Madabā

Madabā

Jordan
also spelled  Medeba 

      town, west-central Jordan. It is situated on a highland plain more than 2,500 feet (760 metres) above sea level. The town lies 20 miles (32 km) south of Amman, along a main highway to southern Jordan.

      An ancient city, Madabā was mentioned in the Old Testament as being laid waste by the Israelites (Israelite) under Moses when the Amorites (Amorite) refused passage through their territory (Numbers 21). It was subsequently allocated by Joshua to the tribe of Reuben (Joshua 13:16). It later served as a Moabite stronghold, having been taken by Mesha, king of Moab, after the division of the Jewish kingdom (9th century BCE). Madabā is mentioned in rabbinic literature as having a Jewish population. After the spread of Christianity, Madabā became an important Byzantine (Byzantine Empire) centre. The town was destroyed in 1880 and was rebuilt and resettled with Christian Arabs from Al-Karak (Karak, Al-) and vicinity. Wheat and barley are grown on the surrounding fertile plain.

      The town is famous in historical cartography for the Madabā mosaic map, thought to be the oldest surviving map of Palestine and the neighbouring territories. The mosaic map, which formed the floor of one of the many ruined ancient churches in Madabā, was discovered in 1884. The map dates from the 6th century CE, was originally 72 by 23 feet (22 by 7 metres) in size, and showed the area from ancient Byblos (modern Jubayl, Leb.) in the north to Thebes (Egypt) in the south and from the Mediterranean Sea in the west to Amman, Al-Karak, and Petra in the east. The map language is Greek, and the geography generally follows the Onomasticon of Eusebius of Caesarea (c. CE 260–c. CE 340). The Madabā map is of particular interest because of its detailed plan of Jerusalem and its numerous place-names in the Negev that are not mentioned in other sources. By 1896, when the map came to the attention of scholars, much of it had been damaged; the extant portion extends from Classical Neapolis (modern Nāblus) to Egypt. In 1965 the map underwent restoration led by a German team on the behalf of the German Society for the Exploration of Palestine (Deutscher Verein zur Erforschung Palästinas). Pop. (2004) 70,338.

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Universalium. 2010.

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