Qanawat Archeological Bathhouses Narrate Stories of Unique Architectural Civilization Dating Back to the 2nd Century
Qanawat archeological town in Sweida province is distinguished by its Roman, Greek, Nabataean and Islamic monuments.
Qanawat has been known throughout history for its social, economic and religious progress as it was ruled in a way similar to the Greek cities.
The ancient bathhouses in Qanawat town in Sweida are of a unique architectural design and a vivid witness to the region’s civilization and a miniature model of the Roman bathhouses in both Shahba and Bosra.
Archeologist , Hassan Hatoum, who is specialized in the region’s antiquities told SANA that the bathhouses , which are located in the lower western part of Qanawat consist of several buildings which were built according to the Roman imperial style in the first half of the second century AD and they include several buildings, where they used to accommodated about 500 persons.
Hatoum pointed out that the bathhouses consist of a number of sections and halls, which are distinguished from each other in terms of their temperature, as the visitors of the bathhouses were moving from the hot hall to the warm one ending up with the cold hall.
The heating channels at the bathhouses were built with high technique within the walls to allow the ascending hot air to warm up the hall , in addition to small basins for the elite figures thus providing privacy away from the eyes of other visitors.
Qanawat bathhouses also include other halls which were allocated for playing and reading , in addition to a library, restaurant , market and smaller bathhouses.
The archeologist Hatoum indicated that the channels which transfer water to the bathhouses and distribute it to the halls have been discovered through excavations carried out by the national excavation expedition which is affiliated to Sweida Antiquities Department over the past years.
The national excavation expedition managed to identify the hot water hall and warm water hall and the steam bath section in addition to finding parts of channels near the discovered halls which draw water from the ancient reservoir or “tank” on the top of a hill , which used to supply the ancient city with drinking water, while other parts from the bathhouses are still located under the current municipality building and the mosque building adjacent to these bathhouses.
It is worth mentioning that there is an archaeological hotel near the bathhouses in the southern side, which consists of two floors and a large courtyard. It was used to the accommodation of passengers and pilgrims who used to come to visit the temples and churches of “Qanawat” and “Si’a” . The ancient hotel dates back to the first half of the second century AD..
Rawaa Ghanam