Jump to content

Jerusalem Archaeological Park

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jerusalem Archaeological Park
LocationOld City of Jerusalem
Coordinates31°46′31″N 35°14′06″E / 31.77528°N 35.23500°E / 31.77528; 35.23500
History
CulturesAncient Israel
Roman Empire
Byzantine Empire
Umayyad Caliphate
Satellite ofCompany for the Reconstruction and Development of the Jewish Quarter
Site notes
Excavation datesVarious from 1860s-present
ArchaeologistsCharles Warren
Benjamin Mazar
Ronny Reich
Eilat Mazar
Websitehttps://travelrova.co.il/language/en/the-archeological-garden-davidson-center-2/

Jerusalem Archaeological Park, also known as Ophel Garden, is an archaeological park located in the Old City of Jerusalem. It is located south of the Western Wall Plaza and under the Dung Gate.[1] It was mamaged by the Ir David Foundation up until 2021, when it changed management to the Company for the Reconstruction and Development of the Jewish Quarter.[2]

Location

[edit]

The Park is located in the northern Ophel of Jerusalem at the foot of the Temple Mount's Southern Wall. It contains archaeological finds from the Bronze Age in 3,000 BC up to the Ottoman Period in the early 20th century. The area of the property is around 20 dunams, and is partly bounded by the Ophel Road. Its entrance is through an underpass on the access road to the Western Wall.

The nomenclature of its designation, Ophel, is a biblical term for an elevated part of the city where the administrative center was located. Its ascent to the Temple was from the City of David through the Ophel, which is mentioned in the Book of Chronicles.

Compound division

[edit]
Map of the archaeological park

The excavation team had to decide which layer to preserve on site, as there were multiple layers of history on location continuously for 3,000 years. In the end, it was decided that the park would be divided into 3 sections, each based on a single layer excavation, to varying depths. They are as follows:

  • Second Temple Compound - The area adjacent to the Western Wall was excavated up to the Second Temple period, around 2,000 years ago.
  • Byzantine Compound - The area adjacent to the eastern half of the Southern Wall mainly displayed artifacts from the Byzantine period, about 1,500 years ago.
  • Early Muslim Period Compound - The area adjacent to the western half of the Southern wall focuses on the Early Muslim Period, around 1,300 years ago.

History

[edit]

British archaeologist Charles Warren was the first to excavate the area in the 1860s. Ottoman authorities forbade him to dig on or near the Temple Mount, claiming that it would damage a site holy to Islam. To circumvent the rules, he travelled through tunnels and underground shafts. Using the more difficult method, he discovered many important findings. In the 1960s, when the Old City was under Jordanian control, Kathleen Kenyon was granted ability to excavate there, mostly near the City of David.[3]

In February 1968, Israeli archaeologists were granted permission to excavate in and around the Old City for the first time. Due to religious tension, it was decided that they would not excavate by the Temple Mount, and they instead searched around the Temple Mount.[4] Benjamin Mazar of the Archaeological Institute at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem was appointed chief archaeologist for the project. The land, owned by the Jerusalem Waqf, was leased for him to do his archaeological dig.[5] The excavation lasted for a decade, and became one of the largest archaeological projects in Israeli history. Archaeologists' publications called their research the "Excavations of the Temple Mount", even though the Mount itself was not excavated. The dig and many of its discoveries brought forth great interest in both the academic community, as well as among the general public.

The excavation ended in 1978, although another of smaller reports were published afterwards, along with many scholarly analyses of the published findings. In 1989, Mazar and his granddaughter Eilat published a report. Benjamin died in 1995 before his final report was issued,[6] and a team headed by his daughter published the rest of the report from the site. At the end of the 1990s, the site was declared a park by the Israeli government, and the Davidson Center Museum was opened, displaying artifacts discovered within its limits.

Second Temple Compound

[edit]

Previous excavations in the park showed that the area near the junction of the Southern Wall to the Western Wall is rich in finds from the Second Temple period. Due too this, it was decided to deepen excavations of the site for this eldest layer, dismantling the staging of the finds from later layers. The decision also cancelled the deepening of the excavation up to the First Temple period, or earlier periods.

Herodian Street

[edit]
Segment of the surviving street, damaged by the destruction of the Temple

One of the most striking finds located in the Second Temple compound of the park is a paved street adjacent to the Western Wall. The street served as part of the complex during its active period, from which pilgrims could access the western entryway of the Temple.[7] Along the street, adjacent to the wall, a series of shops were uncovered that most likely served as merchanting areas, perhaps for ritual items related to worship.[8] The continuation of the street was discovered in 2007 on the slopes of the City of David near the Pool of Siloam, where the road ends.

Parts of the street had already been discovered by Warren in the 19th century prior to the formal establishment of the park, and Mazar had further excavated other parts of it, but the rest of the street (about 75 meters) had been discovered by Ronny Reich. Around 750 meters long, he street is around eight meters in width, and is bounded on both sides by high curbs made out of stone. It was almost entirely covered by a pile of stones from the wall, which had been thrown from high above by the Romans during the Siege of Jerusalem in 70 AD. The majority of those stones were cleared and moved into another part of the garden.[9]

Reich and collegue Yaakov Billig additionally excavated 15 ancient coins from under the road, the latest coin having been minted under the reign of Pontius Pilate, indicating that the road had been built after he began his rule. The paving stones, which were unworn, imply that the road was not used long after its construction was completion. The road had initially been attributed to King Herod, but more contemporary scholars date it to Agrippa II.[10] Josephus states in the early days of Roman commissioner Albinus (AD 62-64), the streets began to be paved with white stone due to make up for the fact that the completion of the construction of the Temple Mount had caused a severe lack of employment in the region.[11]

Trumpeting Place inscription

[edit]

Discovered by Mazar in 1968, one of the stones from the landslide, where it fell to its location of discovery, was found near the southwestern corner of the Temple Mount. It was the cornerhead of one of the walls that had been thrown by the Romans during the Temple Mount's dismantling. The "Trumpeting Place" stone bears an inscription that states "To the house of takiah to..." before the text becomes illegible.[12] The house of takiah potentially refers to a place where the Israelites blew the shofar to announce the begin of holidays and the Sabbath, as explained by Josephus.[13]

The location of impact indicated that the location of the stones discovered by Mazar had been at the top of the corner connecting the Western and Southern Walls at a high point overlooking the city to ensure the sound was able to be heard by all residents of the area.[14]

Byzantine Compound

[edit]

The second compound of the park displays the remains from the period of occupation by the Byzantine Empire, whose inhabitents lived on top of the remnants of the ruins of the Jewish period. The neighborhood was dense with construction by the end of the 4th century in the Eastern part of the Ophel and included many churches, shopes, and homes. There are many mosaics among the surviving floors, some of which have geometric designs. It is theorized that the neighborhood was destroyed during the Persian invasion of 614, and it was not rebuilt afterwards.[15]

Entrance to the Umayyad Palce, 2006

Muslim Compound

[edit]

Umayyad Palaces

[edit]

The third and most recent layer, the early Muslim compound, is dated to the seventh century. Mazar uncovered four palaces from the reign of al-Walid I during the Umayyad Caliphate.[16] These cover the entire area of the garden and formed a ruling complex for royalty.[1] The garden displays the remains of only one of them, "#2," whose roof once was connected by a bridge to the al-Aqsa Mosque. Some of the walls were build using stones that had once beloned to the Temple Mount prior to the Roman destruction. The palace was sometimes as three stories high, and archaeologists theorize that the palaces were destruyed during an earthquake in the mid-eighth century.[17] It was not rebuilt following its destruction. It was subsequently abandoned, and the remains were used several centuries later in fortifications by the Fatimid Caliphate.

In the 16th century, the Ottoman Empire used the outer wall of the palace and mounted a city wall onto it. Because of that, the Ottoman wall only reaches the corner of the palace, and then turns at a 90-degree angle northwards and connections in an arbitrary manner to the Temple Mount in the middle of the Southern Wall. In order to continue the garden, the excavators broke a hole through the wall to have a contiguous garden.[17]

Synagogue

[edit]

West of the palace are the remains of a synagogue from the period of Muslim rule. The building was presumably two stories and included a courtyard in the building boundaries. The identification of the building as a syngogue is larlgely based on two red paintings of a menorah on the walls, as well as another painting of a menorah on stone, which was discovered in a room that had collapsed. Holes were discovered in all entrances to the rooms, which are hypothesized to have been small alcoves for mezuzot. Christians during the Byzantine period may have occupied the building, and Jews were allowed to return to the building when the Arab period began. The synagogue served for 60 years until the Umayyad Palace was built on it.[18]

Davidson Center

[edit]

Named for American-Jewish billionaire, Bill Davidson, the Davidson Center (est. 2001) features a museum within the garden of a chronological timeline of the city through various artifacts discovered on-site.[19] The building is a modern one, but is located inside of one of the administrative centers dated to the Umayyad period.[20]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "Jerusalem Archaeological Park". madainproject.com. Retrieved 2024-09-03.
  2. ^ Klein, Zvika (2023-03-09). "Davidson Center in Jerusalem Archaeological Park reopens with brand-new modernized experience". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 2024-09-03.
  3. ^ "Kathleen Kenyon". Somerville College Oxford. Retrieved 2022-09-02.
  4. ^ Mazar, Benjamin; Avi-Yonah, Michael (1968). THE EXCAVATIONS IN THE OLD CITY OF JERUSALEM: Preliminary Report of the First Season, 1968. Hebrew University of Jerusalem. p. 1.
  5. ^ Reiter, Yitzhak (May 2019). "סטטוס-קוו בתהליכי שינוי: מאבקי שליטה בהר הבית" (PDF). Jerusalem Institute (in Hebrew). Retrieved 2024-01-11.
  6. ^ Greenberg, Joel (1995-09-11). "Benjamin Mazar, 89, Israeli Biblical Archaeologist". New York Times. pp. D23. Retrieved 2024-01-12.
  7. ^ "The Davidson Center". The Friends of the Israel Antiquities Authority. Retrieved 2024-09-03.
  8. ^ "Herodian Street". madainproject.com. Retrieved 2024-01-12.
  9. ^ Shragai, Nadav (7 May 2019). "2,000 years, one path". Israel Hayom. Retrieved 2024-09-02.
  10. ^ Mazar, Eilat (2000). ha-Madrikh ha-shalem la-ḥafirot Har-ha-Bayit [The Complete Guide to Temple Mount Excavations] (in Hebrew). Jerusalem: Shoham. p. 30. ISBN 978-965-90299-0-7.
  11. ^ Josephus, Flavius (1993). "Chapter 20". מלחמת היהודים /יוסף בן מתתיהו (יוספוס פלביוס) ; תרגום מחדש על־ידי שמואל חגי [Wars of the Jews] (in Hebrew). Translated by Hagai, Shmuel. ר. מס. pp. 59–61.
  12. ^ Berger, Jonathan (2021). "Trumpeting-place, Temple mount, Jerusalem, 1st century CE | Sound, Space, and the Aesthetics of the Sublime". ccrma.stanford.edu. Retrieved 2024-09-02.
  13. ^ Josephus. "4:582". The Jewish War. Vol. IV. Translated by Whiston, William. Lexundria.
  14. ^ Mazar, Benjamin (July 1977). "Jerusalem during Herod's House in Light of Excavations South and Southwest of the Temple Mount" (PDF). Cathedra [he]: 29–41 – via ybz.org.il.
  15. ^ Mazar, Eilat (2007). "The Temple Mount Excavations in Jerusalem 1968-1978 Directed by Benjamin Mazar: Final Reports Volume Iii: The Byzantine Period". Qedem. 46: III–215. ISSN 0333-5844.
  16. ^ "Volume 135 Year 2023 Jerusalem, the Old City, the Archaeological Park". hadashot-esi.org.il. Retrieved 2024-09-03.
  17. ^ a b Mazar, Eilat (2003). "The Temple Mount Excavations in Jerusalem 1968-1978 Directed by Benjamin Mazar: Final Reports Volume Ii the Byzantine and Early Islamic Periods". Qedem. 43: III–254. ISSN 0333-5844.
  18. ^ Mazar, Eilat; Peleg, Orit (1999). "'House of Lamps' in the Temple Mount Excavations – The Earliest Synagogue Discovered to Date in Jerusalem" (PDF). Cathedra [he]: 55–74 – via ybz.org.il.
  19. ^ "Jerusalem Archaeological Garden". www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org. Retrieved 2024-09-02.
  20. ^ Kletter, Raz (2015). "Tourism and Sacred Sites: The Davidson Center, the Archaeological Park, and the corner of the Western Wall" (PDF). Emek Shaveh. p. 4. Retrieved 2 Sep 2024.