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Source:
Picturesque Palestine, vol. 1, p. 172. |
Ain-es-Sultan, The
Sultan's Spring
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When we leave the upper channel of the river not a tree or blade of grass, only
a few shrubs with microscopic foliage, are visible till we reach the oasis of
old Jericho, Ain-es-Sultān . . . .We halt in front of the famous spring, the
Prophet's Fountain, Ain-es-Sultān . . . shaded by a fine fig-tree, where an
immense volume of clear warm water, 84° Fahr., very pure, and swarming with
fish, bursts from the shingle at the foot of a great mound, evidently
artificial, and composed of the remains of ancient Jericho, full of fragments of
pottery and frequent morsels of nacreous glass. Behind the spring, and partially
enclosing it, is a ruined edifice, apparently a small Roman temple; and strewn
about are fragments of shafts and Byzantine capitals. The copious stream is
tapped within fifty yards of its exit by various artificial watercourses,
through which the Arabs lead the life-giving liquid from time to time over their
patches of cultivation, through jungles of cane and tamarisk. (Source:
Picturesque Palestine, vol. 1, pp. 170-171.) |