Jalul
Jalul is an archaeological site and small village in the Amman Governorate in northwestern Jordan.
Archaeology
The site of Tell Jalul spans 18 acres and is the largest tell in the central Jordanian plateau region. It is located east of the city of Madaba and west of the Queen Alia International Airport. The tell is oblong in shape and measures about.Reports and surveys
Ruins at Jalul were reported by several 19th-century explorers. Jalul was mentioned as a ruined site north of Madaba by the German explorer Ulrich Seetzen during his 1805–1807 explorations in Transjordan. It was also mentioned in passing by the Swiss explorer Johann Ludwig Burckhardt in 1812. Jalul was described by the English traveler James Silk Buckingham during his visits to the area in 1816. He reported that it was the largest site he had seen in Transjordan after Amman and that Jalul occupied a commanding position on "the brow of an elevated ridge of the land, and looking over an extensive space to the south of it, of a lower level than the great plain by which we had approached this spot from the north". Buckingham noted that the site was divided by an area empty of structure into eastern and western sections containing numerous ruins mostly characterized by columns, piles of large hewn stones and a few cisterns, grottoes, tombs, and sarcophagi "exhibiting a melancholy example of the wreck of former opulence and power".Jalul began to be shown on maps in 1856 where it was erroneously placed on Kiepert's map of Palestine northwest of Madaba, and in 1867 by Charles Warren who correctly placed it on his reconnaissance map of the Jordan Valley. Henry Baker Tristram noted in 1872 that Jalul was "a small ruin, apparently of a fort and a village". Further mentions and descriptions of Jalul were made by Gottlieb Schumacher in 1891 and Alois Musil in 1896. Jalul was surveyed in 1976 by the American archaeologist Robert Ibach during work at the sites of Tell Hisban and Tall al-Umayri by a team from the Madaba Plains Project and Andrews University. He noted that it was "a major site" of ruins, including "walls preserved above the door lintels and arches still intact".