Browse Items (28 total)
- Collection: Jerusalem and the Temple Mount in the Second Temple Period
Jerusalem in the Byzantine period: Map
This plan shows what Jerusalem looked like in the Byzantine period. The Temple stood in ruins, as did the short-lived Temple of Jupiter that some scholars believe was erected in its place. Multiple churches were built during and after the reign of…
Jerusalem in the Late Roman period: Map
This plan shows what Jerusalem looked like after the Roman emperor Hadrian (117-138 CE) ordered the establishment of a colony named Aelia Capitolina in 130-132 CE. Some scholars believe that a temple to Jupiter was erected on the site where the…
Tags: Aelia Capitolina, Hadrian, Jerusalem, Roman, Temple Mount
Jerusalem in the Second Temple period: Map
This plan shows what Jerusalem looked like in the late Second Temple period, prior to the Jewish revolt of 66-70 CE. The Jewish Temple occupied the Temple Mount and the upper-classes lived in the Upper City (known today as Mt. Zion), across the…
Tags: City of David, Jerusalem, Temple Mount
Jerusalem: "Place of the Trumpeting" inscription
This stone, with an inscription in Hebrew that reads, 'To the place of trumpeting to an(nounce)…,' was found in excavations at the base of the southwest corner of the Temple Mount (where many things were found that had been thrown off of the Temple…
Tags: Hellenistic, Jerusalem, Priest, Roman, Temple Mount
Jerusalem: Aelia Capitolina Coin
This bronze coin was minted in 131 CE and commemorates the rededication of Jerusalem as Aelia Capitolina (the inscription is in Latin and reads 'COL[onia] AEL[ia] KAP[itolina]'). The picture in the middle of the coin is the façade of the temple to…
Tags: Aelia Capitolina, Bar Kokhba Revolt, Coin, Hadrian, Jerusalem, Roman
Jerusalem: Broad Stairs at the Temple Mount
This monumental staircase, located to the south of the Temple Mount compound (the wall of which is seen in the background) is one of two that led up to the Double and Triple Huldah Gates and into the Temple Mount. They were built as part of King…
Tags: Crusades, Double Gate, Hellenistic, Herod, Huldah Gate, Jerusalem, Roman, Temple Mount, Triple Gate
Jerusalem: Damascus Gate
This photograph shows the current day Damascus Gate (one of the northern entrances into the Old City of Jerusalem) and a lower, earlier doorway of the Roman gate of the city. Above the lower arch is a worn inscription that reads 'Colonia Ae[lia]…
Tags: Aelia Capitolina, Damascus Gate, Hadrian, Jerusalem, Ottoman, Roman
Jerusalem: Damascus Gate
This photograph shows the Damascus Gate (one of the northern entrances into the Old City of Jerusalem) and a lower, earlier doorway of the Roman gate that stood at the same place. Above the arch is a worn inscription that reads 'Colonia Ae[lia]…
Tags: Aelia Capitolina, Damascus Gate, Hadrian, Jerusalem, Ottoman, Roman
Jerusalem: Herod's enlarged Temple Mount
This aerial photograph of the modern Temple Mount, looking toward the northeast (with the Dome of the Rock roughly in its center and the gray dome of the Al-Aqsa Mosque at its southern end), one can see just how large and well-built King Herod's…
Tags: Al Aqsa Mosque, Dome of the Rock, Hellenistic, Herod, Jerusalem, Roman, Temple Mount
Jerusalem: Herod's Temple walls
This photograph shows the detail of extra-long blocks that King Herod's engineers used to bind the existing exterior walls of the Temple Mount compound to the southern addition that he was building. Some of these blocks measure 39 feet long and weigh…
Tags: Hellenistic, Herod, Jerusalem, Roman, Temple Mount
Jerusalem: Hezekiah's Pool
This pool, just north of Jaffa Gate, on the west side of the Old City of Jerusalem, is one of several large reservoirs constructed to provide water for the expanding population of Jerusalem during the reign of King Herod the Great (37-4 BCE). It and…
Tags: Aqueduct, Hellenistic, Jerusalem, Roman, Water system
Jerusalem: Model of Herod's Western Fortress
This scale model of Second Temple Jerusalem resides at the Israel Museum in modern Jerusalem. This particular photograph shows the towers that were part of a defense system of Jerusalem constructed by Herod the Great at its western border to guard…
Tags: Citadel, Hellenistic, Herod, Jerusalem, Roman
Jerusalem: Model of the Antonia Fortress
This scale model of Second Temple Jerusalem resides at the Israel Museum in modern Jerusalem. This particular photograph is looking from north to south at the Antonia Fortress, which sat at the north edge of the Temple Mount complex (the Temple…
Tags: Antonia Fortress, Hellenistic, Herod, Jerusalem, Roman, Second Temple, Temple Mount
Jerusalem: Model of the Second Temple
This scale model of Second Temple Jerusalem resides at the Israel Museum in modern Jerusalem. This particular photograph is looking west and shows a reconstruction of the Second Temple itself (after King Herod the Great's renovations). The Holy of…
Tags: Hellenistic, Herod, Jerusalem, Roman, Second Temple, Temple, Temple Mount
Jerusalem: objects from a wealthy Second Temple family
The mosaic floor, stone-carved table, and stone vessels are from the Jerusalem Jewish Quarter excavations, which revealed the upper-class houses from the Second Temple period. As a result, we can say that, for instance, upper-class Jerusalemites in…
Tags: Jerusalem, Roman, Stone vessels
Jerusalem: Phasael's Tower
This photograph shows Phasael's Tower, one of three towers built by King Herod the Great (37-4 BCE) as part of his defensive wall system on the western side of the city of Jerusalem. Herod named the tower after his brother, who was killed by the…
Tags: Citadel, Crusades, Hellenistic, Herod, Jerusalem, Phasael Tower, Roman
Jerusalem: phases of the ancient city walls
This image shows the growth of Jerusalem's walls and fortifications over the centuries of the Second Temple period (516BCE – 70CE). The first set of walls (in blue) shows the perimeter of the city during Hasmonean rule (second-first century BCE).…
Tags: Egypt, Geography, Red Sea, Satellite photograph, Sinai Peninsula
Jerusalem: Robinson's Arch
This photograph shows the 'springer' for Robinson's Arch. In 1838, Edward Robinson noticed the strange, curved stones jutting out of the southwestern corner of the Temple Mount (to the upper left of center in this photograph). He realized that these…
Tags: Hellenistic, Jerusalem, Robinson's Arch, Roman, Temple Mount
Jerusalem: Robinson's Arch (reconstruction)
In this drawing, the yellow pieces are those that have been found in archaeological excavations and the rest are an architect's reconstruction of how the southwestern corner of the Temple Mount probably looked in the Second Temple period: a…
Tags: Hellenistic, Jerusalem, Robinson's Arch, Roman, Temple Mount
Jerusalem: Solomon's Stables
This photograph was taken underneath the Temple Mount, in the area known as Solomon's Stables (at the southern end of the Temple Mount, underneath the current Al Aqsa Mosque). Rather than being stables, they are cavernous halls that were built during…
Jerusalem: south of the Temple Mount
This aerial photograph shows the southern part of the Temple Mount and its massive wall. In the foreground of this photograph is the spine of the hill that was the location of the City of David in the First Temple period. To the top right is the…
Jerusalem: Temple Mount
In this photograph the Dome of the Rock is visible in the upper left and the dome of the Al-Aqsa Mosque is visible in the upper right. Below them, Robinson's Arch is visible, springing out of the Western Wall (to the left). The tower rising up at the…
Jerusalem: Temple Mount
This aerial photograph of the Temple Mount compound, taken from the northeast, shows the large platform at its center, on which sits the Dome of the Rock. To the left of the Dome is the Al Aqsa Mosque, and in the close foreground (at the bottom of…
Jerusalem: Temple Mount wall
This photograph shows a vertical seam in the eastern wall of the Temple Mount in Jerusalem. The 100 foot-wide southernmost stretch of the wall (the left half in the photo) is clearly Herodian construction and indicative of the King Herod's additions…
Tags: Hellenistic, Herod, Jerusalem, Roman, Temple Mount
Jerusalem: The Temple Mount - growth in the Hasmonaean and Herodian periods
This slide shows the ways and degrees in which the Temple Mount in Jerusalem was expanded in the Hasmonaean (blue area) and Herodian periods (purple area).
Tags: Jerusalem, Roman, Temple Mount
Jerusalem: The Theodotus Inscription
This inscription, written in Greek, was found in the City of David, south of the Temple Mount, in 1914. It can be dated, on the basis of script, to the reign of King Herod (37-4 BCE), and its content points to a synagogue having been built in…
Tags: Hellenistic, Jerusalem, Roman, Synagogue, Theodotus Inscription
Jerusalem: Triple Huldah Gates
These three doorways, which were blocked up after the Crusader period, led from the monumental steps on the south side of the Temple Mount into the Temple Mount and the area called Solomon's Stables. They were built into the base of the Temple Mount…
Tags: City of David, Crusades, Hellenistic, Herod, Huldah Gate, Jerusalem, Roman, Temple Mount, Triple Gate