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Location

  • Jordan, Amman
  • geo:31.951698,35.939339
  • Location: correct and verified

Period or year

  • 160~ / unknown

Classification

  • theater
  • Visible

Identifiers

Roman Theatre of Amman

data access 7891

The theatre was built during the reign of Antonius Pius (138-161 CE). The large and steeply raked structure could seat about 6,000 people: built into the hillside, it was oriented north to keep the sun off the spectators.

It was divided into three horizontal sections (diazomata). Side entrances (paradoi) existed at ground level, one leading to the orchestra and the other to the stage. Rooms behind these entrances now house the Jordanian Museum of Popular Traditions on the one side, and the Amman Folklore Museum on the other side.

The highest section of seats in a theatre was (and still is) called "The Gods". Although far from the stage, even there the sightlines are excellent, and the actors could be clearly heard, owing to the steepness of the cavea.1

References

  1. Wikipedia: Roman theater (Jordan)

Het theater is samen met het naastgelegen odeum gebouwd in de 2e eeuw na Chr., tijdens de regering van keizer Antoninus Pius. Het biedt plaats aan 6.000 toeschouwers op 33 rijen zitplaatsen en is daarmee het grootste antieke theater van Jordanië. Het theater ligt direct aan het oude forum en is tegen de heuvel aan gebouwd.

Relevant museums

Nearby sites

Use and reuse

Creators: Entry created by René Voorburg (2012-06-26) , last updated by Elżbieta (2018-11-13), with possible contributions by others. CC BY-SA 4.0, metadata CC-0.
Persistent URI: https://vici.org/vici/7891
Data downloads: KML
Suggested citation: Voorburg, R. and , E., Roman Theatre of Amman. https://vici.org/vici/7891, accessed 2026-04-01.