Prague-Sana
The Czech magazine (100 plus 1) described in a video report with the effects of the city of Bosra as one of the "rare historical monuments that are stored in Syria and one of the most beautiful and most important in the world."
The magazine said in its report that "the first reference to the city of Bosra contained in clay regulations dating back to the Egyptian Pharaohs in the fourteenth century BC, but the golden age witnessed the city in the second century when Bosra became the capital of the Romanian territory of Arabia Petraia."
Referring to the Bosra Amphitheater and its theater, especially for its preservation, pointing out that it constitutes the most beautiful building praised by the Romanians and was until mid-twentieth century buried in the majority under the soil.
The theater can accommodate 15,000 spectators, but it is not the only masterpiece in Bosra due to the presence of many other monuments in the city dating back to the Roman and Bernazian periods in addition to the presence of many Arab antiquities.
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