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Treasury seen through Siq, Petra, Jordan
AR9181345 
Treasury of the Pharaohs seen from the end of the Siq, Petra, Ma'an, Jordan. The Siq is a 1.2km gorge formed when the earth split by tectonic forces and is the main entrance to Petra. The Treasury of the Pharaohs or Khazneh Firaoun, 100 BC - 200 AD, was originally built as a royal tomb and is so called after a belief that pirates hid their treasure in an urn held here. Carved into the rock face opposite the end of the Siq, the 40m high treasury has a Hellenistic facade with three bare inner rooms. Petra was the capital and royal city of the Nabateans, Arabic desert nomads. 
Unique Identifier AR9124162 
Type Image 
Purpose Public 
Size 5280px × 3850px 
Photo Credit Manuel Cohen / Art Resource, NY 
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Tags
Al-Batra
al-Khazneh
Arabian
ARABIC
ARCHAEOLOGICAL
Archaeology
ARCHEOLOGICAL
archeology
ARCHITECTURAL
Architecture
Carving
classical
Column
Death
Facade
Funerary
FUNEREAL
Geology
gorge
Greek
HELLENISTIC
History
JORDAN
Jordanian
Khazneh Firaoun
Ma'an
MIDDLE EAST
Middle Easterny
midPetra
Mount Hor
Nabatean
PASSAGE
Pediment
Rock
Rupestrian
Sandstone
siq
Tomb
TOURISM
Treasure
Treasury
treasury of the pharaohs
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