Descubre Amman
Tipos de viaje
Amman's Citadel, Roman Theatre, Jordan Museum (Dead Sea Scrolls copper scroll, 'Ain Ghazal statues), Jordan Archaeological Museum, and the contemporary art at Darat al-Funun.
50 km north of Amman: the best-preserved Roman provincial city outside Italy, with intact Forum, Cardo, temples, theatres, and hippodrome from the 2nd–3rd centuries CE.
90 km east of Amman: Qusayr Amra (UNESCO, extraordinary Umayyad frescoes), Qasr Kharana, and Qasr al-Azraq (Lawrence's winter fortress) — best with a hired car for a full-day circuit.
60 km west: Dead Sea resort beaches and the float experience, plus Madaba (Byzantine mosaic map of Terre Sainte) and Mount Nebo (views over the Jordan Valley, Moses memorial church).
- •Queen Alia International Airport is 30 km south of Amman city centre. Taxis to the city cost approximately JOD 20–25; the Airport Express Bus (JOD 3.25) runs regularly to Abdali bus terminal.
- •Amman taxis: always insist the driver uses the meter (argue firmly if necessary); meters are cheaper than any negotiated price for most journeys. Ride-hailing apps (Careem, Uber) are also available.
- •For Jerash: buses from the North Bus Terminal (Al-Tabarbour) in north Amman run regularly (about 1 JOD each way). Minibuses also available; taxis about JOD 30 return with waiting time.
- •For the Desert Castles circuit, a car or hired taxi is strongly recommended — public transport connections to Qusayr Amra are very limited.
- •Friday is the holy day in Jordan. Downtown Amman is quieter on Fridays; most government offices and many shops are closed. Tourist sites usually open but with shorter hours.
- •The Amman city centre is hilly and walkable between the Citadel and Downtown, but west Amman (Rainbow Street, Abdali) requires taxis or a car — distances are greater than they appear on maps.
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