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Qusayr Amra,
Situated 85 km to the east of Amman, is the little palace
(Qusayr) of Amra, noted for its extensive fresco paintings which cover
virtually all the interior surfaces. The paintings include themes such
as hunting, dancing, and musicians, bathing scenes, cupids, and personifications
of history, philosophy and poetry.
These unique paintings prompted UNESCO to include Qusayr Amra in its World
Heritage list. The plan of the building consists of 3 main elements:
- A rectangular audience-hall with a throne alcove in
the middle of the south side.
- A bath complex which comprises 3 rooms corresponding
to the frigidarium, tepidarium and calidarium, i.e. the cold, warm and
hot rooms respectively.
- The hydraulic structures which include an elevated water-tank,
a masonry-lined deep well, and the apparatus for drawing water from
the well into the water-tank.
Two feeder-pipes drained water from the elevated tank to
the shallow pool or fountain in the audience-hall into a plastered tank,
which stood above the furnace.
It should be noted that Qusayr Amra was not residential
in character, nor was it intended to be occupied over an extended period
of time.
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