Udhruh ( ar, اذرح; transliteration: ''Udhruḥ'',
Ancient Greek
Ancient Greek includes the forms of the Greek language used in ancient Greece and the ancient world from around 1500 BC to 300 BC. It is often roughly divided into the following periods: Mycenaean Greek (), Dark Ages (), the Archaic p ...
''Adrou'', Άδρου), also spelled Adhruh, is a town in southern
Jordan
Jordan ( ar, الأردن; tr. ' ), officially the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan,; tr. ' is a country in Western Asia. It is situated at the crossroads of Asia, Africa, and Europe, within the Levant region, on the East Bank of the Jordan Ri ...
, administratively part of the
Ma'an Governorate. It is located east of
Petra
Petra ( ar, ٱلْبَتْرَاء, Al-Batrāʾ; grc, Πέτρα, "Rock", Nabataean: ), originally known to its inhabitants as Raqmu or Raqēmō, is an historic and archaeological city in southern Jordan. It is adjacent to the mountain of Ja ...
.
[MacDonald 2015, p. 59.] It is the center of the Udhruh Subdistrict.
In 2015, the town had a population of 1,700 and the subdistrict had a population of 8,374.
Udhruh was inhabited by the
Nabateans
The Nabataeans or Nabateans (; Nabataean Aramaic: , , vocalized as ; Arabic: , , singular , ; compare grc, Ναβαταῖος, translit=Nabataîos; la, Nabataeus) were an ancient Arab people who inhabited northern Arabia and the southern Lev ...
as early as the 1st century BCE and later became the site of a fortified Roman military camp used as the headquarters of
Legio VI Ferrata
Legio VI Ferrata ("Sixth Ironclad Legion") was a legion of the Imperial Roman army. In 30 BC it became part of the emperor Augustus's standing army. It continued in existence into the 4th century. A ''Legio VI'' fought in the Roman Republican ...
. Udhruh continued to thrive and by the 6th century was one of the most prosperous towns in
Palaestina Tertia. It submitted to the
Islamic prophet
Muhammad
Muhammad ( ar, مُحَمَّد; 570 – 8 June 632 CE) was an Arab religious, social, and political leader and the founder of Islam. According to Islamic doctrine, he was a prophet divinely inspired to preach and confirm the monot ...
in 631. It later became the site of two decisive conferences in 658 and 661 that respectively arbitrated the end of the
First Muslim Civil War and the onset
Muawiyah I
Mu'awiya I ( ar, معاوية بن أبي سفيان, Muʿāwiya ibn Abī Sufyān; –April 680) was the founder and first caliph of the Umayyad Caliphate, ruling from 661 until his death. He became caliph less than thirty years after the deat ...
’s caliphate. As late as the 9th century it was the regional center of the
Sharat district. During the
Ottoman era a fort was built in the town. Udhruh was abandoned during this era and the modern settlement was founded in the late 1930s.
History
Antiquity
According to archaeological finds, Udhruh was a
Nabatean
The Nabataeans or Nabateans (; Nabataean Aramaic: , , vocalized as ; Arabic: , , singular , ; compare grc, Ναβαταῖος, translit=Nabataîos; la, Nabataeus) were an ancient Arab people who inhabited northern Arabia and the southern L ...
settlement from at least the early 1st century BCE.
Settlement in Udhruh peaked under the
Nabatean king Aretas IV who reigned in ca. 9 BCE–40 CE.
Thus, Udhruh developed concurrently with the Nabatean capital
Petra
Petra ( ar, ٱلْبَتْرَاء, Al-Batrāʾ; grc, Πέτρα, "Rock", Nabataean: ), originally known to its inhabitants as Raqmu or Raqēmō, is an historic and archaeological city in southern Jordan. It is adjacent to the mountain of Ja ...
.
Udhruh was the site of a
Roman fort, which was likely built following the Roman annexation of the Nabatean Kingdom, clients of the Romans, in 106 CE.
The fort may have been a continuation of a Nabatean military structure.
In the late 3rd or early 4th century, the
Legio VI Ferrata
Legio VI Ferrata ("Sixth Ironclad Legion") was a legion of the Imperial Roman army. In 30 BC it became part of the emperor Augustus's standing army. It continued in existence into the 4th century. A ''Legio VI'' fought in the Roman Republican ...
was headquartered at Udhruh.
By then, the fort had long been looted and neglected and it was rebuilt in 303 or 304.
By then the Romans (and later the
Greek-Byzantines) referred to the settlement in the ''
Notitia Dignitatum'' as “
Augustopolis” (Αυγουστόπολις).
[Shahid 2002, p. 327.]
Udhruh remained a place of some importance under
Byzantine
The Byzantine Empire, also referred to as the Eastern Roman Empire or Byzantium, was the continuation of the Roman Empire primarily in its eastern provinces during Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages, when its capital city was Constantin ...
rule, which saw significant demolition and reconstruction of existing military structures in the town.
[MacDonald 2015, p. 74.] The town passed to the control of the Byzantines’ Arab federates, the
Ghassanids
The Ghassanids ( ar, الغساسنة, translit=al-Ġasāsina, also Banu Ghassān (, romanized as: ), also called the Jafnids, were an Arab tribe which founded a kingdom. They emigrated from southern Arabia in the early 3rd century to the Levan ...
, when Emperor
Justinian I
Justinian I (; la, Iustinianus, ; grc-gre, Ἰουστινιανός ; 48214 November 565), also known as Justinian the Great, was the Byzantine emperor from 527 to 565.
His reign is marked by the ambitious but only partly realized ''renovat ...
removed the legionnaires who manned the fortifications of the
Limes Arabicus
The ''Limes Arabicus'' was a desert frontier of the Roman Empire, running north from its start in the province of Arabia Petraea. It ran northeast from the Gulf of Aqaba for about at its greatest extent, reaching northern Syria and forming part ...
in 530.
The Ghassanid
phylarch
A phylarch ( el, φύλαρχος, la, phylarchus) is a Greek title meaning "ruler of a tribe", from '' phyle'', "tribe" + ''archein'' "to rule".
In Classical Athens, a phylarch was the elected commander of the cavalry provided by each of the c ...
al-Harith ibn Jabalah is credited with reconstructing Udhruh by the 10th-century historian
Hamza al-Isfahani.
In a 6th-century list of sites mostly located in the province of
Palaestina Tertia, known as the Beersheba Edict, Udhruh was recorded as paying the second highest amount of taxes.
This testifies to its significance as a regional center at the time, according to archaeologist Burton MacDonald.
A church was built outside of the town's walls in between the 5th or early 7th century.
[MacDonald 2015, pp. 74–75.]
Islamic era
During the late Byzantine period, Adhruh was a possession of the
Banu Judham
The Judham ( ar, بنو جذام, ') was an Arab tribe that inhabited the southern Levant and northwestern Arabia during the Byzantine and early Islamic eras (5th–8th centuries). Under the Byzantines, the tribe was nominally Christian and fo ...
tribe.
[Lammens and Vaglieri 1960, p. 194.] It was often visited by the trade caravans of the
Mecca
Mecca (; officially Makkah al-Mukarramah, commonly shortened to Makkah ()) is a city and administrative center of the Mecca Province of Saudi Arabia, and the holiest city in Islam. It is inland from Jeddah on the Red Sea, in a narrow val ...
n tribe of
Quraysh
The Quraysh ( ar, قُرَيْشٌ) were a grouping of Arab clans that historically inhabited and controlled the city of Mecca and its Kaaba. The Islamic prophet Muhammad was born into the Hashim clan of the tribe. Despite this, many of the Q ...
.
When the Islamic prophet
Muhammad
Muhammad ( ar, مُحَمَّد; 570 – 8 June 632 CE) was an Arab religious, social, and political leader and the founder of Islam. According to Islamic doctrine, he was a prophet divinely inspired to preach and confirm the monot ...
, who belonged to the Quraysh, launched his
expedition to Tabuk in 631, he obtained the capitulation of Udhruh's inhabitants in a treaty.
[Kaegi 1992, p. 82.] The town held a strategic position overlooking the road between Arabia and the
Balqa and controlling access to the iron ore mines of
Wadi Musa.
The Byzantines did not maintain a garrison in Udhruh, but were still able to operate in the area during the
Muslim conquest of the Levant
The Muslim conquest of the Levant ( ar, فَتْحُ الشَّام, translit=Feth eş-Şâm), also known as the Rashidun conquest of Syria, occurred in the first half of the 7th century, shortly after the rise of Islam."Syria." Encyclopædia B ...
launched under Caliph
Abu Bakr
Abu Bakr Abdallah ibn Uthman Abi Quhafa (; – 23 August 634) was the senior companion and was, through his daughter Aisha, a father-in-law of the Islamic prophet Muhammad, as well as the first caliph of Islam. He is known with the honori ...
(r. 632–634).
Many of the inhabitants of Udhruh were
Jewish at the time of their submission to the Muslims, but subsequently converted to Islam.
[Humphrey 2002, p. 210.] They were thenceforth referred to as ''
mawali
Mawlā ( ar, مَوْلَى, plural ''mawālī'' ()), is a polysemous Arabic word, whose meaning varied in different periods and contexts.A.J. Wensinck, Encyclopedia of Islam 2nd ed, Brill. "Mawlā", vol. 6, p. 874.
Before the Islamic prophet ...
'' (associates) of the
Banu Hashim
)
, type = Qurayshi Arab clan
, image =
, alt =
, caption =
, nisba = al-Hashimi
, location = Mecca, Hejaz Middle East, North Africa, Horn of Africa
, descended = Hashim ibn Abd Manaf
, parent_tribe = Qur ...
.
The town also maintained its Christian community well into the early Islamic era.
Udhruh gained fame in Islamic history for hosting the summit that arbitrated the end of the
First Muslim Civil War between Caliph
Ali (r. 656–661) and his opponents in 658.
The first
Umayyad
The Umayyad Caliphate (661–750 CE; , ; ar, ٱلْخِلَافَة ٱلْأُمَوِيَّة, al-Khilāfah al-ʾUmawīyah) was the second of the four major caliphates established after the death of Muhammad. The caliphate was ruled by the ...
caliph
Muawiyah I
Mu'awiya I ( ar, معاوية بن أبي سفيان, Muʿāwiya ibn Abī Sufyān; –April 680) was the founder and first caliph of the Umayyad Caliphate, ruling from 661 until his death. He became caliph less than thirty years after the deat ...
,
gained the recognition of his rival for leadership and son of Ali,
Hasan ibn Ali
Hasan ibn Ali ( ar, الحسن بن علي, translit=Al-Ḥasan ibn ʿAlī; ) was a prominent early Islamic figure. He was the eldest son of Ali and Fatima and a grandson of the Islamic prophet Muhammad. He briefly ruled as caliph from Janu ...
in Udhruh.
The town was the administrative center of
Jund al-Sharah district of the southern Levant at least during the 9th century.
[Le Strange, p. 384.] The 10th-century geographer
al-Muqaddasi notes that Udhruh's townspeople possessed a mantle of the prophet Muhammad and the treaty of capitulation they signed with him which was written on an animal skin.
Ottoman era

At an unknown date during the
Ottoman era (1517–1917), a fort was built in Udhruh.
[MacDonald 2015, p. 92.] It had the roughly the same dimensions and design of the Ottoman fort in
Ma'an, which was built in 1559.
Archaeologist Andrew Petersen estimates that it was constructed by a local leader rather than the Ottoman government.
Modern era
Though the area surrounding Udhruh today is barren, archaeologists surmise that the site sat on a lush oasis during the early centuries of its settlement.
It was abandoned at some point during the Ottoman era and the modern village of Udhruh was established in the late 1930s under the
Emirate of Transjordan
The Emirate of Transjordan ( ar, إمارة شرق الأردن, Imārat Sharq al-Urdun, Emirate of East Jordan), officially known as the Amirate of Trans-Jordan, was a British protectorate established on 11 April 1921, , a British protectorate that later became the modern-day Kingdom of Jordan.
Geography
Udhruh is situated on the eastern edge of the
Sharat highlands of southern Jordan.
[Driessen and Abudanah 2018, pp. 129–130.] It has an average elevation of above sea level.
The town straddles the country's
Desert Highway, and is located northwest of the governorate capital, Ma'an,
[Bisheh 2000, p. 196.] east of Petra and
Wadi Musa,
and north of
Aqaba
Aqaba (, also ; ar, العقبة, al-ʿAqaba, al-ʿAgaba, ) is the only coastal city in Jordan and the largest and most populous city on the Gulf of Aqaba. Situated in southernmost Jordan, Aqaba is the administrative centre of the Aqaba Gove ...
.
The climate is generally arid,
with the lower-lying western part of town having average rainfall of . and the higher eastern part seeing .
The months of January and February sometimes see heavy downpours that cause erosive gullies.
The general lack of rainfall is compensated by Udhruh's spring.
Average temperatures in Udhruh range from 10–15 Celsius in the winter and 30–35 Celsius in the summer.
References
Bibliography
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External Links
Photos of Udhruhat the
American Center of Research
{{Authority control
1930s establishments in Transjordan
Archaeological sites in Jordan
Populated places in Ma'an Governorate
Roman fortifications in Arabia Petraea
Roman legionary fortresses in Jordan