Crow
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Gidday all
Across the the highway from the Inn of the Good Samaritan/Khan al-Hatruri, are the archaeological remains of a crusader fortress known to the Crusaders as Maldoim, Adumim, or Rouge Cisterne / Cisterna Rubea (Red Cistern), among other names. In Arabic it is known as Qal'at ad-Damm, "Blood Castle".[SUP].[/SUP]It was built by the before 1169/72,

Probably at the site of a Late Roman fort, to protect the road between Jerusalem and Jericho. It stands at the top of the "Ascent of Blood", as the Ascent of Adumim was known to the Crusaders.Another was Maldoim (Qual’at al-Damm), a four-sided fort built by the Templars before 1169 to protect the Jerusalem-Jericho road. It had a small tower with additional vaults and a strong rock-cut moat.

Today it lies in complete ruins lost and forgotten. A Templar fort that was over run and destroyed and left abandoned and almost forgotten to history.
While these forts acted as safe way houses for pilgrims. Many would be picked off by banditry. Templars supplied safe passage on the road between Jerusalem and Jericho.
No doubt there is potential for Templar coin hoards to be found at this site.

Crow
Across the the highway from the Inn of the Good Samaritan/Khan al-Hatruri, are the archaeological remains of a crusader fortress known to the Crusaders as Maldoim, Adumim, or Rouge Cisterne / Cisterna Rubea (Red Cistern), among other names. In Arabic it is known as Qal'at ad-Damm, "Blood Castle".[SUP].[/SUP]It was built by the before 1169/72,

Probably at the site of a Late Roman fort, to protect the road between Jerusalem and Jericho. It stands at the top of the "Ascent of Blood", as the Ascent of Adumim was known to the Crusaders.Another was Maldoim (Qual’at al-Damm), a four-sided fort built by the Templars before 1169 to protect the Jerusalem-Jericho road. It had a small tower with additional vaults and a strong rock-cut moat.

Today it lies in complete ruins lost and forgotten. A Templar fort that was over run and destroyed and left abandoned and almost forgotten to history.
While these forts acted as safe way houses for pilgrims. Many would be picked off by banditry. Templars supplied safe passage on the road between Jerusalem and Jericho.
No doubt there is potential for Templar coin hoards to be found at this site.

Crow