Top Places to Visit in Jordan [Middle East] - A Tour Through Images | Historical Places in Jordan
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#JordanTourGuide,
#Jordan (officially The Hashemite #KingdomOfJordan), is an Arab kingdom in Western Asia, on the East Bank of the Jordan River. It is is a founding member of the Arab League and the Organization of Islamic Co-operation, and is one of two Arab states to have signed a peace treaty with Israel.
The capital and most populous city of jordan is #Amman. It is also country's economic, political and cultural centre.
Jordan [#MiddleEast] has a wealth of Beauty and Culture which can attract people from all over the world to visit there. Here is our list of the Top Beautiful Places to visit in Jordan so you can spend your time wisely.
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#TopPlacesToVisitinJordan, #PetraJordan, #TripToJordan,
Best Tourist Places to Visit in Jordan:-
- #TheJordanMuseum (Amman)
- Royal Automobile Museum (Amman)
- Jabal Al-Qalaa (Amman) – A Roman Temple
- #JordanNationalArchaeologicalMuseum (Amman)
- Children's Museum (Amman)
- Darat al Funun - Home for the arts and artists from the Arab world. (Amman)
- Ola's Garden (Amman)
- Rujm Al-Malfouf (Amaan) Ammonite watch tower built around 1000 BC.
- Jordanian Museum of Popular Tradition (Amman)
- Dar Al-Anda Art Gallery (Amman)
- Jordan National Gallery of Fine Arts (Amman)
- Central Bank of Jordan Currency Museum (Amman)
- Jordan Folklore Museum (Amman)
- #AlexanderTheGreatGallery (Amman)
- Wadi Finan Art Gallery (Amman)
- Roman Amphitheater (Amman)
- Wadi Zarqa Ma'in (Amman)
- The Citadel (Amman) – Historical Site, L-shaped hill is one of the seven jabals that originally made up Amman.
- Qasr al-Kharrana (Amman) - Desert Castles
- Iraq Al Amir (Amman)
- 6 Yard (Amman)
- King Abdullah Mosque (Amman)
- Ottoman railway ten arches bridge (Amaan) - Built in 1910
- King Hussein Bin Talal Mosque (Amman)
- Qasr al-Abd (Amman) - palace from approximately 200 BCE
- Badia 4x4 Adventures (Amman)
- The Boulevard (Amman)
- Al Balad – Downtown Amman (Amman) - old commercial area
- TIRAZ Widad Kawar Home for Arab Dress (Amman)
- Love on a Bike (Amman) - offers a wide selection of art & handmade products- paintings, pottery
- JADAL for Knowledge and Culture (Amman) - open space for cultural activities & knowledge sharing
- Rainbow Street (Amman)-a famous historic area of Jabal Amman
Part:2:-
- #PetraWorldHeritageSite - The Treasury (Petra-Wadi Musa)
- Monastery (Al Dayr)(Petra-Wadi Musa)
- Siq (Petra-Wadi Musa) - the main entrance to the ancient Nabatean city of Petra
- High Place of Sacrifice (Petra-Wadi Musa)
- The Royal Tombs (Petra-Wadi Musa)
- Al-Beidha - Little Petra (Petra-Wadi Musa)
- Street of Facades (Petra-Wadi Musa)
- #ByzantineChurch (Petra-Wadi Musa)
- #PetraMuseum (Petra-Wadi Musa)
- Obelisk Tomb (Petra-Wadi Musa)
- The Great Temple (Petra-Wadi Musa)
- Sextius Florentinus Tomb (Petra-Wadi Musa)
- Jordan Desert Hikes (Petra-Wadi Musa)
- Horse Riding Jordan (Petra-Wadi Musa)
- Dead Sea
- #JordanRiverBaptismalSite (Dead Sea Region)
- Mujib Nature Reserve (Dead Sea Region)
- Cave of Prophet Lut (Dead Sea Region)
- O Beach (Dead Sea Region)
- Wadi Rum Protected Area (Wadi Rum)
- Lawrence's Spring (Wadi Rum)
- Jebel Khazali (Wadi Rum)
- Desert Moon Camp - Day Tours (Wadi Rum)
- Wadi Rum Trail (#WadiRum)
- Mount Nebo (Madaba)
- Church of St John the Baptist (Madaba)
- The Church of Saint George (Madaba)
- Madaba Archaeological Museum (Madaba)
- Madaba Archaeological Park (Madaba)
- La Storia Tourism Complex (Madaba)
- Wadi Jadid (Madaba)
- Um er-Rasas (Kastrom Mefa'a) (Madaba)
- Machaerus (Madaba) - the location of the imprisonment and execution of John the Baptist
- Wadi Al Hidan (Madaba)
- Jerash Ruins (Jerash)
- Ajloun Fort (Jerash)
- Wadi Araba Desert (Aqaba)
- Berenice Beach Club (Aqaba)
- Aqaba Archaeological Museum (Aqaba)
- Arts of Sham Countries Art Gallery (Aqaba)
- Islamic Ayla City (Aqaba)
- Bait Alaqaba Diving Center (Aqaba)
- City Beach (Aqaba)
- Sharif Hussein Bin Ali (Aqaba)
- Prophet Shoaib Shrine (Al Salt)
- Salt Turk Sehitligi (Al Salt)
- Umm Qais Museum (Umm Qais)
- The Museum at the Lowest Place on Earth (Safi)
- The Baptism Site Of Jesus Christ (Al-Maghtas)
- Quseir Amra (Azraq)
- Qasr Azraq (Azraq)
- Azraq Wetland Reserve (Azraq)
- Wadi Ghuweir (Dana)
- Dana Nature Reserve (Dana)
- Ajloun Nature Reserve
- Ajlun Castle (Qala'at ar-Rabad) (Ajlun)
- Tell Mar Elias (Ajlun)
- Wadi al-Mujib
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Top 10 Places to Visit in Jordan | Things to do in Jordan | Top Attractions Travel Guide
Top 10 Places to Visit in Jordan | Things to do in Jordan | Top Attractions Travel Guide
1. AL-MAGHTAS
Al-Maghtas, meaning submersion or immersion in Arabic, is an archeological world recorded past site page in Jordan at the east bank of the Jordan stream, formally alluded to as Baptism site Bethany past the Jordan. Wikipedia
2. Reservoir conduit RUM
Reservoir conduit Rum is a secured spurn wild in southern Jordan. It highlights passionate sandstone mountains like the various domed Jebel Um Ishrin, in addition, common bends, for instance, Burdah Rock Bridge. various old etchings and carvings line hard sinkholes and drench chasms, for instance, Khazali Canyon. The regular watering crevice of Lawrence's Spring is called after British contender Lawrence of Arabia, who as far as anyone knows washed
there.
adapt to: Wadi Rum Village, Jordan
3. PETRA
Petra is an acclaimed archeological site page in Jordan's southwestern desert. pursuing to around 300 B.C., it transformed into the capital of the Nabatean kingdom. Gotten to with the guide of a thin ravine called Al Siq, it incorporates tombs and havens cut into purple sandstone feigns, procuring its moniker, the Rose city. perhaps its most extreme well known structure is 45m-over the top Al Khazneh, an asylum with an extravagant, Greek-mold lacquer, and alluded to as The Treasury.
4. DANA BIOSPHERE RESERVE
Dana Biosphere Reserve is Jordan's biggest nature store, arranged in south-central Jordan. Dana Biosphere Reserve wound up plainly set up in 1989 in the domain in and over the Dana city and Wadi Dana identified with 308 rectangular kilometers. Wikipedia
5. pointless SEA
The dead Sea is genuinely endorheic (no outlet streams) with the Jordan River being its solitary sizeable source. The northern bit of the futile Sea gets rarely.
6. AMMAN
Amman, the capital of Jordan, is a current city with various vintage remnants. On Jabal al-Qala'a incline, the imperative mansion incorporates the backbones of the Roman Temple of Hercules and the eighth century Umayyad Palace astounding, perceived for its remarkable curve. coordinated with a substitute downtown slant, the Roman Theater is a 6,000-limitation, second century stone amphitheater giving accidental exercises.
7. Mount Nebo
Mount Nebo is a raised zone in Jordan, sort of 817 meters above sea arrange, unmistakable in the Hebrew Bible as in which Moses moved toward becoming permitted a viewpoint of the Promised Land. Wikipedia
8. QASR AMRA
Qasr Amra, moreover interpreted as Quseir Amra or Qusayr Amra, is the remarkable perceived roughly the surrender royal residences arranged in blessing day eastern Jordan. Wikipedia
nine. JERASH
Jerash is a city in Jordan, north of the capital Amman. Had in light of the fact that the Bronze Age, it's perceived for the remainders of the walled Greco-Roman settlement of Gerasa genuinely out of entryways the cutting edge town. these join the second one century Hadrian's Arch, the Corinthian portions of the Temple of Artemis and the gigantic examination board's oval corridor. The Jerash Archeological Museum shows doodads uncovered from the site on the web.
10. AQABA
Aqaba is a Jordanian port town at the dark red Sea's Gulf of Aqaba. Had considering that 4000 B.C., it's household to the Islamic-time Aqaba palace and the adjacent Aqaba Archeological Museum. Its coastline lodging are generally perceived for windsurfing and diverse water sports, and the region is a top go for scuba jumpers, with prominent dive areas, for example, the Yamanieh coral reef inside the Aqaba Marine Park, south of the city.
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The Most Expensive Currencies In The World
What do you think, which currency is the most expensive in the world today?
Most believe that the British pound is the highest currency; however, as it turned out it is not.
Especially, for blog readers, we compiled the list of the strongest world currencies (Dated 13 Jan 2019).
By the way, we also have the TOP 10 of the weakest world currencies.
No. 1 – Kuwaiti Dinar (1 KWD = 3.29 USD)
Currency code – KWD
1 KWD = 3.29 USD
The Kuwaiti Dinar is the world’s highest-valued currency against the US Dollar.
Kuwait is a small country with enormous wealth. The high value (rate) of its currency is explained by significant oil exports into the global market.
No. 2 – Bahraini Dinar (2.65 USD)
Currency code – BHD
1 BHD = 2.65 USD (pegged to dollar)
The Bahrain Dinar is the second most valuable currency.
Bahrain is a Persian Gulf island state with a population of just over 1 million people. As in the first case, this country’s largest source of income are the «black gold» exports.
It is interesting that the Bahrain Dinar is pegged to US Dollar exchange rate, and its rate against the US Dollar has remained stable since 2005 already.
No. 3 – Oman Rial (2.60 USD)
Currency code – OMR
1 OMR = 2.60 USD (pegged to dollar)
Oman is a country on the Arabian Peninsula. Thanks to its strategic location, it possesses a developed economy and a high quality of life.
The Oman Rial is also pegged to US Dollar as Bahrain Dinar.
It is remarkable that purchasing power of this currency is so high that the government had to issue 1/4 and 1/2 Rial banknotes. On the picture above, you can see 1/2 Rial (Half Rial).
No. 4 – Jordan Dinar (1.41 USD)
Currency code – JOD
1 JOD = 1.41 USD (pegged to dollar)
It is hard to explain the high value of Jordan Dinar. This country is not economically developed and it lacks essential resources, such as oil.
Nevertheless, one Jordan Dinar costs 1.41 US Dollar, what makes it one of 10 the strongest world currencies.
No. 5 – British Pound Sterling (1.26 USD)
Currency code – GBP
1 GBP = 1.26 USD
Most people think that British Pound is the strongest world currency, but it only closes the top five of this list.
British Colonies issue their own banknotes, which visually differ from banknotes issued by the Bank of England, but they are valued as 1 per 1.
Therefore, there are several of them: Scottish, North Ireland, Manx, Jersey, Guernsey, Gibraltar Pounds, as well as St. Elena Island Pound and Falkland Islands Pound.
Amusingly, native Britons do not always want to accept «other» Pounds as a means of payment.
No. 6 – Cayman Islands Dollar (1.20 USD)
Currency code – KYD
1 KYD = 1.20 USD (pegged to dollar)
Cayman Islands is one of the world’s best tax havens. These islands provided licences for hundreds of banks, hedge funds and insurance companies.
Thanks to its leadership among tax havens, Cayman Islands Dollar costs near 1.22 US Dollar.
No. 7 – European Euro (1.14 USD)
Currency Code – EUR
1 EUR = 1.14 USD
The euro currency has strengthened over the past few years. This allowed it to raise the list of the most powerful currencies. Partially, its strength is explained by the fact that it is the official world currency in European countries among which you will find several economically developed countries.
Besides, Euro is the second reserve world currency enveloping 22.2% of all world savings (US Dollar has 62.3%).
No. 8 – Swiss Franc (1.04 USD)
Currency code – CHF
1 CHF = 1.04 USD
Switzerland is not only one of the richest countries in the world, but it is also one of the most stable. Its banking system had long been known for its formerly resolute «Bank Secrecy».
Besides, its high-tech goods are very well known all around the globe.
Pay attention when you see an original of this banknote. This is the only banknote I saw which has the vertical view.
No. 9 – US Dollar
Currency code – USD
1 USD = 1.00 USD
Owing to USA world economic leadership, its currency achieved such a title as «World Reserve Currency». In other words, you can make dollar payments everywhere (in any country).
No. 10 – Canadian dollar (0.75 USD)
Currency code – CAD
1 CAD = 0.75 USD
The Canadian dollar is the fifth largest reserve world currency. Canadian dollar is often called the «loonie» in honor of the bird depicted on the coin worth 1 dollar.
Stock market chaos | The end of easy money? | Counting the Cost
This week saw a brutal selloff in global stocks which accelerated as the week got under way.
On Monday and Tuesday, stocks fell dramatically, erasing all of the gains of 2018 in a matter of hours. And then, stocks recovered and have been pretty volatile since.
So what is behind the wild swings in stocks and bonds from New York to London to Tokyo?
The prospect of higher interest rates across the globe was the main reason given by analysts for the market rout.
The world economy is just emerging from a period of record low-lending rates, and in some cases negative interest rates, all designed to revivify the global economy.
Nearly a decade of ultra-easy monetary policy by central banks has sent asset prices sky-high, but now that's likely to end. Things like stocks, bonds, commodities and currencies are going to have to adjust.
For too long, investors were sleepwalking into the raging bull market that was going on underneath them. And investors and traders forgot the financial markets can fall as well as rise, says market analyst David Madden at CMS Markets.
There was so much positive momentum, there were so many positive indicators and so much enthusiasm surrounding global stock markets ... that investors, quite frankly, got complacent. They ignored the fact that volatility was at multiyear lows and they assumed that stock markets would keep reaching fresh record heights here in Europe or in Asia. We did hit a speed bump when we saw average earnings in the US spike last week, sending fears we could have four rate rises from the Federal Reserve this year. That's what prompted this exodus out of equities, he explains.
This is a classic example of the market being overbought, overstretched, and the selloff you've seen recently is all the froth being taken off the top of the market.
The era of easy money is perhaps over, according to Madden.
I think we're entering the transition period whereby central bankers in the last number of years had very aggressive loose-margin policies to kick-start the economies around the world. And we're now probably in the phase where the central banks are looking to step back and in many cases actually tighten the margin policy - be it in the form of higher interest rates or a reduction in the stimulus package, he says.
So, it's almost like the economy has gotten off the ground and now the economy is going to have to survive more on its own momentum rather than the guiding hand of central banks.
Also on this episode of Counting the Cost:
Suffragettes: This week marks 100 years since women were given the right to vote in the UK. Activists at the forefront of that campaign were known as Suffragettes. The Museum of London threw an epic victory celebration to remember and teach about the suffragettes who took on the government and won, as Barnaby Phillips reports.
Laos debt: Concerns are growing about how much money the government in Laos is borrowing from China putting the country into deeper debt. Wayne Hay reports from the Laotian capital, Vientiane.
Ryanair Jordan: Ryanair said it's launching flights to Jordan for the first time. The low-cost Irish airline already flies to Israel and Morocco. Its first route from Amman in Jordan to Paphos in Cyprus will begin in March.
SpaceX launch: Billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk's company SpaceX sent one of his Tesla electric cars into space, as Rob Reynolds reports. The successful launch gave Musk's company a boost, which wants lucrative contracts with NASA, the US military, and satellite companies.
US oil production: Oil production from US oil wells is at all-time heights. US figures show that weekly production is already above 10 million barrels a day. The US Energy officials predict output will top 11 million barrels a day by the end of the year. This couldn't come at a worse time for OPEC, which is trying to cut production in order to wipe out oversupply concerns and support prices. Antoine Halff, senior research scholar at the Columbia University Center on Global Energy Policy, gives his take.
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Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art Wants You
Sara Turner and Victoria Reis are two student employees at the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art discuss why student should be involved with the museum and the benefits they will receive. The museum is currently hosting the National Geographic Greatest Photographs of the American West, Transatlanticism, and other exhibits.
Travel To Jordan | Jordan's Full History And Documentary In Urdu & Hindi | اردن کی سیر و معلومات
#Jordan #TravelToJordan #VisitMyWorld
Jordan's Facts, History And Documentary In Urdu And Hindi
Also, watch other travel videos with complete history and documentary in Urdu and Hindi:
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Travel To Brunei | Brunei's Full History And Documentary In Urdu & Hindi | برونائی کی سیر و معلومات
Travel To Thailand | Thailand's Full History And Documentary In Urdu & Hindi | تھائی لینڈ کی سیر و معلومات
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Travel To Israel | Israel's Full History And Documentary In Urdu & Hindi | اسرائیل کی سیر و معلومات
Travel To Cyprus | Cyprus's Full History And Documentary In Urdu & Hindi | سائپرس کی سیر و معلومات
Travel To Finland | Finland's Full History And Documentary In Urdu & Hindi | فن لینڈ کی سیر و معلومات
Travel To Iceland | Iceland's Full History And Documentary In Urdu & Hindi | آئس لینڈ کی سیر و معلومات
Travel To South Korea | South Korea's Full History And Documentary In Urdu & Hindi | جنوبی کوریا کی سیر و معلومات
Travel To North Korea | North Korea's Full History And Documentary In Urdu & Hindi | شمالی کوریا کی سیر و معلومات
Travel To Azerbaijan | Azerbaijan's Full History And Documentary In Urdu & Hindi | آذربائیجان کی سیر و معلومات
Travel To United Kingdom | United Kingdom's Full History And Documentary In Urdu & Hindi | برطانیہ کی سیر و معلومات
Travel To Switzerland | Switzerland's Full History And Documentary In Urdu & Hindi | سوئٹزرلینڈ کی سیر و معلومات
Travel To New Zealand | New Zealand's Full History And Documentary In Urdu & Hindi | نیوزی لینڈ کی سیر و معلومات
Travel To Germany | Germany's Full History And Documentary In Urdu & Hindi | جرمنی کی سیر و معلومات
Travel To Romania | Romania's Full History And Documentary In Urdu & Hindi | رومانیہ کی سیر و معلومات
Travel To Ireland | Ireland's Full History And Documentary In Urdu & Hindi | آئرلینڈ کی سیر و معلومات
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Amazing Facts, Urdu History And Documentary About Jordan
In today's video, we will discuss Jordan. The ultimate history of Jordan with complete Documentary in Urdu and Hindi. We will let you know what's Jordan's Immigration Laws, Jordan's visa, Best Places in Jordan to visit, Famous Foods of Jordan, Independence Day of Jordan, Famous Cities of Jordan, Best landmarks in Jordan, Religions in Jordan, Annual Salary in Jordan, Prime Minister and President of Jordan, Neighbor countries of Jordan, Time Zone of Jordan, Travel to Amman in Urdu and Hindi, Temporary (tourist) visa to Jordan, Jordan's VISIT VISA Approval Rate in 2019 – 2020, BENEFITS OF JORDAN VISA, Jordan's population, Jordan's national sport, Jordan's national language, Jordan's national animal, Jordan's capital, Jordan's currency, Jordan's country code, Jordan's domain name, The total area of Jordan, Easiest Way To Get Jordan Visa, Things To Do in Jordan, The beauty of Nature Jordan, JORDAN's Tourism video, Jordan's 4K Trip in 3 Minutes - Jordan's Music Video, Jordan's beautiful aerial footage, Jordan's Nightlife, Jordan's Museum. Discover Jordan in 2020 - 4K Jordan Drive Bus ride in Jordan - Travel vlog tourism video, Independence Jordan's National Flag Day, Hitchhiking around Jordan, Most Beautiful And Modern area of Jordan 2020, Jordan TOWN Walk, Walking at Night in Jordan.
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Palestinian Food - ARABIC FEAST in Bethlehem + Jesus Birthplace in West Bank, Palestine!
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Before beginning, I want to make it clear I paid for this tour and decided to go on it myself. It is not sponsored in anyway. However, after spending time with Osama and seeing the tours and great people that are involved with I would highly recommend it.
I had really wanted to visit Bethlehem, and we decided to book a tour to also visit Hebron, another one of the most religiously significant cities in the West Bank, Palestine. So we drove through the checkpoint and I could hardly believe I was in Bethlehem, the birthplace of Jesus.
After meeting up with Osama, who is an absolutely awesome guy, we started walking off through the Old City of Bethlehem. First stop was a place to get a nice view overlooking the city. Absolutely stunning and to think of the immense and important history was mind blowing. Manakish or manaeesh is an Arabic baked flatbread, sometimes covered in za’atar before being baked. We stopped at an breadshop to have a piece before heading on to the church.
Church of the Nativity
NOTE: Thanks to baby Micah, we were allowed to enter a side entrance to the Grotto with no queue, which saved a lot of time, sometimes you have to wait for an hour to get entrance because it’s very small.
Being a Christian, this was an experience that was almost surreal and extraordinarily special for me. I will cherish that entire moment in the Grotto, a place that marks the spot where Jesus was born and where he was laid in a manger.
Walled off hotel - We then took a drive over to the Walled Off Hotel, a hotel that faces the separation wall. It was eye-opening to learn more about the situation.
Palestinian food home cooked - There’s no better way to eat when you travel than to have home cooked food. And so through the arrangement of Visit Palestine, we were invited to a Palestinian family home to eat an Arabic food feast that included chicken stuffed with rice and meat all baked in oven safe bags (I think). The chicken and the spices were amazing, and additionally the side dishes, including the freshly roasted almonds were the best I’ve ever had. Also, the hospitality and generosity of this family in Bethlehem truly made it memorable. It was an honor to enjoy Palestinian food in Bethlehem with a local family.
Hebron Old City - We continued on to Hebron, a city about 30 minutes from Bethlehem. Again it was a fascinating and eye-opening ride. Hebron is a city known for its conflict.
Ibrahimi Mosque (also known as Cave of the Patriarchs) - At the Ibrahimi mosque you can pay respect to the tombs of Abraham, Isaac, Sarah, and Leah. Again, it’s pretty surreal to visit, and it a truly special moment.
Fresh juice - 5 ILS ($1.40) - We then walked around the streets of Old City Hebron, which to be honest is a little scary and unfortunately filled with tension. Even though it’s so beautiful and so ancient, it’s eerie.
It was a fascinating experience to visit Palestine, eye-opening as well. But the combination of generous people I met, delicous Palestinian food at a family home, and seeing in person the place where Jesus was born and where Abraham’s tomb sits, all added up to be one of the most special and emotional days I’ve ever had in my life.
Just as a note of reference: I paid $500 USD for the tour with but they provide transportation for me and my family from Tel Aviv, and it included everything private. I also needed a private tour to be able to make a video like this. Thank you to Osama for being so cool!
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Rania Al-Mashat: The Egyptian Minister of Tourism | Talks at Google
Dr. Al-Mashat was sworn in as Egypt’s Minister of Tourism on January 14, 2018. Under the Ministry, there are the Egyptian Tourism Promotion Board and the Tourism Development Authority. Prior to that, she was an Advisor to the Chief Economist of the International Monetary Fund in Washington DC. She specializes in central banking issues, including designing monetary policy frameworks, defining financial stability and macro-prudential tools, and led country mission teams on these issues. She has contributed several chapters to the IMF’s book, titled, “Advancing the Frontiers of Monetary Policy” published in April 2018.
Dr. Al-Mashat has received a number of international and domestic awards; selected among the top 50 most influential women in the Egyptian economy during 2015; the 2014 Young Global Leaders by the World Economic Forum; chosen to join the Scientific Council of Bruegel (the most influential policy think tank in Europe in 2017; the 2014 and 2015 Economic Leaders for Tomorrow in Africa by Institut Choiseul; among the 2014 top 10 most powerful women in the
Egyptian Banking Sector in the survey conducted by the Bassera Center; the Government of France’s 2013 International Visitor Leadership Program, among the most powerful women in the Egyptian Banking Sector in 2014, and the 2013 Distinguished Alumni Award, School of Business at AUC.
Moderated by Selim Eddé.
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Gifts received by Kim Il Sung
Ancient Greek relics A Ceramic Oil Vase and A Ceramic Lamp presented by chairman of the Cyprus Socialist Party and chairman of the Cyprus Afro-Asia Solidarity Committee
Miniature of the first ship to circumnavigate the world, presented by the employees of the Unop Publishers of Portugal
Craftwork Elephant presented by Vice-President of the International Olympic Committee
Metal Craftwork Sound of Juche Bell Resounding over Mt. Himalaya, presented by Nepalese Association of Friendship with the DPRK
Biography of Kim Il Sung volumes 1 and 2 presented by the Tri-Continental Peoples Solidarity Organization
National Emblem of Gabon presented by El Hadj Omar Bongo, President of the Republic of Gabon and Secretary-General of the Gabon Democratic Party
Stuffed turtle presented by Manuel Pinto Da Costa, President of the Democratic Republic of Sao Tome and Principe
Congratulatory Message in ancient Arabic presented by a professor of Cairo University, Arab Republic of Egypt
Craftwork Native Home at Mangyongdae presented by Jia Yi Xiang Firm in Hong Kong
Craftwork God Ueueteotul presented by Miguel de la Madrid Hurtado, President of the United States of Mexico
Craftwork presented by Hussein I, King of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan
Animal-shaped jar decorated with bead strings presented by Secretary-General of Cameroonian Journalists Union
Gold-miniature date tree presented by Ahmad Hassan Al-Bakr, President of the Republic of Iraq
Metal sculpture A Pair of Horses presented by the Juche Idea Study Group Delegation of India
Gold Sword presented by Colonel Muammar al-Qaddafi, leader of the Great September 1 Revolution of the Socialist Peoples Libyan Arab Jamahiriyah
Gold-gilded sword presented by Colonel Ali Abdallah Salih, President of Yemen Arab Republic
Gold knife presented by Leopold Sedar Senghor, President of Republic of Senegal and Secretary of the Socialist Party
Gold key of Bucharest presented by Bucharest citizens in Romania
Gold-silver gilted sculpture Fairy on the Dragon presented by Guang Xing Electricity Corporation of Macao
Gold-silver sculpture Libyan Rider presented by Colonel Muammar al-Qaddafi, leader of the Great September 1 Revolution of the Socialist Peoples Libyan Arab Jamahiriyah
Valuables, wristlet, spoons and chopsticks stand presented by the government of Islamic Republic of Mauritania
Casket presented by Julius K. Nyerere, President of the United Republic of Tanzania
Pistol presented by Sandinist National Liberation Front of Nicaragua
Pistol and cartridge presented by the government of the Peoples Socialist Republic of Albania
Woodcraft Pavilion in Water presented by Zhou En-lai, Premier of the State Council of Peoples Republic of China
Woodcraft Mangyongdae—Beacon of Revolution presented by the teaching staff and students of Youth club in Madagascar
A set of ash trays presented by director of Matura company of Germany
Bronze crafts Kings Cart presented by the delegation of educators of Kingdom of Thailand
Bronze tray and bronze kettle presented by Muhammad Hosni Said Mubarak, President of Arab Republic of Egypt
Copper plate painting Native Home at Mangyongdae presented by stockholders of International Foreign Currency Exchange Company of Kuwait
Presidents baton presented by cousin of President of Republic of Bolivia
Large folding screen Green Bamboo Grove with embroideries on both sides, presented by the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China
Perdí mi vuelo! Hola Jordania!
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Taylor Swift - Delicate (Vertical Version)
Music video by Taylor Swift performing Delicate. © 2018 Big Machine Label Group, LLC
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Jordan | Wikipedia audio article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
Jordan
Listening is a more natural way of learning, when compared to reading. Written
language only began at around 3200 BC, but spoken language has existed long ago.
Learning by listening is a great way to:
- increases imagination and understanding
- improves your listening skills
- improves your own spoken accent
- learn while on the move
- reduce eye strain
Now learn the vast amount of general knowledge available on Wikipedia through
audio (audio article). You could even learn subconsciously by playing the audio
while you are sleeping! If you are planning to listen a lot, you could try using
a bone conduction headphone, or a standard speaker instead of an earphone.
You can find other Wikipedia audio articles too at:
In case you don't find one that you were looking for, put a comment.
This video uses Google TTS en-US-Standard-D voice.
SUMMARY
=======
Jordan (Arabic: الْأُرْدُنّ Al-ʾUrdunn [al.ʔur.dunː]), officially the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan (Arabic: المملكة الأردنية الهاشمية Al-Mamlakah Al-Urdunnīyah Al-Hāshimīyah), is an Arab country in Western Asia, on the East Bank of the Jordan River. Jordan is bordered by Saudi Arabia to the south, Iraq to the north-east, Syria to the north, Israel and Palestine to the west. The Dead Sea lies along its western borders and the country has a small shoreline on the Red Sea in its extreme south-west, but is otherwise landlocked. Jordan is strategically located at the crossroads of Asia, Africa and Europe. The capital, Amman, is Jordan's most populous city as well as the country's economic, political and cultural centre.What is now Jordan has been inhabited by humans since the Paleolithic period. Three stable kingdoms emerged there at the end of the Bronze Age: Ammon, Moab and Edom. Later rulers include the Nabataean Kingdom, the Roman Empire, and the Ottoman Empire. After the Great Arab Revolt against the Ottomans in 1916 during World War I, the Ottoman Empire was partitioned by Britain and France. The Emirate of Transjordan was established in 1921 by the Hashemite, then Emir, Abdullah I, and the emirate became a British protectorate. In 1946, Jordan became an independent state officially known as the Hashemite Kingdom of Transjordan, but was renamed in 1949 to the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan after the country captured the West Bank during the 1948 Arab–Israeli War and annexed it until it was lost to Israel in 1967. Jordan renounced its claim to the territory in 1988, and became one of two Arab states to sign a peace treaty with Israel in 1994. Jordan is a founding member of the Arab League and the Organisation of Islamic Co-operation. The sovereign state is a constitutional monarchy, but the king holds wide executive and legislative powers.
Jordan is a relatively-small, semi-arid, almost-landlocked country with an area of 89,342 km2 (34,495 sq mi) and a population numbering 10 million, making it the 11th-most populous Arab country. Sunni Islam, practiced by around 95% of the population, is the dominant religion in Jordan and coexists with the indigenous Christian minority. Jordan has been repeatedly referred to as an oasis of stability in a turbulent region. It has been mostly unscathed by the violence that swept the region following the Arab Spring in 2010. From as early as 1948, Jordan has accepted refugees from multiple neighbouring countries in conflict. An estimated 2.1 million Palestinian and 1.4 million Syrian refugees are present in Jordan as of a 2015 census. The kingdom is also a refuge to thousands of Iraqi Christians fleeing persecution by ISIL. While Jordan continues to accept refugees, the recent large influx from Syria placed substantial strain on national resources and infrastructure.Jordan is classified as a country of high human development with an upper middle income economy. The Jordanian economy, one of the smallest economies in the region, is attractive to foreign investors based upon a skilled workforce. The country is a major tourist destination, also attracting medical tourism due to its well developed health sector. Nonetheless, a lack of natural resources, large flow of refugees and regional turmoil have hampered economic growth.
Dubai Airport’s Gold Bar Challenge Says Take The 20kg Gold Bar From The Box & It’s Yours! || GoViral
Prizes and jackpots do fascinate us all. Especially the ones that demand you to put all your mind and might into winning a tricky challenge. Moreover, when the jackpot is no itsy-bitsy cash prize but a huge 20kg bar of gold, it’s certainly worth a shot. Right?
Dubai Airport has come up with a bizarre yet exciting ‘Gold Bar Challenge’ that has got travelers hooked to a glass box. All you gotta do is:
1. Try and take the 20kg gold bar out from the hole in a glass box.
2. And take it home!
A video of several travelers trying their hand and luck at the challenge has been going viral on the internet. The video shows people trying hard to take the gold bar out of the box but, in vain.
Saudi Arabia - Jeddah evening prayer
The city of Jeddah preparing for the evening prayer and returning to normal business after it.
This clip was recorded when I drove through Saudi Arabia (my wife was not admitted) on our overland trip from the Netherlands to South Africa.
From the Frontlines: The Global Refugee Crisis
For more on this event, visit:
For more on the Berkley Center, visit:
For the past several years, the global migrant crisis has dominated international headlines, and journalists have been at the frontlines of the issue, documenting the plight of displaced persons and their reception in and impact on their new host countries. Among these journalists are Pulitzer Center grantees Ben Taub, Robin Shulman, and Alice Su, whose work on refugees and migrants has been published by media outlets from around the world, including the New Yorker, NPR, Time and the Washington Post Magazine, Politico, and the Washington Post. Taub's focus on African migrants heading to Europe has shed light on issues of human trafficking in the region, while Shulman and Su have focused on resettlement and the impact of migrants and refugees on host societies in North America and Germany, respectively.
Taub, Shulman, and Su will join Shaun Casey, Berkley Center director and former director of the U.S. Department of State’s Office of Religion and Global Affairs, to discuss how communities worldwide have reacted to the refugee crisis. They will analyze the ethics of resettlement and explore religion's role in refugee integration.
A reception will follow the event.
This event is co-sponsored by the Berkley Center for Religion, Peace, and World Affairs and the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting. It is made possible with the generous support of the Henry Luce Foundation.
A. R. Rahman, Jiya Jale (Dil Se): Berklee Indian Ensemble (Cover)
#berklee #berkleecollegeofmusic Jiya Jale (Dil Se) is a tribute to A. R. Rahman by the Berklee Indian Ensemble in gratitude for his immense contribution to our lives through his inspiring music and journey.
A. R. Rahman is an Indian composer, singer-songwriter, producer, multi-instrumentalist and philanthropist. In 2009, Time Magazine placed Rahman in its list of World's Most Influential People. In a notable career spanning two decades, he has garnered particular acclaim for redefining contemporary Indian film music, and putting Indian music on the global map, in a way that no other Indian composer/performer has achieved.
On October 24, 2014, Berklee College of Music will confer A. R. Rahman with an honorary doctor of music degree. Berklee Faculty and students from the Berklee Indian Ensemble will pay tribute to the living legend, who will join them on select pieces in a concert celebrating his music and life at Boston's Symphony Hall.
Mr. Rahman's visit is a signature event under Berklee India Exchange, a new initiative co-founded by two Indian Berklee alums, Annette Philip (artistic director), and Clint Valladares (artist relations and strategy), as a platform for cultural conversation, through the composition, collaboration, and performance of original Indian music. Proceeds from the concert will go towards a scholarship fund in Mr. Rahman's name for students from India to attend Berklee.
This is a huge milestone for the Berklee Indian Ensemble, one of largest and most diverse ensembles at the college, with members representing 37 countries, and counting. Founded in 2011 by faculty member, Annette Philip, the ensemble performs an expansive repertoire of Indian classical, semi-classical, folk, Sufi, and contemporary Indo-jazz music, with the ultimate goal of presenting concerts entirely consisting of original student compositions. Every year, there is at least one composition by A. R. Rahman featured in their repertoire.
Berklee Indian Ensemble
Jiya Jale (A. R. Rahman)
From the film Dil Se
Arrangement: Inna Dudukina
Vocal arrangement, Producer: Annette Philip
Instrumental interlude: Berklee Indian Ensemble
Soloists
Ishita Sinha: voice, Patna, India
Harshitha Krishnan, voice, Chennai, India
Nalini Krishnan, voice, Seattle, Washington
Rohith Santosh Jayaraman, voice, morsing (jaw harp), San Jose, CA
Instrumental Soloists
Yazhi Guo: dizi, Hong Kong, China
Sashank Navaladi: sarod, New Delhi, India
Harini Srinivasa Raghavan: violin, Chennai, India
Layth Al Rubaye: violin, Amman, Jordan
Patrick Simard: drums, Ottowa, Canada
Indian Ensemble Choir
Sanjeeta Bhattacharya, New Delhi, India
Dhruv Goel, Lucknow, India
Vasundhara Gupta, Kolkata, India
Rohith Santosh Jayaraman, San Jose, CA
Harshitha Krishnan, Chennai, India
Nalini Krishnan, Seattle, Washington
Armeen Musa, Dhaka, Bangladesh
Kanika Patawari, Antwerp, Belgium
Annette Philip, Kerala, India
Purvaa Sampath, Bangalore, India
Ishita Sinha: Patna, India
Harini Srinivasa Raghavan, Chennai, India
Aseem Suri, New Delhi, India
Adriel Tjokrosaputro, Surakarta, Indonesia
Sanchitha Wickremesooriya, Colombo, Sri Lanka
Strings
Layth Al Rubaye: violin, Amman, Jordan
Harini Srinivasa Raghavan: violin, Chennai, India
Daniel Urbanowicz: viola, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Naseem Al Atrash: cello, Beit Sahour, Palestine
Victor Manuel Gonzalez Quezada: double bass, Rancagua, Chile
Rhythm Section
Annette Philip: piano, Kerala, India
Aleif Hamdan: electric guitar, Jakarta, Indonesia
Shubh Saran: electric and acoustic guitar, New Delhi, India
Achal Murthy: bass, Strassen, Luxembourg
Ullas Rao: mridangam, Westwood, MA
Kaushlesh Purohit: tabla, percussion, Jodhpur, India
Ranajoy Das: cajon, New Delhi, India
Joe A Galeota Jr.: percussion, Arlington, MA
Patrick Simard: drums, Ottowa, Canada
Recorded live at The Record Company
Simon Katz: recording engineer, mixing engineer
Chris Geller: assistant engineer
Pietro Milanesi: second engineer
Teo Karakolev: videographer, editor
Kevin Greene: videographer
Sam Harchik: videographer
Mastered by M Works Studios
Jonathan Wyner: engineer #berklee #berkleecollegeofmusic
Architecture, art and design - 100 years of the Bauhaus (1/3) | DW Documentary
How has the Bauhaus school of architecture and design, Germany’s best-known art school, shaped the world we live in today?
bauhausWORLD - The Effect (2/3):
bauhausWORLD - The Utopia (3/3): Online on January 27, 2019
The three-part documentary bauhausWORLD marks the 100th anniversary of the opening of Germany’s best-known art, architecture and design school, the Bauhaus. Exploring the legacy of this iconic German institution, our film crew traveled the world, meeting architects, artists, urban planners, doers and dreamers. Do the Bauhaus’s social ideals and design principles still shape how we live today?
New approaches to education and training, architecture, painting, dance and design were explored and developed at the Bauhaus. Its founder and director Walter Gropius attracted the leading creative figures of the era, including Hannes Meyer, Mies van der Rohe, Lyonel Feininger, Oskar Schlemmer, Wassily Kandinsky, Paul Klee, László Moholy-Nagy, Anni Albers, Josef Albers and Gunta Stölzl. Today, Bauhaus is considered the birthplace of Modernism and has become a byword for sleek, functional design.
Founded in Weimar in 1919, the Bauhaus school moved to Dessau in 1925 and then to Berlin, where it was forced to shut in 1933 after Hitler seized power. Most of its artists, architects and visionaries emigrated, fanning out and spreading the Bauhaus doctrine around the world.
Filmmaker Lydia Ranke and her team traveled the world to make the three-part documentary bauhausWORLD. Alongside the Bauhaus sites of Weimar, Dessau and Berlin, they visited cities such as Tokyo, Amman, Tel Aviv, New York, Chicago, Mexico City and Medellín, talking to experts from architects Norman Foster and Tatiana Bilbao to architecture critic Mark Wigley, furniture designer Yinka Ilori and fashion designer Kasia Kucharska.
The Code is the first part of bauhausWORLD. The search for the secret of Bauhaus’s enduring success leads all the way to Japan - a journey illustrating how the forced closure of the school that drove the movement into exile served to spread its philosophy around the world.
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Ruckus - October 24, 2019
Mike Shanin talks to Kansas 3rd District candidate Sara Hart Weir about her effort to unseat Congresswoman Sharice Davids. Jon Stephens, Annie Presley, Terry Riley and Woody Cozad discuss Barbara Bollier and her chances in the Kansas U.S. Senate race, the Jackson County tax mess and whether residents may lose their homes and the vague results of new Kansas City Public Schools test scores.
Kansas City PBS - KCPT, Kansas City
Mohammad al-Asad, “The Center for the Study of the Built Environment (CSBE): A Twenty-Year Journey”
This presentation tells the story of CSBE (csbe.org), an independent non-profit think / do tank. It focuses on exploring how fields connected to the built environment, including architecture, urbanism, landscape architecture, heritage conservation, and construction technologies, can enhance the public good. In doing so, CSBE has been involved in collecting, documenting, and processing data; carrying out research projects; disseminating accumulated knowledge and information through print and online publications, lectures, workshops, as well as courses; and implementing pilot projects.
The presentation will focus on how CSBE has worked on realizing its goals since its inception in Jordan about two decades ago. These goals could not be realized merely through striving for technical proficiency. There also has been a need to develop appropriate internal financial and administrative systems, as well as navigating complex and continuously-changing legal environments. In addition, the importance of grasping available opportunities for collaboration and the development of support networks with relevant organizations and individuals cannot be underestimated.
Mohammad al-Asad is an architect and architectural historian. He is the Founding Director of the Center for the Study of the Built Environment in Amman (CSBE; csbe.org), an independent private, non-profit think / do tank that was established in 1999.
He studied architecture at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and history of architecture at Harvard University before taking on post-doctoral research positions at Harvard and at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton. He taught at Princeton University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the University of Jordan, the German Jordanian University, and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, where he was the Alan K. and Leonarda Laing Distinguished Visiting Professor. He was also an adjunct professor at Carleton University in Ottawa. In addition, he has been involved in teaching Open Massive Online Courses (MOOC) in both Arabic and English on architecture and urbanism for the Edraak Platform of the Queen Rania Foundation for Education and Development, and for the Aga Khan Trust for Culture Education Program.
He has published extensively in both Arabic and English on architecture and urbanism. He is the author of Contemporary Architecture and Urbanism in the Middle East (2012). He also co-edited (with Rahul Mehrotra) Shaping Cities: Emerging Models of Planning Practice (2016), and edited Workplaces: The Transformation of Places of Production: Industrial Buildings in the Islamic World (2010). In addition, he is a contributor to the forthcoming 21st edition of Sir Banister Fletcher’s A History of Architecture.
Al-Asad has appeared in documentary films including Islamic Art: Mirror of the Invisible World (2012), and also led the production of films including Arab Women in Architecture (2014).
He is a member of the board of directors of the Jordan National Gallery of Fine Arts (part of the Royal Society for Fine Arts). He also had served as the Coordinator of the International Academic and Curatorial Committee for the Discover Islamic Art project of the Museum With No Frontiers, and was a member of the Amman Commission, which served as an advisory body for the Mayor of Amman.
Al-Asad was a project reviewer for the Aga Khan Award for Architecture between 1989 and 2007, and has been a member of the Award's Steering Committee for its 2010, 2013, 2016, and 2019 cycles.
This event is supported by the Aga Khan Program at the GSD.