Tag Archives: Jerusalem

From the Temple Mount to the Pool of Siloam

Chris Mitchell, CBN News, reports on the steps leading from the Temple Mount to the Pool of Siloam.

Ancient steps and a storm sewer dating back to King Herod are two of the recent finds in Jerusalem.

The discoveries help tell the story of the Jewish pilgrimage to the Temple in the time of Jesus.

“I was glad when they said to me let us go to the house of the Lord,” King David wrote in the Psalms.

Some 2,000 years ago, Jewish pilgrims might have recited this psalm of ascents as they climbed stairs on their way to worship at the Temple.

Three times a year, the Bible commanded the Jewish people to go up to Jerusalem to celebrate the Feasts of the Lord.

“They probably camped outside the city in the valleys in the Kidron Valley… came in the city through the southern gate into the pool to take a ritual bath and then went up to the Temple Mount to pay their respects to the God of Israel,” said Haifa University archaeologist Roni Reich.

The excavation is located just outside the City of David. Many believe the area was Jerusalem at the time of King David.

Recently archaeologists uncovered the other side of the broad stairway leading to the Temple Mount. Paved with large limestone blocks, it is thought to be about 140 feet wide and climbs less than a half mile uphill to the Temple Mount.

Reich said Jesus, too, most likely walked the steps.

Just outside is the pool of Siloam, where Jesus healed the blind man as mentioned in the Gospel of John.

Read the full report, or watch a nice video featuring Archaeologists Ronnie Reich, here.

HT: Dr. Claude Mariottini

First Temple Period gate and wall

The headline writers are going wild. Arutz Sheva says, “Dig Supports Biblical Account of King Solomon’s Construction” here. The article includes a short video featuring Dr. Eilat Mazar at the site here.

The Associated Press article is headed “Archaeologist Sees Proof For Bible In Ancient Wall” here. The AP headline at Yahoo News reads, “Archaeologist sees proof for Bible in ancient wall,” here.

The news release from the Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs reads, “Jerusalem city wall from 10th century B.C.E. uncovered,” here.

A good report in the Trumpet (here) reads, “Solomonic Wall Discovered in Jerusalem.”

Dr. Eilat Mazar, of Hebrew University, has been working for several years in the City of David excavation. For the past three months she has been working in the area north of the City of David next to the street that runs along the south side of the Temple Mount. The area is part of what is called the Ophel. Eilat Mazar worked here with her grandfather, Benjamin Mazar, in the 1980s. You can see the area in this aerial photo I made December 15, 2009. In fact, a portion of the excavation is covered by a tarp.

Jerusalem Aerial of Second Temple excavation. Photo by Ferrell Jenkins.

Aerial view of Second Temple excavation. Photo by Ferrell Jenkins.

Thirteen photos are posted on the Hebrew University Facebook album here.

Todd Bolen (here and here and here) and Leen Ritmeyer (here and here) point out that, in spite of the news release, this excavation goes back many years. Dr. Eilat Mazar has spent the past three months working in the area.

Below is a photo of the gate area showing the west chambers that I made in 2005. Benjamin Mazar and his grand daughter Eilat published a report on this area in 1989.

Gate from First Temple Period. Photo by Ferrell Jenkins 2005.

Gate from First Temple Period. Photo by Ferrell Jenkins 2005.

Compare the photo above, and the schematic drawing on the sign below (from 2005), with photos 12 and 13 in the HU Facebook album.

Marker indicated First Temple Period gate. Photo by Ferrell Jenkins 2005.

Marker indicated First Temple Period gate. Photo by Ferrell Jenkins 2005.

It seems uncertain whether this gate belongs to the 8th century B.C., 9th century, or 10th century. Eilat Mazar says it belongs to the 10th century B.C. based on pottery and a comparison of the architecture with that in other excavated cities. We must patiently wait to see the evidence. [See the comment by barnea levi selavan on Ritmeyer’s blog. He points out several significant things not included in the news reports.]

I look forward to seeing the area that has been recently cleaned. The news reports, including the video by Prof. Mazar, do not distinguish between what we already knew and what is new.

No one would enjoy seeing an inscription reading “Built in the 950 B.C. by King Solomon, son of David” more than I. Until more evidence is forthcoming we must leave Solomon out of this picture.

And this is the account of the forced labor that King Solomon drafted to build the house of the LORD and his own house and the Millo and the wall of Jerusalem and Hazor and Megiddo and Gezer. (1 Kings 9:15 ESV)

P.S. I was about 5 minutes away from posting this early today when my wife came to say that we must leave to pick up our grandson for the day. I chose the better part!

Jaffa Gate and the Christian Quarter from the air

In the past few days we have called attention to the excavations being conducted by the Israel Antiquities Authority at Jaffa Gate in Jerusalem. Archaeologists working in the area announced the discovery of an East-West road of the 4th century Byzantine city and the high-level aqueduct that brought water into the city in the second and third century.

The photo below shows Jaffa Gate and the Citadel from the air. Hezekiah’s Pool is visible just to the left (north) of the main street (David Street), almost in the center of the photo. The dome of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre is visible on the upper left side of the photo. Most of the area shown in this photo is called the Christian Quarter of the Old City of Jerusalem.

    Aerial view of the Christian Quarter of the Old City. Photo by Ferrell Jenkins.

Aerial view of the Christian Quarter of the Old City. Photo by Ferrell Jenkins.

Click on the photo for a larger image.

Second century aqueduct found in Jerusalem

The Israel Antiquities Authority announced earlier today the discover of the High-Level Aqueduct that brought water into Hezekiah’s Pool in the Roman city of Jerusalem.

A beautiful aqueduct, standing 1.50 meters [4.92 feet] high and built of large stones, has been situated for almost two millennia right under one of the most familiar and traveled places in Jerusalem – beneath the road that leads from Jaffa Gate toward the David Citadel Museum and the shops on David Street.

The High-Level Aqueduct of Jerusalem, which dates from the second-third century CE, was exposed in excavations the Israel Antiquities Authority is conducting, with funding provided by the Jerusalem Development Authority for the purpose of replacing the infrastructure in the region.

According to Dr. Ofer Sion, excavation director on behalf of the Israel Antiquities Authority, “The side of the aqueduct was discovered during the course of the excavation. When we removed the stones in its side and peeked into it we saw a splendidly built aqueduct covered with stone slabs where one can walk crouched down for a distance of approximately 40 meters. It is very exciting to think that no one has set foot there for many hundreds of years”. According to Sion, “The noted Land of Israel scholar, Dr. Conrad Schick, described a specific section of the aqueduct in a survey he conducted at the end of the nineteenth century. In 1898 a building was erected in this area which afterward became what we know of today as the Imperial Hotel. Schick’s documentation provided us with the clue that led to exposing this section of the aqueduct”.

The aqueduct is c. 60 centimeters [23.64 inches] wide and 1.5 meters [4.92 feet] high. Shafts were exposed at fifteen meter intervals or so that allowed the ancients to check the state of the aqueduct from what was the surface level in those days.

Second century upper aqueduct in Jerusalem. Photo: Assaf Peretz, IAA.

Second century high-level aqueduct in Jerusalem. Photo: Assaf Peretz, IAA.

A short video from ITN features Dr. Ofer Sion and the upper aqueduct here.

Todd Bolen calls attention to Tom Powers — View From Jerusalem in which he includes the late 19th century plans by Conrad Schick. Tom has some great photos made during the excavation.

For centuries, the water for Jerusalem came from the Gihon Spring on the east side of the city. From the time of Herod the Great, at least, water for the city was brought from Solomon’s Pools south of Bethlehem by aqueduct. This was a distance of about 8 miles.

Once the water reached Jerusalem it was brought into the city by two main aqueducts — the Low-Level Aqueduct and the High-Level Aqueduct. [UPDATE: See the comment by Tom Powers. Tom correctly points out that there were two separate aqueducts bringing the water into the city. I plan to say more about this later. Thanks for the correction, Tom.]

The High-Level Aqueduct conveyed water to the high part of the city where King Herod’s palace and Hezekiah’s Pool were situated, the latter being the main source of water for all those arriving in the city; and the Low-Level Aqueduct carried water to the Temple Mount and the Temple.

So many names in the Holy Land have nothing to do with the person for whom they are named. The Citadel of David is not. Solomon’s Pools are not. Hezekiah’s Pool may not be. These names were attached to various structures by later pilgrims.

Jerome Murphy-O’Connor describes Hezekiah’s Pool.

This great reservoir is entirely surrounded by buildings, and is accessible through the Coptic Khan…. At present the dry pool is used as a rubbish dump by the dwellings which surround it on all sides, but a much needed restoration project is on the drawing board.

Murphy-O’Connor says the pool “is thought to date from the Herodian period when it was fed by an aqueduct (visible outside Jaffa Gate) coming from Mamilla Pool.” He says Josephus mentions the pool under the name Amygdalon (Almond Tree) (War 5:468). He says this name, Amygdalon, is probably a deformation o f the Hebrew migdal (tower). The reference is to the towers of Herod’s palace.

I have been upstairs, or on the roof, of the Petra Hotel several times to photograph Hezekiah’s Pool. The photo below was made in early September, 2008. The area was the cleanest I had seen it. The Petra Hotel is immediately east of the Imperial Hotel mentioned in Tom Powers blog.

The view from the hotel roof is good. To the left is the dome of the Holy Sepulchre. The Lutheran Church tower is in the middle of the photo. The Dome of the Rock is visible to the right. In the distant left is Mount Scopus. To the right is the Mount of Olives.

Hezekiah's Pool from roof of Petra Hotel. Photo by Ferrell Jenkins.

Hezekiah's Pool from roof of the Petra Hotel. Photo by Ferrell Jenkins.

The full news release by the IAA may be read here.

HT: Todd Bolen, Bible Places Blog; Joseph I. Lauer.

Archaeologist Gabriel Barkai discusses digging on the Temple Mount

Israel National News has posted a video featuring Dr. Gabriel Barkai.

In wake of the claims that Israel is excavating under the Dome of the Rock on the Temple Mount and undermining Muslim mosques in order to cause them to collapse, archaeologist Dr. Gabriel Barkai told IsraelNN TV the opposite is true.

He charged that it is the Arabs who have acted against the status quo and have “brutally” excavated land that contains many ancient artifacts from Jewish history.

Dr. Barkai spoke about the “Sifting Project,” in which countless archaeological finds are being discovered in the rubble dug up by the Muslims. He also discussed his most famous discovery: small silver plaques containing the Priestly Benediction from the Book of Numbers, which he found in 1979.

These plaques contain the oldest surviving Biblically-related inscription discovered to date, dating back to 600 B.C.E.

Some of the comments made by Dr. Barkai are controversial, but I think readers who are interested in the archaeology of Jerusalem will find this 10-minute video beneficial.

The link takes you to the report and the video with all of the associated ads.

HT: Joseph I. Lauer

Al Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem

The Al-Aqsa (or Al-Aksa) Mosque is one of the two important buildings erected by Moslems on the platform built by Herod the Great. A Brief Guide to the Dome of the Rock and Al-Haram Al-Sharif, published in 1965, says the Al-Aksa Mosque was built in A.D. 693 or A.D. 705. The other significant building on the platform is called The Dome of the Rock or the Mosque of Omar. It is built over the rock where, according to tradition, Abraham offered Isaac (Genesis 22), and where the Temple of Solomon once stood (1 Kings 6).

Al-aksa Mosque. View toward south west. Photo by Ferrell Jenkins.

This building has often been in the news. In 1951 King Abdullah of Jordan was assassinated in the Mosque. In 1969 an Australian tourist set fire to the building. Just a couple of days ago we saw news reports of disturbances in the Mosque. The Guardian of London headline reports,

Palestinians clash with Israeli troops at al-Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem. Demonstrations at holy shrine erupt into violence as youths fight battles with riot police.

Israel plans major excavation at Western Wall

Israel National News reports, in an article by Samuel Sokol, plans to conduct a archaeological dig under the Western Wall in Jerusalem.

Israel is planning a major archaeological dig under the Western Wall (Kotel) plaza, opposite the Temple Mount, officials announced Thursday. The excavations will create an archaeological park directly underneath the area where worshippers currently stand while praying at the Kotel.

The current prayer area will remain open, supported by pillars, while a new area will be added underneath, at the level at which worshippers at the ancient Temple stood in the past.

The complete article may be read here, and another here from The Jerusalem Post.

This drawing shows the planned part underneath the present pavement at the Western Wall.

Proposed Western Wall archaeological park. Photo: Antiquities Authority.

Proposed Western Wall archaeological park. Photo: Antiquities Authority.

Here is the way this area looks at the present time.

The Western Wall platform. View to north toward Wilson's Arch. Photo by F. Jenkins.

The Western Wall platform. View to north toward Wilson's Arch. Photo by F. Jenkins.

HT: Joseph Lauer

Jerusalem excavation at BiblePlace Blog

Todd Bolen has posted three photos showing some current excavations in Jerusalem here. The one of the excavations in the Western Wall plaza is especially helpful.

Video on the City of David

The Israel Antiquites Department has released a nice 9-minute video featuring archaeologists Ronnie Reich and Eli Shukron showing some of the highlights of the City of David excavation. The film features the following places:

  • The water system and Warren’s Shaft
  • The Canaanite pool channel
  • Gihon Spring
  • Hezekiah’s Tunnel
  • The Pool of Siloam
  • The Herodian Street
  • The drainage channel

The video runs a little slow on my computer, but if you give it a little time to load it is certainly worth the wait. The link is here.

The photo below shows part of two towers that served as a fortification for the protection of Gihon Spring as early as the Canaanite time.

Foundation of the fortification tower at Gihon Spring. Photo by Ferrell Jenkins.

Foundation of the fortification towers at Gihon Spring. Photo by Ferrell Jenkins.

The information sign at the site says,

It was here that a rock-cut pool and the remains of the bases of two towers were located. These towers, built of large stones, constituted part of the fortifications protecting the pool and the spring as early as the Middle Bronze Age (18-15 centuries BCE). The spring water flowed through the channel to a large pool, from which scores of people could draw water simultaneously. The surplus water flowed through a channel to another pool in the south of the city.

This work has been carried out by Reich and Shukron.

HT: Joseph I. Lauer

Extraordinary Finds at the Mt Zion Excavation

That the title of the July update after three weeks of digging at the Mt Zion Excavation. The report by James D. Tabor is available here. The location is a beautiful one. It lies between the road and the old city wall on the south side of the Old City of Jerusalem, and it overlooks the Hinnom Valley (Joshua 18:16). There are some nice photos of the site and some of the discoveries.

Discoveries in the past three weeks include:

  1. A stone vessel with an ancient inscription of ten lines in archaic Jewish script.
  2. Murex snail shells with holes drilled in them.
  3. A fire pit dated to just after the Roman destruction of Jerusalem in A.D. 70.
  4. The threshold of a Fatimid period double gate.
  5. An arched doorway with mosaic floor and plastered wall.
  6. Several 2nd temple vaulted chambers that likely contained mikvot (ritual baths).
  7. Miscellaneous items such as coins, intact lamps, etc.
Herodian lamp from Mt Zion Excavation. Photo: Tabor Blog.

Herodian lamp from Mt Zion Excavation. Photo: Tabor Blog.

The excavators, Tabor and Gibson, have found evidence in some of these items that causes them to think this might have been an area were priests from the Second Temple period lived. (Second Temple means the Herodian Temple, which was really the Third Temple!).

Archaeology is hard work, but as these little things come to light it is exciting to have a better understanding of the past.

HT: Joseph I. Lauer