Antiquities laws and regulations issued in Jordan from 1923 to 2013

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54134/jjha.v16i3.660

Keywords:

Department of Antiquities of Jordan, Antiquities Law, Ministry of Tourism of Jordan, cultural heritage, Dead Sea Scrolls.

Abstract

The Department of Antiquities, established in 1923, is one of the first governmental departments established after the foundation of the modern state of Jordan. For the purposes of organizing archaeological work, the Jordanian government has issued during the past hundred years several laws related to the legalization of archaeological work and the protection of antiquities, numbering seven, the first of which was the Law of Antiquities of 1925 and the last of which was Law No. 21 of 1988, followed by many amendments and regulations. The most recent of these was the Law Amending the Antiquities Law No. (55) of 2008. In this paper, we reviewed all antiquities laws, regulations, and amendments that occurred to them from 1923 to 2013, and discussed them, highlighting their strengths and weaknesses, and their contribution to protecting the Jordanian cultural heritage.

Author Biographies

Ahmed Lash, Department of Antiquities of Jordan

Head of Archaeological loan and foreign affair collaboration

Hala Qasem Al-Syoof, Department of Antiquities of Jordan

Head of Publication and Registration

References

Bartoccini, R. (1927). Italian Archaeological Excavation and Research in Jordan. Italian Expeditions, DoA Archive.

Al-Madhi, Munib, and Suleiman Al-Mousa. (1988). A History of Jordan in the Twentieth Century 1900-1959 (2nd Edition Edition). Amman Jordan.

Published

2022-10-31

How to Cite

Lash, A. ., & Al-Syoof, H. Q. . . (2022). Antiquities laws and regulations issued in Jordan from 1923 to 2013. Jordan Journal for History and Archaeology, 16(3), 225–241. https://doi.org/10.54134/jjha.v16i3.660

Issue

Section

Articles