Browse Items (337 total)
Jerusalem: Bedouin discoverers of Cave 1
The two men in this photograph, Jum'a Muhammed (on the left) and Muhammed edh-Dhib (on the right) are the two Ta'amireh Bedouin cousins who claim to have discovered the first Dead Sea Scrolls in Cave 1 in 1947. Details of the discovery differ, but…
Tags: Dead Sea Scrolls, Essenes, Hellenistic, Qumran, 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: Chaim Weitzman and Faisal I
Chaim Weitzman was the first President of Israel. Prior to his presidency, he is widely credited as the one who convinced the British Foreign Minister Arthur Balfour to create the Balfour Declaration; he was also instrumental in its drafting. He…
Jerusalem: Church of the Holy Sepulchre
This close-up of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, which is looking northwest, shows the two domes of the church: the Anastasis (the larger dome, on the left) and the dome over the basilica (the smaller dome, on the right). The entrance to the…
Jerusalem: Church of the Holy Sepulchre - aedicule of the Anastasis
This photograph shows a small aedicule, a chapel built over the rock cut empty tomb believed to belong to Jesus. It stands at the center of the rotunda, the round architectural structure that was built there by the Crusaders and right underneath the…
Jerusalem: Church of the Holy Sepulchre - Chapel of St. Helena
This photograph is taken from the Armenian chapel dedicated to Queen Helena (the mother of Constantine who was entrusted by her son to oversee the building of the church in the 4th century CE). The steps in the background are the 29 steps that lead…
Jerusalem: Church of the Holy Sepulchre - plan
This plan shows the original layout of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in the time of Constantine and his mother Helen. The complex is made of 3 separate units: at the bottom of the plan, a basilica ending with an apse and Golgotha incorporated into…
Jerusalem: Church of the Holy Sepulchre - Tomb of Jesus
This photograph shows the interior of the Aedicule of the Anastasis, where Christians as early as the 4th century CE believed that Jesus' body was laid before his resurrection.
Jerusalem: Church of the Holy Sepulchre and Dome of the Rock
This photograph, looking east, shows the proximity of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre (the two domes in the foreground) to the Dome of the Rock (in the background). The Mount of Olives and the Arab village of Et Tur (the smaller of the two towers on…
Jerusalem: City of David
This view of the eastern slope of the City of David shows the steps leading down to the Gihon Spring (at the bottom of the photo, in the triangular shadow beneath the double window), 8th-7th century BCE walls and a Jebusite wall (immediately below…
Jerusalem: City of David - expansion in the 9th-7th centuries BCE
This map shows the City of David, the City of Solomon (north/up the hill), and the expansion of the city to the west, which occurred between the 9th and 7th centuries BCE. It also shows the path of the Siloam Tunnel from the Spring of the Gihon…
Tags: City of David, David, Gihon Spring, Iron Age, Jerusalem, Kidron Valley, Map, Siloam Tunnel, Solomon
Jerusalem: City of David - map outline
This topographical map of Jerusalem shows the present Old City of Jerusalem in dark blue (the walls of which were built by the Ottoman Turks in the 16th century CE) and the Temple Mount in the southeastern corner of the Old City. The City of David is…
Tags: City of David, David, Iron Age, Jerusalem, Map, Ottoman Period, Solomon, Temple Mount
Jerusalem: City of David - the Stepped Structure
The 50-foot-high stepped structure on the right in this photo was probably built in the pre-Davidic Jebusite period (i.e., prior to the 10th century BCE). The square-cornered tower immediately beyond the stepped structure was part of the east wall of…
Tags: Bronze Age, City of David, Iron Age, Jebusite, Jerusalem
Jerusalem: Coin of 'Jonathan the King' (Alexander Jannaeus)
A typical coin struck by the Hasmonaean (Maccabean) king Alexander Jannaeus (ruled from 103-76 BCE). The symbol on the left is an anchor and the symbol on the right is a lily flower, which was a symbol for Jerusalem. The inscription around the anchor…
Tags: Alexander Jannaeus, Coin, Hasmonaeans, Hellenistic, High priest, Jerusalem
Jerusalem: Coin of Yehud
Money was invented in the Persian Period, and this particular coin bears the official name of the district in which the Jews lived: 'Yehud' (spelled out by the three letters to the right of the bird). The script is ancient Hebrew and the name is the…
Tags: Coin, Jerusalem, Persian Period, Yehud
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: Damascus Gate
A look from the north at the Damascus Gate, which is one of the northern gates into the Old City of Jerusalem. The gate that you see at the center of the photograph, as well as the walls to its right and left, are Ottoman in date, built by Suleiman…
Tags: Aelia Capitolina, Damascus Gate, Hadrian, Jerusalem, Ottoman, Roman
Jerusalem: Dome of the Rock
This photograph shows the Dome of the Rock (Arabic: "Kubbat as Sakhra") looking east. For centuries it was misnamed the Mosque of Omar. Omar did erect a simple wooden mosque at the site, but that was replaced by his successor Caliph Abd al-Malik, who…
Jerusalem: Dome of the Rock
This close-up of the Dome of the Rock shows the beauty and riches of its present decoration. It was commissioned by Abd al-Malik in 687 CE and completed in 691 CE. Suleiman the Magnificent carried out extensive restorations of the building in the…
Tags: Dome of the Rock, Jerusalem, Ottoman, Suleiman, Temple Mount, Umayyad
Jerusalem: Dome of the Rock
This photograph of the Dome of the Rock shows its octagonal structure and its golden dome. Beneath the dome, at the center of the structure is the bedrock called the Sakhra. For centuries it was misnamed the Mosque of Omar. Omar did erect a simple…
Jerusalem: Dome of the Rock - fish-eye view of the interior
This fish-eye photograph was taken inside the Dome of the Rock. Above you can see the intricate artistic styling that decorates the underside of the dome; below you can see the section of bedrock around which the building was built. Muslims believe…
Tags: Dome of the Rock, Jerusalem, Temple Mount
Jerusalem: Dome of the Rock - interior view
This is a photograph of the interior of the dome that sits on the Dome of the Rock. It was planned as a deliberate imitation of the vault over the Anastasis of the Holy Sepulchre; even the size of this hemisphere is within a few feet of the…
Jerusalem: Dome of the Rock - interior view
This photograph of the interior of the Dome of the Rock shows the symmetry of the architectural plan and the lavish geometric decoration adorning the walls and arches. Beneath the dome, at the center of the structure (just on the other side of the…
Tags: Crusades, Dome of the Rock, Jerusalem, Suleiman, Temple Mount
Jerusalem: Dome of the Rock and the Dome of the Spirits
This photograph, taken from the top of the Temple Mount platform, shows the Dome of the Rock in the background and the Dome of the Spirits in the foreground. The Dome of the Spirits is one of several lesser shrines that dot the top of the Temple…
Jerusalem: Eastern Terra Sigillata Juglet
This jug, which was found in the Jewish Quarter excavations in Jerusalem, is made of a type of pottery called Eastern Terra Sigillata 'A', or ESA. Its red, lustrous slip is one of the hallmarks of this kind of pottery and is partially the result of…
Tags: Eastern Sigillata 'A', Jerusalem, Pottery, Roman
Jerusalem: Ecce Homo Arch
This picture shows the Ecce Homo arch, which was the large central arch of Hadrian's east forum. It stands over the Via Dolorosa in the Old City of Jerusalem outside the Sisters of Zion Convent. Note how more modern buildings have been built around…
Tags: Aelia Capitolina, Hadrian, Jerusalem, Roman
Jerusalem: Eleazar Sukenik
After the Dead Sea Scrolls from Cave 1 were found by the Bedouin and taken to Bethlehem, they ended up in front of Eleazar Sukenik, a professor and archaeologist at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, who is the man in this picture. He was the first…
Tags: Dead Sea Scrolls, Essenes, Hellenistic, Qumran, Roman
Jerusalem: General Allenby Entering
This photograph shows the British General Edmund Allenby entering Jerusalem after the British took the city in World War I. He dismounted and walked into the city out of respect for it and in contradistinction to the German Emperor Wilhelm II's entry…
Tags: Allenby, British Mandate, Jerusalem, World War I
Jerusalem: Gihon Spring
This photograph shows the modern entrance steps that lead down to the Gihon spring, which was the water source for the city of Jerusalem in antiquity. When Sennacherib, King of Assyria, came to besiege Jerusalem in 701 BCE, the Judahite king Hezekiah…
Jerusalem: Gihon Spring
This photograph shows the modern entrance to the Gihon Spring (the steps leading down in the background), from the inside of the tunnel. This prolific spring provided water for the inhabitants of Jerusalem in antiquity even in the driest summer…
Jerusalem: Gold Ring Depicting the Holy Sepulchre
This photograph shows a gold ring that depicts the Aedicule of the Anastasis at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. It was found in a 6th-century building south of the Temple Mount and shows the Anastasis as a free-standing structure (which was how it…
Jerusalem: Great Isaiah Scroll
The Great Isaiah Scroll is one of the largest and best-preserved scrolls from the Dead Sea Scrolls and was probably produced around 100 BCE. The entire cache of Dead Sea Scrolls, which were initially found by some Bedouin in caves near the Dead Sea…
Tags: Dead Sea Scrolls, Essenes, Great Isaiah Scroll, Hellenistic, Isaiah, Qumran, Roman
Jerusalem: Hasmonaean wall
This photograph shows the walls of the western side of the Old City of Jerusalem. The prominent portion of this wall was built by the Ottomans in the 16th century; however, significant parts of the wall, especially the lower layers, are from the days…
Tags: Hasmonaeans, Hellenistic, Jerusalem, Ottoman Period
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: Inscription from the Tomb of Matthias
This inscription was discovered in a tomb in a northern suburb of modern Jerusalem. It is written in Aramaic, a common language of the Second Temple period, but the script, called Paleo-Hebrew, is like the one that was used hundreds of years earlier,…
Tags: Aramaic, Grave, Hellenistic, Inscription, Jerusalem, Tomb
Jerusalem: Ketef Hinnom Amulet
The photographed image (on the right) and line drawing (on the left) are of one of two Ketef Hinnom amulets. It is a small (1.0 x 3.75 inches), thin sheet of silver on which an inscription was lightly inscribed. It is important because they date to…
Tags: Amulet, Grave, Iron Age, Jerusalem, Ketef Hinnom, Priestly Blessing, Tomb
Jerusalem: Lithograph of the Ecce Homo Arch
This 19th century lithograph shows two of three arches (there would have been another small arch on the right side of the large arch), which is typical of arches built during Hadrian's time. Arches built during Herod's time were typically double…
Tags: Aelia Capitolina, Hadrian, Jerusalem, Roman
Jerusalem: map of the period between the Jebusites and Hezekiah
This map shows the borders of city of Jerusalem from the time of the Jebusites, the settlers of the city prior to the 10th century BCE, to the time of the Judaean king Hezekiah (686 BCE). The current Old City walls (built in the 16th century CE) and…
Tags: Bronze Age, Canaanite, City of David, Hezekiah, Iron Age, Jebusite, Jerusalem, Map, Nehemiah, Ottoman Period, Roman Period
Jerusalem: Metropolitan Samuel
The first of the Dead Sea Scrolls were found by Bedouin in 1947 in the Judaean Desert, who took them to an antiquities dealer in Bethlehem named Kando. Kando took four of the scrolls to St. Mark's Monastery in the Old City of Jerusalem, where he…
Tags: Dead Sea Scrolls, Essenes, Hellenistic, Qumran, Roman
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 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…
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: 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's renovations). The Holy of Holies would…
Tags: Hellenistic, Jerusalem, Roman, Second Temple, Temple, Temple Mount
Jerusalem: Mount of Olives
This view, looking east toward the Mt. of Olives, shows the modern Seven Arches Hotel on its summit and the Jewish cemetery that has been built on its western slope. At the base of the Mt. of Olives is the steep Kidron Valley, which cuts dramatically…
Tags: Jerusalem, Kidron Valley, Mt. of Olives, Temple Mount