Al Qastal | |
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Coordinates:31°44′49″N35°56′8″E / 31.74694°N 35.93556°E /31.74694; 35.93556 | |
Country | ![]() |
Governorate | Amman Governorate |
Time zone | UTC + 2 |
31°44′49″N35°56′8″E / 31.74694°N 35.93556°E /31.74694; 35.93556Al Qastal (Arabic:القسطل) is atown in theAmman Governorate of northernJordan.[1] Originally established as anUmayyad settlement, it remains the oldest and most complete such settlement in the Near East[2] The remains of theminaret at Qastal is especially important as it is the only one extant from the Umayyad period, making it one of the oldest minarets in the world.[3] Qasr al-Qastal, also located within the town, is considered one of thedesert castles and is just 5 km fromQasr Mshatta.
Textual evidence from the poetKuthayyir 'Azzah indicates that the Qasr al-Qastal complex was originally built byCaliphYazid bin Abd al-Malik. The fact that the Qasr al-Qastal complex was finished, while the nearby Qasr Mshatta was never finished, indicates that Qasr al-Qastal may be the oldest Umayyad construction in the area. Tombstones from Al-Qastal indicate that after the fall of the Umayyads the site was used by theAbbasid Caliphate.[dubious –discuss] When the Abbasid Caliphate fell, there was a short period when the site was abandoned. Later, under theAyyubid andMamluk dynasties, Al-Qastal was re-settled, a number of small buildings dating back to this time.[dubious –discuss][citation needed]
Qasr al-Qastal was an Umayyadpalace of theqasr type. The building was approximately 68 meters square. The outer wall of the palace had 12 semi-circular towers at intervals between four large corner towers. The ground floor comprised an entrance hall, courtyard, and six suites of rooms. The upper story contained another set of suites and the palace's audience hall which had a triple,apse design. The palace was originally decorated with carvings and mosaics that show similarity to mosaics found atQasr al-Hallabat.
Near the palace there are two noteworthy sites, a small, rectangularmosque and acemetery. Attached to the mosque is one of the oldestminarets in the world, known as the Al-Qastal Minaret. The tombs in the cemetery are noteworthy for being oriented facingPetra, as opposed toMecca.The error is 29° West.[citation needed]
Water for the palace came from a large stone dam, areservoir as well as over 70 smallcisterns that had a combined capacity of over 2 million cubic meters of water.[4]
Today the site lies in ruins and a portion of the palace has been covered by a modern house[5] owned by a powerful clan who appropriated much of the site and used architectural elements of theqasr as decoration.