AMMAN, Jordan — Hundreds of demonstrators calling for reform rallied late into the evening in the Jordanian capital on Friday, a week after riot police officers and government supporters violently broke up a rally and a protest camp, leaving one man dead and scores injured.

This Friday’s demonstration, by contrast, went on for hours without intervention. The reformists stayed at their new location, the downtown Municipality Square, from after noon prayers until 10 p.m.

The protesters hailed mostly from the Muslim Brotherhood and the March 24 Movement, a new organization that had originally planned to camp out from that date until their demands for reform were met, like those who took up temporary residency in Tahrir Square in Cairo. But the camp was destroyed a day after it was set up.

The Muslim Brotherhood estimated the number of protesters on Friday at up to 2,000, though others said it was closer to 800. The main demands raised by the demonstrators were an end to corruption and constitutional reform that would curb the sweeping powers of King Abdullah II.