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THE MONASTERY (AD-DEIR)

Ancient monuments
4.9/5
23 review

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Petra, Jordan
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2024
Recommended
2024

An imposing monastery with a 47-metre-high, 48-metre-wide facade that once served as a temple for religious worship

How to get there. The main path starts from the Basin restaurant. It takes 850 steps and 45 minutes (minimum) to reach the top. You can make the ascent by donkey for 15 DJ (to be negotiated). There is another less arduous, but longer path (which can be done via the Back Door Trail).

Visit. With its 47 m high and 48 m wide façade, the Monastery is the most imposing of all the monuments of the ancient city. Its deep resemblance with the Treasury is obvious, even if its ornamentation remains more sober. One is quickly astonished to discover the excellent state of conservation of the monument, in spite of the intense erosion at the origin of the deterioration of many of the tombs of the city. It is however not protected by any mountainside. Contrary to the long held idea, it is not a royal mausoleum, since no tomb has been found. It is rather a vast temple dedicated to the practice of ritual banquets in honor of Obodas II, a Nabataean monarch who reigned from 30 BC to 9 BC and was deified after his death. An inscription found not far from the monastery calls for "remembering Ubaydu son of Waqihel and his associates for the symposium of Obodas the God". A symposium, in ancient Greece, was a banquet given after a meal, accompanied by dancing and singing.

The monastery dates back to the middle of the first century. It takes its name from the Byzantine period when it was probably used as a monastery, and most certainly as a church, as the crosses drawn on the back wall testify. Carved in yellow sandstone, its first level is punctuated by eight pilasters finished with Nabatean capitals with horns for some, of Ionic inspiration for others. An imposing entrance as well as two windows in trompe l'oeil appear between them. The second level is surmounted by a pediment broken by an imposing tholos, a circular temple, framed on each side by two pavilions. Niches have been dug between the pilasters of these three elements. The tholos has at its top an impressive urn of approximately 9 meters in height, visible for miles around.

To the left of the building, a staircase cut in the rock climbs up to a platform where an altar was installed. The staircase continued beyond, to the top of the Monastery, but it was closed by the authorities after the accidental death of a tourist. Prefer the late afternoon light for beautiful photos, but leave in time to get back to the remote entrance of the site.

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Members' reviews on THE MONASTERY (AD-DEIR)

4.9/5
23 reviews
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The ratings and reviews below reflect the subjective opinions of members and not the opinion of The Little Witty.

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Florent73
Visited in october 2018
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Un très belle ballade, sans difficulté, permet d'arriver au Monastère. Un très bel endroit. Pas besoin d'avoir recours à un guide...
nonoceline
Visited in november 2018
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Le "monastère" est un tombeau situé en hauteur et recul des autres sites du lieu.
Le chemin est un peu fatigant mais l'atmosphère régnant devant le tombeau est plus calme que pour le Trésor.
Je vous conseille d'y aller en fin de journée pour avoir le soleil dans le dos et les meilleures couleurs.
Deux beaux points de vue sont atteignables en retrait.
cammmz
Visited in june 2018
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Le chemin est long et dur quand il fait chaud mais on est bine récompensé: le monastère est très impressionnant ! Prenez votre temps en vous rafraîchissant dans le petit restaurant/bar juste en face du monastère pour le contempler.
J-ML
Visited in april 2018
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Le Monastère ou Al-Deir atteint après une belle montée dans la montagne ponctuée de plusieurs centaines de marches, de bédouins vendant des bibelots loin de la foule de Pétra. Superbe, plus grand que le Trésor mais moins ouvragé, très bien conservé. En face et plus loin, plusieurs points de vue avec de petites échoppes où prend un thé bien mérité. A faire le matin avant la chaleur.
Valiha
Visited in july 2016
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Très belle ballade (tonique!) qui permet de retrouver le calme en s'éloignant de la vallée. Avec , comme récompense, la vue superbe sur le monastère et deux très beaux point de vue. Le long du chemin, on trouve des échoppes ou des Bédouins vendent des bijoux artisanaux à prix raisonnable.

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