Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-lj6df Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-04T17:41:14.614Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A New Architectural Survey of Qaṣr Burquʽ, Eastern Jordan

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 April 2011

Extract

Qaṣr Burqu⃓ is one of the most remote of the Jordanian so-called ‘desert castles’ (quṣūr) of the early Islamic period: it lies some 200km east of⃓Ammān (figs. 1–4). However, it is neither a castle, nor is it in the desert, rather it represents a variety of building types and lies in the dry steppe (areas receiving less than 100mm of rainfall per annum) of the bādiyat al-šām (literally, the steppe lands of Damascus). Furthermore, most of the architectural elements are not necessarily attributable to the early Islamic period, namely the Umayyad Caliphate of the seventh and eighth centuries, despite a ‘building’ inscription (E4: see below, pp. 206–7) of Walīd b. ‘Abd’l-Malik (Caliph AD 705–15), dated AD 700 (H. 81). Rather, the various architectural entities at the site, and their use, span the time from about the third-fourth (probably a little later) to the eighth centuries AD. This time range and the Qaṣr's remote location are significant in relation to the political and economic history of the Near East, particularly in regard of nomad-state relations across the verdant-steppic interface. The time range of the various constructions includes the period following the dissolution of the limes arabicus which had been extensively refurbished and augmented under Diocletian and later under Justinian in the third and sixth centuries AD. Many of the more remote erstwhile fortlets, forts and legionary fortresses were colonized by villagers and nomads, as well as monks and pious hermits. Between the fourth and sixth centuries (particularly in the sixth century under the Ghassānids), purpose-built monasteries and ‘residences’ for hermits were established throughout greater Syria, some of them far out in the steppe. The military station at Nemāras about 80km to the north-east of Qaṣr Burqu⃓, for example, may have become one of several centres, functioning as a παƍεμβολή νομάδον of the Lakhmids in the region, under the leadership of Imru'l-Qays who was called ‘king of the Arabs’ and who was buried there in AD 328. Places like Qaṣr Burqu⃓ and Deir al-Kinn, on the other hand, may have been founded or re-established as monasteries.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1991

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Aigrain, R. 1924, ‘Arabie’, Dictionaire d'histoire et de géographic ecclésiastique, 1208–11Google Scholar
Al-Dimašqi, (Shams al-dīn abū ‘Abd’ Allah Muḥammad al-), Cosmographie. Fraen, M. and Mehren, M. A. F. (texte arabe). 1923. Al-Dimašqi, Cosmographie de Chems-ed-Din Abou Abdullah Mohammeded-Dimachqui, Collectio Edit. Rar. Orient. Nov. Impr., 2, LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Almagro, M., Caballero, L., Zozaya, J. and Almagro, A. 1975. Qusayr ‘Amra, Residencia y Banyor Omeyas en el Desierto de Jordania, MadridGoogle Scholar
Al-Mas⃓ūdī, , Murūj al-dhahab. Barbier de Meynard, C. A. and Pavet de Courteille, A. J. (eds. and transl.) 18611877. Al-Mas'udI, Muruj al-dhahab, 9 vols., ParisGoogle Scholar
Banning, E. B. 1986. ‘Peasants, pastoralists and Pax Romana: mutualism in the southern highlands of Jordan’, Bull. Amer. Sch. Oriental Res., 261, 2550CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bell, G. 1927. Letters, 2 vols., LondonGoogle Scholar
Bellamy, J. A. 1985. ‘A new reading of the Nemāra inscription’, J. Amer. Oriental Soc., 105, 3148CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Betts, A. V. G. 1985. ‘Black Desert Survey, Jordan: third preliminary report’, Levant, 17, 2951CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Betts, A. V. G. and Helms, S. W. 1989. ‘A water harvesting and storage system at Ibn al-Ghazzi in eastern Jordan: a preliminary report’, Levant, 21, 311CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Betts, A. V. G. et al. 1990. ‘The Burqu⃓/Ruweishid Project: preliminary report on the 1988 field season’, Levant, 22, 120CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Betts, A. V. G., 1991. ‘The Burqu⃓/Ruweishid Project: preliminary report on the 1989 field season’, Levant, 23, 728CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bowerstock, G. W. 1980. ‘Mavia, Queen of the Saracens’ in Studien zur antiken Sozialgeschichte (Festschrift F. Vittinghoff) (eds. E., Eck, H., Galsterer and H., Wolff), 477–95, KölnGoogle Scholar
Brisch, K. 1963. ‘Das Omayyadische Schloss im Usais. Vorläufiger Bericht über die mit Mitteln der DFG unternommended Grabungen’, Mitteilungen des Deutschen Archaeologischen Instituts (Abt. Kairo), 19, 141–87Google Scholar
Brisch, K., 1965. ‘Das Omayyadische Schloss im Usais (II). Vorläufiger Bericht über die mit Mitteln der DFG unternommended Grabungen (Frühjahr 1963)’, Mitteilungen des Deutschen Archaeologischen Instituts (Abt. Kairo), 20, 138–77Google Scholar
Bury, J. B. 1923. History of the Later Roman Empire from the Death ofTheodosius I to the Death of Justinian (AD 395 to AD 565), 2 vols., LondonGoogle Scholar
Butler, H. C. 1903. An American Archaeological Expedition to Syria in 1899–1900, Part II, Architecture and Other Arts, New YorkGoogle Scholar
Butler, H. C., 1919. Publications of the Princeton University Archaeological Expedition to Syria in 1904–5 and 1909, Div. II, Ancient Architecture of Syria. Section A. Southern Syria, B. Northern Syria, LeydenGoogle Scholar
Carlier, P. 1984. ‘Recherches archéologiques au château de Qasṭal (Jordanie)’, Ann. Dept. Antiquities Jordan, 28, 343–83Google Scholar
Carlier, P. and Morin, F. 1986. ‘Qasṭal. Un site umayyade complet’, Archiv für Orientforschung, 33, 187206Google Scholar
Caskel, W. 1969. ‘Die Inschrift von en-Nemara neu gesehen’, Mélanges de l'Université Saint-Joseph de Beyrout, 45. 367–79Google Scholar
Chabot, J.-B. 1908. Documental ad origines Monophysitarum illustrandas, ParisGoogle Scholar
Creswell, K. A. C. 1932. Early Muslim Architecture, 2 vols., OxfordGoogle Scholar
Dauphin, C. M. and Schonfield, J. J. 1983. ‘Settlements of the Roman and Byzantine period on the Golan Heights’, Israel Explor. J., 33, 189206Google Scholar
Day, F. E. 1960. ‘Appendix E. Historical notes on Burqu⃓, Bayir and Dauqara’ in Field 1960, 150–60Google Scholar
Dow, S. ‘Appendix F. The Greek inscription at Qaṣr Burqu⃓’ in Field 1960, 161–3Google Scholar
Dussaud, R. and Macler, F. 1903. Mission scientifique dans les régions désertiques de la Syrie moyenne, ParisGoogle Scholar
Eadie, J. W. 1988. Review of Parker 1986, Bull. Amer. Sch. Oriental Res., 269, 94CrossRefGoogle Scholar
el-Hawary, H. M. 1930. ‘The most ancient Islamic monument known, dated AH 31 (AD 652) from the time of the third Caliph ‘Uthman’,J. Roy. Asiatic Soc., 321–33CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eph⃓al, I. 1982. The Ancient Arabs. Nomads on the Borders of the Fertile Crescent. 9th-5th Centuries BC, LeydenCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ettinghausen, R. 1977. Arab Painting, new edition, LondonGoogle Scholar
Field, H. 1929. ‘Early man in north Arabia’, Natur. Hist., 29, 33–4Google Scholar
Field, H., 1960. North Arabian Desert Archaeological Survey 1925–50, Peabody Mus. Paps., 45/2, Cambridge, Mass.Google Scholar
Gaube, H. 1974a. Ein arabischer Palast in Südsyrien. ḫirbet el Beida, Beiruter Texte und Studien, 16, BeirutGoogle Scholar
Gaube, H., 1974b. ‘An examination of the ruins at Qasr Burqu⃓’‘, Ann. Dept. Antiquities Jordan, 19, 93100Google Scholar
Gaube, H., 1979. ‘Die Syrischen Wüstenschlösser: Einige wirtschaftliche und politische Gesichtspunkte zu ihrer Entstehung’, Zeitschrift des Deutschen Palästina-Vereins, 95, 182209Google Scholar
Glueck, N. 1951. Explorations in Eastern Palestine. IV, pts. 1–2, Ann. Amer. Sch. Oriental Res., 25–8, New HavenGoogle Scholar
Goubert, P. 1951. Byzance avant de Justinien. L'empereur Maurice, ParisGoogle Scholar
Grabar, O., Holod, R., Knustad, J. and Trousdale, W. 1978. City in the Desert. Qusur al-Hayr East, Cambridge, Mass.Google Scholar
Gregory, S. and Kennedy, D. 1985. Sir Auriel Stein's Limes Report, Brit. Archaeol. Rep. Int. Ser., 272 (2 vols.), OxfordGoogle Scholar
ḥamza, al-Iṣfahānī. Ta⃒rīkh. Gottwaldt, J. M. E. (transl.) ḥamza al-Iṣfahānī, Ta⃒rīkh sinī mulūk a-ardh wa⃒ lanbiya (1961 edition), BeirutGoogle Scholar
Helms, S. W. 1981 Jawa: Lost City of the Black Desert, London and New YorkGoogle Scholar
Helms, S. W., 1989. ‘Jawa at the beginning of the Middle Bronze Age’, Levant, 21, 4168CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Helms, S. W., 1990. Early Islamic Architecture of the Desert: A Bedouin Station in Eastern Jordan, EdinburghGoogle Scholar
Herzfeld, E. 1921. ‘Mshattâ Hîra und Bâdiya. Die Mittelländer des Islams und ihre Baukunst’, Jahrbuch der Königlichen Preussischen Kunstsammlungen, 42, 104–46Google Scholar
Hillenbrand, R. 1982. ‘La Dolca Vita in early Islamic Syria: the evidence of the Later Umayyad palaces’, Art Hist., 5, 135CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hitti, P. K. 1970. History of the Arabs from the Earliest Times to the Present, LondonGoogle Scholar
Istaḥrī, (Ibraḥīm ibn Muḥammad [abū Ishaq] al Farisī). The Oriental Geography of Ebn Haukal… (1981 edition), LondonGoogle Scholar
Jaussen, J. A. and Savignac, R. 1922. Mission archéologique en Arabie, III, Les Châteaux arabes, ParisGoogle Scholar
Kawar, I. (Shahid). 1958. ‘The last days of Salih’, Arabica, 5, 47CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kennedy, D. and Riley, D. 1990. Rome's Desert Frontier, SheffieldGoogle Scholar
Kennedy, J. 1986. The Prophet and the Age of the Caliphates, London and New YorkGoogle Scholar
Killick, A. C. 1986. ‘Udru and the southern frontier’ in The Defence of the Roman and Byzantine East (eds. P., Freeman and D., Kennedy), Brit. Archaeol. Rep. Int. Ser., 297 (2 vols.), 431–46Google Scholar
King, G. R. D. 1987. ‘The distribution of sites and routes in the Jordanian and Syrian deserts in the early Islamic period’, Proc. Seminar Arabian Stud., 17, 91105Google Scholar
Lammens, H. 1910. ‘La Bâdiya et la ḥīra sous les Omaiyades. Un mot à propos de Mśattâ’, Mélanges de la Faculté Orientale, Université Saint-Joseph, Beyrut, 4, 91112CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lancaster, W. 1981. The Rwala Bedouin Today, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Lancaster, W. and Lancaster, F. 1990. ‘Ar-Risha: a permanent address’ in Helms 1990Google Scholar
Littmann, E. Magie, D. and Stuart, D. R. 1921. Publications of the Princeton University Archaeological Expedition to Syria in 1904–1905 and 1909, Div. III, The Greek and Latin Inscriptions, Section A: Southern Syria, LeydenGoogle Scholar
Macadam, H. I. 1986. ‘Some notes on the Umayyad occupation of north-east Jordan’ in The Defence of the Roman and Byzantine East (eds. P., Freeman and D., Kennedy), Brit. Archaeol. Rep. Int. Ser., 297, 53–47Google Scholar
Mayerson, P. 1989. ‘Saracens and Romans: micro- and macro-relationships’, Bull. Amer. Sch. Oriental Res., 274. 71–9CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Negev, A. 1985. ‘Excavations at Carmel (Kh. Susiya) in 1984: preliminary report’, Israel Explor. J., 35, 231–52Google Scholar
Nöldeke, T. 1875. ‘Zur Topographie und Geschichte des Damascenischen Gebiete und Haurangegend’, Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenland Gesellschaft, 29, 419–44Google Scholar
Parker, S. T. 1986. Romans and Saracens: A History of the Arabian Frontier, Amer. Sch. Oriental Res. Dissertation Ser., 6, PhiladelphiaGoogle Scholar
Parker, S. T., 1987a. ‘The Roman limes in Jordan’ in Studies in the Archaeology and History of Jordan, vol. III (ed. A., Hadidi), AmmanGoogle Scholar
Parker, S. T., 1987b. ‘Peasants, pastoralists and Pax Romana: a different view’, Bull. Amer. Sch. Oriental Res., 265, 3551CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peters, F. E. 19771978. ‘Byzantium and the Arabs of Syria’, Annales Archéologiques Arabs de Syrie, 27–8, 97–113Google Scholar
Piccirillo, M. 1987. ‘Prima campagna di scavo a Um er-Rasās’, (‘Chronique Archéologique’), Syria, 64, 302–5Google Scholar
Piccirillo, M., 1987. ‘La torre di Umm er-Rasās’, Liber Annuus, 37, 402–3Google Scholar
Piccirillo, M., 1988. ‘Archaeological excavations at ⃓Ayoun Musa-Mount Nebo’, Ann. Dept. Antiquities Jordan, 32, 195–2O5Google Scholar
Poidebard, A. 1934. La Trace de Rome dans le Désert de Syrie, 2 vols., ParisGoogle Scholar
Prentice, W. K. 1931. ‘A Greek inscription from Kasr Burka’, Amer. J. Archaeol., 635, 4850 Procopius, Buildings. Dewing, H. B. and Downey, G. (transl.) 1954. Procopius, 7 vols., London and Cambridge, Mass.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Procopius, Persian Wars. Haury, J. (ed.) Procopius, Opera Omnia, vol. I, De bellis libri I-IV (edited and corrected, G., Wirth, 1962), LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Sartre, M. 1982. Trois études sur l'Arabie romaine et byzantine, Collection Latomus, 178, BrusselsGoogle Scholar
Sauvaget, J. 1939. ‘Remarques sur les monuments Omayyades: I, Château de Syrie’, Journal Asiatique, 281, 159Google Scholar
Sauvaget, J., 1967. ‘Châteaux umeyyades de Syrie’ (contribution à l'étude de la colonisation arabe au rér siècle de l'Hégire), Révue, des étrudes islamiques, 152Google Scholar
Schlumberger, D. 1939. ‘Les fouilles de Qusur el-Heir el-Gharbi (1936–1938). Rapport preliminaire’, Syria, 20, 195238. 324–73CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schröder, E. 1960. ‘Architectural report’ in Field 1960, 94104Google Scholar
Shahid, I. 1984. Byzantium and the Arabs in the Fourth Century, WashingtonGoogle Scholar
Shboul, A. 1975. ‘On the later Arabic inscription in Qaṣr Burqu⃓’, Ann. Dept. Antiquities Jordan, 20, 95–8Google Scholar
ṭabarī, , Ta'rīkh [Ta'r¯kh al-rusul wa'l-mulūk (Arabic), 8 vols., Cairo, 19601967]Google Scholar
Tchalenko, G. 19531958. Villages antiques de la Syrie du nord, 3 vols., Institute Français d'Archéologie de Beyrout, Bibl. archéol. et hist., 50, ParisGoogle Scholar
Theophanes, , Chronographia. Niebuhrii, B. G. (ed.). 1939. Theophanes, Chronographia, Corpus Scriptorum Historiae Byzantinae, BonnGoogle Scholar
Trimingham, J. S. 1979. Christianity Among the Arabs in Pre-Islamic Times, London and New YorkGoogle Scholar
Vööbus, A. 1960. History of Asceticism in the Syrian Orient. A Contribution to the History of Culture in the Near East, vol. II, Early Monasticism in Mesopotamia and Syria, Corpus Script. Chris. Orient., 197, subsidia tom., 17, LouvainGoogle Scholar
Waddington, W. H. 1870. Inscriptions grèques et latines de la Syrie recuillies et expliquées par W. H. W., ParisGoogle Scholar
Wright, W. 1871. Catalogue of the Syriac manuscripts in the British Museum, Part II, LondonGoogle Scholar
Wulff, H. E. 1966. The Traditional Crafts of Persia. Their Development, Technology and Influence on Eastern and Western Civilization, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Ya⃓qubi (Aḥmad ibn ⃒abi Ya⃓cūb ibh Wāḍiḥ), Ta⃒rīkh al-Y, 3 vols. (annotated by M. ṣādiq, Baḥr al-⃓Ulum [Arabic]), Nadjal 1964Google Scholar