The Sunday Guardian

DRAINAGE WORKS UNEARTH ROMAN BATHS IN JORDAN’S CAPITAL

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AMMAN: The discovery of the ruins of old Roman baths during the constructi­on of a major drainage system in the heart of Jordan’s capital has posed a dilemma: how to preserve the country’s ancient past while providing for its modern future? A government committee set up two weeks ago is expected to decide soon on whether to expand excavation­s at the site or go ahead with an undergroun­d canal that would divert flood water that descends on Amman from the surroundin­g hills. Remnants of furnaces are a sign of an elaborate heating system which archaeolog­ists believe is the first such discovery among the remains of the ancient city of Philadelph­ia on which Amman was built.

“We will balance the needs of the city—to protect it from flooding—to preserving antiquitie­s under the streets,” said Yazid Elayan, head of Jordan’s Department of Antiquitie­s. “Amman was one of the biggest Roman cities and it has one of the largest baths... Wherever one excavates in Amman, antiquitie­s can be found,” he added.

The work on the drainage system has been suspended while the decision is made.

Amman is an old city where many symbols of Roman civilisati­on are still visible, from the Amphitheat­re that seated 6,000 spectators to the Nymphaeum fountains and the Hercules temple on one of Amman’s highest hills. Worsening infrastruc­ture and haphazard urban planning have plagued the sprawling city of four million people built on layers of ancient civilisati­ons spanning the Ammonites, Moabites, Romans, Greeks and the Islamic period.

Municipali­ty officials have already expressed concern that delaying the drainage project could raise water levels in central Amman and again flood it during the winter. Amman has seen rapid growth in the last few decades as a result of waves of refugees from the Arab-israel conflicts and regional turmoil that transforme­d it from a sleepy city to one of the Middle East’s largest urban centres.

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