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  2. Amman is an ancient city built on the ruins of a city known as “Rabbath Ammon,” later “Philadelphia,” and finally “Amman,” a modification from “Rabbath Ammon,” and the Ammonites took it as their capital. The city was established on seven hills, and it seems that it was the center of the region at that time. It is one of the four ...

    • 7250 BC
    • Jordan
  3. Sep 5, 2021 · After the Ptolemaic Greeks took control of Amman, in 285 BC, Ptolemy II changed its name from Robbat Ammon to "Philadelphia". Philadelphia means the city of brotherly love. He named it after the leader "Philadelphia." This article was written originally in Arabic and is translated using a 3rd party automated service.

  4. international.visitjordan.com › Wheretogo › AmmanAmman - Visit Jordan

    Amman, the capital of Jordan, is a fascinating city of contrasts – a unique blend of old and new, situated on a hilly area between the desert and the fertile Jordan Valley. In the commercial heart of the city, ultra-modern buildings, hotels, restaurants, art galleries and boutiques rub shoulders comfortably with traditional coffee shops and ...

  5. www.wikiwand.com › en › &Amman - Wikiwand

    Amman The earliest evidence of settlement in Amman dates to the 8th millennium BC, in a Neolithic site known as 'Ain Ghazal, where the world's oldest statues of the human form have been unearthed. During the Iron Age, the city was known as Rabat Aman and served as the capital of the Ammonite Kingdom. In the 3rd century BC, Ptolemy II Philadelphus, Pharaoh of Ptolemaic Egypt, rebuilt the city ...

  6. Apr 13, 2021 · In the fall of 1609, some weeks after Henry Hudson angled his ship through an inviting narrows, entered an expansive bay, and began exploring a broad river that would later be named for him, one ...

    • Joshua Jelly-Schapiro
  7. Feb 24, 2020 · Later on, Amman became an ordinary city. It began to shrink. Some of its neighborhoods began to resemble the place I was originally from. And there were two different worlds: West Amman, where the city’s social and economic elite and state officials lived, and East Amman, where the struggling classes lived.

  8. v. t. e. The name of Toronto has a history distinct from that of the city itself. Originally, the term " Tkaronto " referred to a channel of water between Lake Simcoe and Lake Couchiching on maps as early as 1675 [1] but in time the name passed southward, and was eventually applied to a new fort at the mouth of the Humber River.