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The King Abdullah I Mosque (Arabic: مسجد الملك عبد الله الأول) in Amman, Jordan was built between 1982 and 1989. It is capped by a blue mosaic dome beneath which 3,000 Muslims may offer prayer.
Amman International Stadium: Amman: 17, 619 Football Jordan national football team, Al-Faisaly SC: 1968 [1] 2 King Abdullah II Stadium: Amman: 13,265 Football Jordan national football team, Al-Wehdat SC, Shabab Al-Hussein SC, Shabab Al-Ordon Club, Al-Yarmouk FC: 1999 [2] 3 Al-Hassan Stadium: Irbid: 12,301 Football Jordan women's national ...
Raghadan Palace (Arabic: قصر رغدان, romanized: Qaṣr Raġadān), the first Hashemite structure in Jordan, [1] was built by King Abdullah I, the founding monarch of the country. Upon his arrival in Amman, King Abdullah I initially resided in a modest Ottoman-style house near the Roman Theater.
Abdullah arrives in Amman 1920 Abdullah 1920 Abdullah I of Transjordan during the visit to Turkey with Turkish president Mustafa Kemal 1937. On 8 March 1920, Abdullah was proclaimed King of Iraq by the Iraqi Congress but he refused the position. After his refusal, his brother Faisal who had just been defeated in Syria, accepted the position.
Princess Iman was born in 3 August 2024 at King Hussein Medical Center in Wadi Al-Seer, Amman.She is the eldest child of Crown Prince Hussein and Princess Rajwa, She is a member of the Hashemite royal family, she is part of the dynasty that governs the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan. [3]
Indonesia and Jordan formally established diplomatic relations on 27 February 1950 when President Sukarno appointed Bagindo Dahlan Abdullah, a member of the Central Indonesia National Committee, to serve as the ambassador of the United States of Indonesia to Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and Jordan with a permanent residence in Baghdad. [3]
In February 2011, King Abdullah II dismisses Prime Minister Rifai and his cabinet [6] In October 2011, Abdullah dismisses Prime Minister Bakhit and his cabinet after complaints of slow progress on promised reforms [7] In April 2012, as the protests continues, Al-Khasawneh resigned, and the King appoints Fayez al-Tarawneh as the new Prime ...
Amman had already been functioning as an administrative centre. The Umayyads built a large palace on the Amman Citadel hill, known today as the Umayyad Palace. Amman was later destroyed by several earthquakes and natural disasters, including a particularly severe earthquake in 747. The Umayyads were overthrown by the Abbasids three years later ...