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Jordan Experience |
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Jordan Experience
organizes trips
primarily to Jordan.
Next to that we can also
organize overland trips
to Jordan's neighbouring
countries in the
Middle-East. We have
extended knowledge of
the region. We know our
way around Jordan from
our own experience for
years on end. As a
result Jordan Experience
can compose nearly every
program possible,
meeting the customers'
individual needs and
wishes. Travelling to
Jordan with Jordan
Experience will give
travellers an
opportunity to see the
real colourful Jordan.
We take pride in making
every trip we organize a
unique experience for
our clients. We stand
for offering a travel
experience beyond
belief. |
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JORDAN IN DEPTH |
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HISTORY
History Of Jordan
The land that became Jordan forms part
of the history-rich Fertile Crescent
region. Its known history began around
2000 B.C., when Semitic Amorites settled
around the Jordan River in the area
called Canaan. Subsequent invaders and
settlers included Hittites, Egyptians,
Israelites, Assyrians, Babylonians,
Persians, Greeks, Romans, Byzantines,
Arab Muslims, Christian Crusaders,
Mameluks, Ottoman Turks, and, finally,
the British. At the end of World War I,
the territory now comprising Israel,
Jordan, the West Bank, the Gaza Strip,
and Jerusalem was awarded to the United
Kingdom by the League of Nations as the
mandate for Palestine. In 1922, in an
attempt to assuage Arab anger resulting
from the Balfour Declaration, with the
approval of the League of Nations, the
British created the semi-autonomous Arab
Emirate of Transjordan in all
Palestinian territory east of the Jordan
river. The British installed the
Hashemite Prince Abdullah, while
continuing the administration of
Palestine and Transjordan under a single
British High Commissioner. The mandate
over Transjordan ended on 22 May 1946;
on 25 May, the country became the
independent Hashemite Kingdom of
Transjordan. It ended its special
defense treaty relationship with the
United Kingdom in 1957.
Transjordan opposed the creation of
Israel in May 1948, and took part in the
warfare between the Arab states and the
newly founded State of Israel. The
armistice agreements of 3 April 1949
left Jordan in control of the West Bank
and provided that the armistice
demarcation lines were without prejudice
to future territorial settlements or
boundary lines.
In 1950, Transjordan annexed the West
Bank, and the country was renamed "the
Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan" to reflect
this. The annexation was recognised only
by the United Kingdom.
Jordan signed a mutual defense pact in
May 1967 with Egypt, and it participated
in the June 1967 war against Israel
along with Syria, Egypt, and Iraq.
During the war, Jordan lost its control
of the West Bank and all of Jerusalem.
In 1988, Jordan renounced all claims to
the West Bank but retained an
administrative role pending a final
settlement, and its 1994 treaty with
Israel allowed for a continuing
Jordanian role in Muslim and Christian
holy places in Jerusalem. The
international community as represented
in the United Nations considers the West
Bank to be territory occupied by Israel
and believes that its final status
should be determined through direct
negotiations among the parties concerned
on the basis of UN Security Council
Resolutions 242 and 338.
The 1967 war led to a dramatic increase
in the number of Palestinians,
especially from the West Bank, living in
Jordan. Its Palestinian refugee
population – 700,000 in 1966 – grew by
another 300,000 from the West Bank. The
period following the 1967 war saw an
upsurge in the power and importance of
Palestinian resistance elements (fedayeen)
in Jordan. The heavily armed fedayeen
constituted a growing threat to the
sovereignty and security of the
Hashemite state, and open fighting
erupted in June 1970. The battle in
which Palestinian fighters from various
Palestinian Liberation Organization
(PLO) groups were expelled from Jordan
is commonly known as Black September
Other Arab governments attempted to work
out a peaceful solution, but by
September, continuing fedayeen actions
in Jordan – including the destruction of
three international airliners hijacked
by the Popular Front for the Liberation
of Palestine and held in the desert east
of Amman – prompted the government to
take action to regain control over its
territory and population. In the ensuing
heavy fighting, a Syrian tank force took
up positions in northern Jordan to
support the fedayeen but subsequently
retreated. By 22 September, Arab foreign
ministers meeting at Cairo had arranged
a cease-fire beginning the following
day. Sporadic violence continued,
however, until Jordanian forces led by
Habis Al-Majali won a decisive victory
over the fedayeen in July 1971,
expelling them from the country.
At the Rabat summit conference in 1974,
Jordan agreed, along with the rest of
the Arab League, that the PLO was the
"sole legitimate representative of the
Palestinian people", thereby
relinquishing to that organization its
role as representative of the West Bank
Palestinians.
No fighting occurred along the 1967
Jordan River cease-fire line during the
October 1973 Arab-Israeli war, but
Jordan sent a brigade to Syria to fight
Israeli units on Syrian territory.
Jordan did not participate in the Gulf
War of 1990-91. In 1991, Jordan agreed,
along with Syria, Lebanon, and
Palestinian representatives, to
participate in direct peace negotiations
with Israel sponsored by the U.S. and
Russia. It negotiated an end to
hostilities with Israel and signed a
declaration to that effect on July 25,
1994 (see Washington Declaration). As a
result, an Israeli-Jordanian peace
treaty was concluded on October 26,
1994. Following the outbreak of
Israeli-Palestinian fighting in
September 2000, the Jordanian government
offered its good offices to both
parties. Jordan has since sought to
remain at peace with all of its
neighbours.
On November 9, 2005, Jordan experienced
three simultaneous bombings at hotels in
Amman. At least 57 people died and 115
were wounded. Al-Qaeda in Iraq, a group
led by native Jordanian Abu Musab al-Zarqawi,
claimed responsibility.
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