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The South Theatre is, after or along with the Artemis Temple, considered to be the most attractive part of Jerash. Is has been restored in 1925 (during which, according to my source, Jordan, a German book by Dumont publishers, some errors have been made in the reconstruction of the stage building). Four different types of stone have been used building this Roman type theatre. On 32 rows of benches, divided in two by a diazoma halfway up, could seat some 3500 visitors. Two inscriptions have been found referring to gifts to the theatre, indicating that was being built at the time (during Domitian, 81-96 AD) though more recently found inscriptions indicate the actual building period was probably 90-92. Traces of (much later) Umayyad re-use have been found. An earthquake, maybe one in 747 destroyed it.
Full EXIF Info | |
Date/Time | 03-Jun-2013 14:27:05 |
Make | Nikon |
Model | NIKON D4 |
Flash Used | No |
Focal Length | 16 mm |
Exposure Time | 1/800 sec |
Aperture | f/8 |
ISO Equivalent | 200 |
Exposure Bias | 0.00 |
White Balance | 0 |
Metering Mode | matrix (5) |
JPEG Quality | fine (4) |
Exposure Program | aperture priority (3) |
Focus Distance |
Copyright: Dick Osseman. For use: see my Profile.