Das Jordan Museum
Nationalmuseum für Geschichte und Kultur Jordaniens. Über 2000 Artefakte, u.a. Ain Ghazal Statuen, früheste großformatige Menschenfiguren; Nabatäer, Schriftrollen vom Toten Meer.
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Khirbet edh-Dharih war ein nabatäisches Dorf an einem Berghügel über dem Wadi al-La'ban, tributpflichtig an das Wadi al-Hasa im Süden Jordaniens.
Ein außergewöhnlicher Tempel mit kunstvoll gearbeiteter Fassade von bis zu 15 m Höhe, in dem Dorf gebaut um 100 n.Chr.
The temple facade was designed according to classical fashion. It contained major constitutional elements of classical architectural order, but its decoration was not classical at all. Excavators found the temple in ruined heaps, but fortunately they could recover hundreds of fallen stone blocks that enabled them to reconstruct major parts of the temple.
The architrave of the temple facade stood around 10m above ground. It was decorated with carved vines and animals, and had Medusa heads at the corners. The frieze above had figures of the Zodiac alternating with winged Victories, who crowned these figures. The discovered zodiac figures are, from left to right, Taurus, Gemini (figured as Dioscuri), Cancer, Libra and a fragment of a cuirassed Sagittarius; the others are very damaged or missing.
At the top, a triangular pediment had sea centaurs (Tritons) with long twisted tails, crowned by flying Victories and fishes at the ends. Standing eagles guarded the central figures, which were certainly the most important for the temple. Only fragments remain to indicate what these were: a section of the head of a bearded deity (possibly Hadad / Dushara) and fine cornucopiae that suggests a female deity, possibly Atargatis / al-'Uzza. These two were the main deities at the nearby Nabataean temple of Khirbat at-Tannur.
The discoveries in 1998 to 2001 generated discussions among scholars: is the zodiac depicted here a sign of an astral Nabataean cult, or does it represent the local adoption of the zodiacal calendar that was known in several contemporary cultures?
(Text im Jordan Museum)
© Foto: Haupt & Binder
Nationalmuseum für Geschichte und Kultur Jordaniens. Über 2000 Artefakte, u.a. Ain Ghazal Statuen, früheste großformatige Menschenfiguren; Nabatäer, Schriftrollen vom Toten Meer.