Qasr Bshir (Arabic: قصر بشير; Latin: Castra Praetorii Mobeni) is an ancient Roman fort in modern-day Jordan. Isolated in an area of the desert rippled with shallow valleys that drain into the Wadi Mujib river, it is about south of the capital city, Amman. The structure is not visible from any settlement or Jordan's Desert Highway. It measures about square and stands three storeys tall. Qasr Bshir is one of the best-preserved examples of a Roman castellum (small fort),
The fort was part of the Limes Arabicus, a chain of forts and watchtowers on the eastern desert frontier of the Roman Empire. Construction began in the third century AD, during the Tetrarchy, when Rome was divided between four emperors. Emperor Diocletian sought to secure Rome's far eastern border with a string of fortifications. The Limes Arabicus, or Arabian frontier, protected the Roman provinces of Syria and Arabia Petraea from raids by Arabian nomads. Each location was just far enough apart to maintain communication between them. Satellite imagery has since revealed many smaller outposts scattered to the east, indicating that Qasr Bshir was also likely part of a trade network stretching into Persia. Although it is now located where the Syrian Desert meets the semi-arid steppe country in the Jordanian Highlands, the area once experienced higher rainfall and there is evidence of agriculture during classical antiquity. By AD 500, the eastern forts, including Qasr Bshir, were abandoned. Centuries later, the site was reoccupied by the Umayyads until earthquakes in 747 and 749 destroyed much of the building.
Since historians Rudolf Ernst Brünnow and Alfred von Domaszewski began documenting the site in the late nineteenth century, significant additional damage has appeared in the structure. Large cracks not visible in their original photographs have formed, and entire rooms have collapsed. Extensive archaeological excavations were carried out during the 1980s.
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