- Ayy
- Faqqu
- Al-Karak
- Al-Mazar al-Janubiyya
- Al-Mazra'a
- Al-Qasr
- Al-Safi
The magnificent
Crusader fortress of Kerak - Crak des
Moabites, or Le Pierre du Desert to
Crusaders - soars above its valleys and
hills like a great ship riding waves of
rock. But Kerak's origins go back long
before the Crusaders; the earliest
remains are Iron Age, shortly after the
Exodus, when this was a part of Moab. It
was known as Kir-haraseth, Kir-heres, or
Kir, and its doom was prophesied by
Isaiah (16:7), who mentions its
'raisin-cakes', presumably a local
specialty. Then it falls out of history
until the Byzantine period, when it was
important enough to have an archbishop.
It was the Crusaders who made Kerak
(biblical Charach Mouba) famous. The
fortress, located 124 km south of Amman,
was built in 1142 by Payen le Bouteiller,
lord of Montreal and of the province of
Oultre Jourdain, on the remains of
earlier citadels, which date back to
Nabataean times. He made Kerak the new
capital of the province, for it was
superbly situated on the King's Highway,
where it could control all traffic from
north and south and grow rich by the
imposition of road-tolls.
There were -as there are today- two
parts of Kerak, both contained within
stout walls, but the citadel and its
fortress are separated from the town by
a deep dry moat. The fortress is
typically Crusader, with dimly lit
stone-vaulted rooms and corridors
leading into each other through heavy
arches and doorways. The best preserved
are underground, and to be reached
through a massive door (ask at the
ticket office).
The castle in itself is more imposing
than beautiful, though it is all the
more impressive as an example of the
Crusaders' architectural military
genius. Each stronghold was built to be
a day's journey from its neighbor. At
night, a beacon was lit at each castle
to signal to Jerusalem that it was safe.
As the visitor enters the modern gate,
one path leads down to the stairs to the
lower courtyard and lower vaults, and a
second path leads to the upper level.
The ruins of the upper level are
attributed to the Crusader period, and
the staircases leading to the
underground level of the upper courtyard
provide access to Mamluk architecture
complexes, most of which were probably
associated with a palace. Among these
ruins are a well-preserved school with
an adjoining mosque.
All the inhabitants of the town could
gather for protection within the citadel
in times of danger - as they did in 1173
when the Zengid ruler Nureddin attacked
the castle. His siege was unsuccessful,
as were later attempts by Saladin in
1183 (when the marriage of the heir of
Kerak was taking place inside, and
Saladin chivalrously kept his
siege-engines off the bridal tower), and
again in 1184. It was not until the end
of 1188, after a siege of more than a
year, that Kerak finally surrendered to
the Muslims.
Kerak's most famous occupant was Reynald
de Chatillon, whose reputation for
treachery, betrayal and brutality is
unsurpassed. When King Baldwin II (who
signed a truce with Saladin) died, his
son, a 13-year-old leper, sued for peace
with Saladin. The Leper King, however,
died without a heir, and in stepped
Reynald, who succeeded in the early
1180's in winning the hand of Stephanie,
the wealthy widow of Kerak's
assassinated regent.
Reynald promptly defied the truce with
Saladin, who returned with a huge army,
ready for war. Reynald and King Guy of
Jerusalem led the Crusader forces and
suffered a massive defeat. Reynald was
taken prisoner and beheaded by Saladin
(the only Crusader king or lord to be
executed by Saladin himself), marking
the beginning of the decline in Crusader
fortunes.
In 1263 the Mamluk Sultan Baybars took
Kerak. The Arab traveler Ibn Battuta,
who visited it in 1355, was much
impressed by the castle's strength, and
said that it was also called "The Castle
of the Raven". Under Ottomans it was
ruled by local families until 1840, when
Ibrahim Pasha son of Mohammad Ali of
Egypt took it, greatly damaging its
defenses. After World War I, Kerak was a
British administrative center until
Emirate of Transjordan was established
in 1921. It remains the center of a
large district.
Kerak is still a largely Christian town,
and many of today's Christian families
trace their origins back to the
Byzantines. There is a small but
interesting museum in the castle, which
is one of the finest of its type
surviving today.







