and shrinkage were
gradual, and some of the churches were still in use in
720, when the Caliph Yazid II issued a decree ordering
that "all images and likenesses in his dominions,
of bronze and of wood and of stone and of pigments,
should be destroyed." The result of this
edict is seen in the destruction of mosaic floors in
such churches as St. John the Baptist; apparently the
adjoining Church of SS. Cosmos arld Damianus was already
a partially buried ruin, for the mosaics fortunately
escaped.
This is almost the last thing we know
of Jerash. Excavations show that the area of the Forum
and South Tetrapylon was still occupied in the late
eighth century, but in the twelfth century comes the
last known reference to the town. A crusader, William of
Tyre, speaks of it as having been long uninhabited; a
garrison of forty men stationed there by the Atabey of
Damascus converted the Artemis Temple into a fortress
which was captured by Baldwin II, King of Jerusalem,
1118- 31, and utterly destroyed. The inner faces of the
temple walls show clearly the effect of the burning
which was apparently the method of destruction. Yaqut, a
thirteenth- century Arab geographer, says that the place
was described to him as a field of ruins, completely
uninhabited.
So it happily remained until the
settlement there of the Circassian colony by the Turks
in 1878. To this day Arabs as far afield as south
Palestine when they wish to speak of something as
extremely ruinous say: "It is like the ruins of Jerash." |