Now itās an old stone ruin, but it was once the largest and most elaborate of the 150 stone homes built in the Byzantine era in Umm el-Jimal. history professor Bert de Vries will travel to Jordan in January to review the site, known officially as House XVIII.
āThis is original vernacular architecture that survived in these cultures,ā de Vries said. āItās part of the architectural heritage of the land.ā
Funded by an Ambassador Fund for Cultural Preservation grant from the U.S. State Department, de Vries will work to preserve and present House XVIII. The founder of Calvinās archaeology minor has been investigating Umm el-Jimal for more than 40 years.
āHouse XVIII is a representative example of the other 150 houses and how the people lived back then,ā he said.
De Vries wants to establish the house as a viable archaeological site by making it both safe and attractive for the general public.
In January, de Vries and students who sign on for his interim class āField Work in Archaeologyā will tackle the initial planning phase. Working from a rented headquarters, the class will document the building and provide a detailed work plan for its physical preservation.
During phase two, staff from the Jordan Department of Antiquities (which is providing matching funds) and elsewhere will stabilize walls and clear space for walking around the house.
In the projectās final stage, de Vries and his team will publish their documentation and a visitorās guide to House XVIII.
Open Hand Studios, which specializes in cultural heritage preservation, will create virtual imaging of House XVIII. Founded by Calvin alums Paul Christians (ā03) and Jeff DeKock (ā01), who took de Vriesā archaeology class, the organization is also helping de Vries create a virtual museum.
Assisted by a previous grant, de Vries will also collect oral histories from the region.
About the Author
Myrna Anderson is a senior writer in Calvin Collegeās communications and marketing department.