The Edifice of The Martyrs of The Great Arab Revolt, Al-Ayes - Al-Tafilah The Al-Ayes district is of historical value, and it is believed that Job, peace be upon him, had lived in it, and even that one of the names of Job is the name (Awaas). Al-Ayes is about 10 kilometers east of Al-Tafilah, and it overlooks it to the west. It witnessed one of the most important battles of the Great Arab Revolt, the Battle of Hadd Al-Daqiq on January 25, 1918 AD, in which the Great Arab Revolt Army inflicted a humiliating defeat on the Turkish forces. Hadd Al-Daqiq is the plain that expands from the side of Al-Tafilah University northwards, with a depth of 10 km and a width of up to 8 km. It is called Hadd Al-Daqiq because it ends with an acute angle to the west, which overlooks a steep slope below where a deep village appears. It was an everlasting and powerful battle, in which the people of Al-Tafilah and its villages participated, and a number of them were martyred and some were wounded. In the Great Arab Revolt Square, which was set up in front of Al-Tafilah University by one of the citizens of Al-Tafilah, Mr. Ibrahim Al-Hanaqta, it included an old cannon at the edge of the square to the south. In the center of the roundabout, a stone rectangle rose, topped by a four-facade beacon bearing the image of the late King Al-Hussein, may God rest his soul, and a portrait of His Majesty King Abdullah II Ibn Al-Hussein. A facade bore Surat Al-Tin from the Holy Qur’an. The fourth panel had verses of poetry in the magnanimity and courage of the people of Al-Tafilah. The western wall was topped with a marble panel that bears a panoramic image of Sharif Al-Hussein bin Ali and his sons, the Hashemite kings. And in the second part, there are panels bearing the names of the martyrs and the wounded.