Gadara has been
identified as the ancient city half-hidden beneath modern Umm Qais in Jordan.
Until late Hellenistic
times, the citizens of Gadara had to rely on a variety of cisterns that collected rainwater. So far, no less
than 75 such reservoirs have been identified with a storage capacity varying
from 6 to 450 cubic
meters. After the arrival of the Romans in the 1st
century BC, the growing population spread out over a wider area, needing more
water than the cisterns could provide. Water had to be
brought into Gadara from a spring 11
kilometers away. It probably flowed through a series of clay
pipes buried underground, called Qanat
Turab, making a detour around the valleys. Near Gadara, the water crossed another
valley by means of a bridge and reached a tunnel under the city’s Acropolis.
From here, it was distributed to the baths, Nymphaeums, and houses.
By the end of
the 1st century AD, however, the population of Gadara and neighboring settlements had
exploded to reach about 50,000 people. To meet their needs, a daily debit of
300-400 liters
per person was required. Together with the cities of Adra’a and Abila, Gadara decided to build a second long-distance water supply running through a
series of tunnels cut in the rock. The project, known as Qanat Fir’aun, was started in 90 AD to be completed in several
phases by 210 AD. It is known to have been functioning until the devastating
earthquake of 747 AD, which destroyed Gadara.

I already touched on the subject in my earlier post, Preservation
of the Roman aqueduct at Gadara, without digging
deeper into the prowess of the Roman engineers. This elaborate structure started
at a reservoir at Wadi Harier, near
the Syrian border village
of Dille,
with a storage capacity of 4 to 6 million cubic meters. The water covered a
distance of 170
kilometers to Gadara using gravity, in this case, a gradient of about 217 meters! How these
engineers from antiquity managed to figure this out without the help of our
modern technology is a pure wonder. For a good 100 kilometers of its
course, the water ran through a system of tunnels. On its way, 14 tributaries
from Lake Muzarib
in southern Syria
and several springs added their waters to the main stream. For the maintenance
of the entire system, karezes or qanats, providing underground
access, were added at regular intervals.
Access to both
aqueducts can be found on the Acropolis of Gadara,
i.e., where the remains of the abandoned Ottoman village of Umm Qais now
stand. Today’s tourist can visit the last section of this 170-kilometer-long
tunnel in a guided tour. A real treat!
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