The Folk Museum is also a display museum in Jordan. The favorite is the display of the clothing area. You can deeply understand the clothing and daily style of the country. The number and variety of clothing are very rich.
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The Folklore Museum Highlights: Must-See Features and Attractions
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The Jordan Folk Museum is located on the west side of the Roman Theatre in Amman. It was built by the Ministry of Antiquities and opened to the public in 1975. The main contents displayed in the museum are divided into three parts: desert culture, village culture and urban culture. The exhibits in the museum mainly reflect the daily life of people in the 19th and early 20th centuries: through traditional Jordanian costumes and various tableware.
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The Folklore Museum Reviews: Insider Insights and Visitor Experiences
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The Folk Museum is also a display museum in Jordan. The favorite is the display of the clothing area. You can deeply understand the clothing and daily style of the country. The number and variety of clothing are very rich.
The Jordan Folk Museum shows folklore things. I especially like the display of ethnic costumes here. Jordan is also a relatively conservative city. The folklore museum is also worth visiting. [View] Very beautiful [Fun] Very interesting
The Jordan Folk Museum has a lot of interesting artworks. You can see a lot of rich artworks here. The folklore items are also very complicated. The Jordanian city style is also not bad. Suitable for visiting here. [View] The view here is not bad [Fun] Very interesting building.
Founded by the Department of Antiquities in 1975, housed in the Western lateral hall of the Roman Theatre (from the entrance to the right), the museum exhibits costumes and items of daily life, weapons, and musical instruments from the 19th and early 20th centuries, belonging to the culture of the desert , villages and towns.Mannequins dressed in traditional costumes are displayed in daily life scenes, such as women in a Jordanian seating area in front of a house, men playing backgammon sitting at a nicely crafted inlaid table, a countryside room where women prepare bread, a weaving room where the looms are run by men, a market with stands of traditional craftsmen, men gathering in the guest section of a Bedouin tent, a couple riding camels, etc.
The Jordan B&B Museum shows the state of life of the early Jordanian people.
Two big surprises for me from the Jordanian Museum: ① I saw the "Dead Sea Scroll Dead Sea Scrolls" with my own eyes; ② I personally touched the ceramic pieces that have been 7,000 years since 5,000 BC (the museum specially sorted out some pottery fragments to make the audience feel).