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Stop mourning Herod’s temple Jul 15, 2013, 12:00 AM Edit; Facebook; Twitter; email; Print; 7; Please note that the posts on The Blogs are contributed by third parties.
The network of tunnels beneath the Temple Mount has been the subject of much mystery and controversy, but the cisterns – some of which are linked to biblical sources – are just as fascinating.
Standing in the Davidson Archaeological Park near the Western Wall today, visitors are struck by the Herodian road, the shops that sold sacrifices to pilgrims on their way to the Temple Mount, and ...
Known both as the Finger of Og and as Herod’s Pillar, the 12.15-meter-long and approximately 1.75-m -wide column is thought to have been quarried in order to decorate the Second Temple as part ...
MKs tour site of PA destruction: 'They're stealing our history' Samaria Council Head Yossi Dagan following the PA's construction of a road over 1st Temple remains: 'Permanent force must guard the ...
A film about the destruction of the Second Temple premiered in 2021. Oct. 7 gives it new resonance. Copied to clipboard. For Web: Copy HTML. Copied to clipboard. For Print: Copy Plain Text.
They also found the remains of nearly 40 cooking pots, some still intact, in a plastered water cistern that had been in use until the destruction of the Second Temple by Rome in the first century CE.