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Jerash RACE: The Roman Army and Chariot Experience

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Actors dressed as armour-clad legionnaires and centurions rehearse a staged spectacle in the hippdrome of the ancient Roman city of Jerash, Jordan. Starting mid-July actors will perform 'The Roman Army and Chariot Experience,' a one-hour show held in honour of Julius Caesar as part of Jordan's newest tourist attraction(AFP/File/Khalil Mazraawi)

The sun bears down and dust swirls as Roman centurions, followed by armour-clad legionnaires and bruised gladiators, tramp out of the ancient hippodrome to the trailing sounds of a military march.

Actors rehearse a gladiator fight in the hippodrome of the ancient Roman city of Jerash, Jordan, in preparation for an upcoming one-hour show honoring Julius Caesar and part of Jordan's newest tourist attraction(AFP/File/Khalil Mazraawi)

In the seats all around, 21st century spectators in modern-day Jordan cheer and applaud the spectacle before them — a one-hour show held in honour of Julius Caesar, and part of Jordan's newest tourist attraction.

Starting mid-July, visitors to Jordan can plunge into the past, reliving in a unique location just north of the capital Amman some of the high moments that made the Roman empire.

The setting is Jerash, the ancient Roman city and one of Jordan's better preserved archaeological sites and one of the 10 great cities during the Roman golden age.

An actor rides a Roman-stule horse-drawn chariot in Jerash, Jordan, during a rehearsal for 'The Roman Army and Chariot Experience,' a one-hour show held in honour of Julius Caesar, and part of Jordan's newest tourist attraction(AFP/File/Khalil Mazraawi)

The place is the restored hippodrome located close to the South Gate just beyond the triumphal arch that was erected as a tribute to Emperor Hadrian who visited the city in 129 AD.

Much smaller than Rome's famed Circus Maximus, the Jerash hippodrome is nevertheless endowed with 10 starting gates, original stone seats for the spectators and surrounded in the distance by olive tree-dotted rolling hills.

The show is known as "The Roman Army and Chariot Experience" or simply by its acronym RACE.

An actor performs in the ancient Roman city of Jerash, where a cast of retired Jordanian army soldiers, special forces and policemen will entertain tourists starting mid-July with a staged spectacle of Roman centurions, legionaires and gladiators(AFP/File/Khalil Mazraawi)

The cast is made up of retired Jordanian army soldiers, special forces and policemen.

And yes, the blockbuster movie Ben Hur was the inspiration.

The show begins as trumpets blare from a loudspeaker and a Julius Caesar character shouts in Latin: "Silencium!" (Silence).

The spectators settle in as helmeted legionnaires in belted brown togas and ankle-high leather boots march up to the center of the hippodrome, one hand clutching a "pilum" or heavy javelin, and the other branding a shield.

They are preceded by a pitiless centurion, shouting commands in Latin, and a flagbearer who holds up proudly the legion's standard: a bull with the words Leg VI.

The VI Legion Ferrata was established by Julius Caesar in 52 BC and took part in Roman civil wars on the side of Marc Antony.

In perfect harmony, the army performs offensive and defensive techniques and re-enacts battles against an unseen enemy described by a narrator as a "hordes of barbarians" who deserve no mercy.

The voice narrating the battle tells spectators how the Roman legionnaires lived, worked and fought "using the pilum only once because it would bend on impacting the enemy's shield."

Their battle won, the legionnaires make room for gladiators, who in real life serve in the special forces corps of the Jordanian army, and are experts in closehand combat.

The gladiators, moving in pairs, deliver a ruthless fight with swords, kicking and punching each other until one is pinned to the ground, prompting the spectators to decide if he will live or die by giving the thumbs up or down.

The show concludes with a seven-lap chariot race around the "spina" middle barrier that lies in the center of the hippodromes. Some chariots are pulled by two horses, others by four. (AFP)

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{ 3 } Comments

  1. nasimjo | October 18, 2005 at 12:46 pm | Permalink

    yeah ,, i've seen them many times … this history re-act has been performed for about a year now .

  2. u tell me | May 14, 2006 at 1:46 am | Permalink

    this website is gay, i needed homework help and it doesn't een HELP! SHEESH

  3. Amy | June 3, 2009 at 4:08 pm | Permalink

    Jerash is a wonderful place and the Roman Race Show is awesome :)

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