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・ Al-Salamiyah District
・ Al-Salamiyah Nahiyah
・ Al-Salam–Carlitz polynomials
・ Al-Salam–Chihara polynomials
・ Al-Salam–Ismail polynomials
・ Al-Salih Hajji
・ Al-Salih Tala'i Mosque
・ Al-Salihiyah
・ Al-Salihiyah, Deir ez-Zor Governorate
・ Al-Salihiyah, Hama
・ Al-Salihiyya
・ Al-Salimiyah Madrasa
・ Al-Salman District
・ Al-Salmani
・ Al-Salmiya SC
Al-Salt
・ Al-Samakiyya
・ Al-Samaqiyah al-Qibliyah
・ Al-Samarrai
・ Al-Samawa District
・ Al-Samawal al-Maghribi
・ Al-Samh ibn Malik al-Khawlani
・ Al-Samiriyya
・ Al-Sammu'i
・ Al-Samoud 2
・ Al-Samra
・ Al-Sanadid Forces
・ Al-Sanamayn
・ Al-Sanamayn District
・ Al-Sanbariyya


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Al-Salt : ウィキペディア英語版
Al-Salt

Salt ((アラビア語:السلط) ''Al-Salt'' — pronounced Es-Sult or Es-Salt) is an ancient agricultural town and administrative centre in west-central Jordan. It is on the old main highway leading from Amman to Jerusalem. Situated in the Balqa highland, about 790–1,100 metres above sea level, the town is built in the crook of three hills, close to the Jordan Valley. One of the three hills, (Jebal Al Qal'a), is the site of a 13th-century ruined fortress. It is the capital of the Balqa Governorate.
The Greater Salt Municipality has about 97,000 inhabitants (2006) of which 65% are Muslim and 35% Christians.
==History==

It is not known when the city was first inhabited, but it is believed that it was built by the Macedonian army during the reign of Alexander the Great. The town was known as ''Saltus'' in Byzantine times and was the seat of a bishopric. At this time, the town was considered to be the principal settlement on the East Bank of the Jordan River. The settlement was destroyed by the Mongols and then rebuilt during the reign of the Mamluk sultan Baibars (1260–1277) and became a regional capital once more during the time of the Ottoman Empire. In the early 1830s, Salt was again attacked, this time being blown up during a raid by the Egyptian viceroy Ibrahim Pasha in his campaigns against the Ottomans in Palestine.
Salt's heyday was in the late 19th century when traders arrived from Nablus to expand their trading network eastwards beyond the Jordan River. As a result of the influx of newcomers this period saw the rapid expansion of Salt from a simple peasant village into a town with many architecturally elegant buildings, many built in the ''Nablusi'' style from the attractive honey-coloured local stone. A large number of buildings from this era survive as of 2009.
After World War I, the town was the site which Herbert Samuel, British High Commissioner of Palestine, chose to make his announcement that the British favoured a Hejazi Hashemite ruled entity on the East Bank of the Mandatory Palestine (current Jordan). This wish became reality in 1921 when Abdullah I became Emir of Transjordan. Salt seemed to be the city that would be chosen as the capital of the new emirate since most of the industry and commerce flowed through Salt. During this period Salt had no high schools. Even so, Abdullah picked the city as the capital of his emerging emirate but later changed his mind and moved his compound and entourage to Amman when he and the notables of Salt had a disagreement. Amman at that time was a small city of only 20,000 people which experienced rapid growth.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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