Jerusalem's Temple Mount


Book Description

According to the Hebrew Bible, King Solomon built a Temple to the Lord in Jerusalem on a threshing floor that his father, King David, purchased from Araunah the Jebusite for 50 shekels of silver. "No other building of the ancient world," claims the Anchor Bible Dictionary, "either while it stood in Jerusalem or in the millennia since its final destruction has been the focus of so much attention throughout the ages." This stunning book, with its 160 illustrations, is a history of the Temple or Temples in Jerusalem from Solomon's time to the present. The book reads like an archaeological excavation, digging deeper and deeper at one site. Starting with a discussion of the Palestinian denial of a Jewish Temple, the book proceeds to explore the Islamic Dome of the Rock, the little-known Roman Temple of Jupiter, Herod's massive Temple Mount, the Temple built by the exiles returning from Babylon, and finally Solomon's Temple. With a lively and informative text to accompany the pictures, Jerusalem's Temple Mount is replete with archaeology, history, legends (Jewish, Christian, and Muslim), inscriptions, biblical interpretations, and forgeries.




Secrets of Jerusalem's Temple Mount


Book Description

Published by the Biblical Archaeology Society, this edition brings the best-selling "Secrets" book up to date with the latest research on the Temple Mount. Still concise, still affordable, it now contains new chapters on why we can rely on the description in Middot to describe the structure of Herod's Temple and a look at how model making can help us to understand what Solomon's Temple looked like. A unique feature of this new book is a tour of the Temple Mount guided by King Herod the Great. - Publisher.




Jewish Fundamentalism and the Temple Mount


Book Description

The Temple Mount, located in Jerusalem, is the most sacred site in Judaism and the third-most sacred site in Islam, after Mecca and Medina in Saudi Arabia. The sacred nature of the site for both religions has made it one of the focal points of the Arab-Israeli conflict. Jewish Fundamentalism and the Temple Mount is an original and provocative study of the theological roots and historical circumstances that have given rise to the movement of the Temple Builders. Motti Inbari points to the Six Day War in 1967 as the watershed event: the Israeli victory in the war resurrected and intensified Temple-oriented messianic beliefs. Initially confined to relatively limited circles, more recent "land for peace" negotiations between Israel and its Arab neighbors have created theological shock waves, enabling some of the ideas of Temple Mount activists to gain wider public acceptance. Inbari also examines cooperation between Third Temple groups in Israel and fundamentalist Christian circles in the United States, and explains how such cooperation is possible and in what ways it is manifested.




Jerusalem


Book Description

The first modern guide to theTemple Mount for visitors of all religions. The authoritative text of JERUSALEM: THE TEMPLE MOUNT contains priceless information and is richly documented with detailed maps, plans and stunningly evocative reconstructive illustrations.,




Islam, Jews and the Temple Mount


Book Description

This study presents the first comprehensive survey of the abundant early Islamic sources that recognize the historical Jewish bond to the Temple Mount (Masjid al-Aqsa) and Jerusalem. Analyzing these sources in light of the views of contemporary Muslim religious scholars, thinkers and writers, who – in the context of the Arab-Israeli conflict – deny any Jewish ties to the Temple Mount and promote the argument that no Jewish Temple ever stood on the Temple Mount. The book describes how this process of denying Jewish ties to the site has become the cultural rationale for UNESCO decisions in recent years regarding holy sites in Jerusalem, Bethlehem and Hebron, which use Muslim Arabic terminology and overlook the Jewish (and Christian) history and sanctification of these sites. Denying the Jewish ties to the Temple Mount for political purposes inadvertently undermines the legitimacy of Islam’s sanctification of Al-Aqsa and the Dome of the Rock as well as the credibility of the most important sources in Arabic, which constitute the classics of Islam and provide the foundation for its culture and identity. Identifying and presenting the Jewish sources in the Bible, Babylonian Talmud and exegesis on which these Islamic traditions are based, this volume is a key resource for readers interested in Islam, Judaism, religion and political science and history in the Middle East.




The Temple Mount


Book Description




God's Mountain


Book Description

"Eliav refutes the popular tradition that situates the Temple Mount as a unique sacred space from the earliest days of the history of Israel and the Jewish people - a sequential development model that begins in the tenth century BCE with Solomon's construction of the First Temple. Instead, he asserts that the Temple Mount emerged as a sacred space in Jewish and early Christian consciousness hundreds of years later, toward the close of the Second Temple era in the first century CE. Eliav pinpoints three defining moments in the Temple Mount's physical history: King Herod's dramatic enlargement of the mountain at the end of the first century BCE, the temple's destruction by the Roman emperor Titus in 70 CE, and Hadrian's actions in Jerusalem sixty years later.".




The Temple Revealed


Book Description

The Temple Revealed presents a thorough investigation of the evidence to determine the exact former location of the Jewish temple destroyed in AD 70. By using biblical evidences, historic testimony, modern archaeological findings, logical deduction, and some profound reasoning, the former location of the temple can now be determined with certainty.




The Jerusalem Temple Mount Myth


Book Description

The Jerusalem Temple Mount Myth amasses over 400 literary descriptions from several versions of the Bible, history, the Talmud, other Jewish sources, pseudepigrapha, and the Apocrypha to demonstrate the First and Second Jewish temples stood in the City of David, above the Gihon Spring. The alleged temple mount (the Haram-esh Sharif) is compared with Josephus's description of the Roman camp ("Antonia"--the actual identity of the Haram esh-Sharif), as well as his description of the temple, exposing numerous discrepancies. The archaeology of the City of David is also included, and excavations are related to the literary evidence, where possible. A list of the 400 descriptions is included at the end. Two problems for the traditional location include descriptions of a spring within the temple precincts (the Gihon Spring) and its being built within the boundaries of the City of David, which was confined to the lower half of the southeastern hill in the Israelite period prior to Hezekiah, and in the Persian and Greek periods--even in the Roman period, according to Josephus (it being like a "moon when she is horned"--the shape of the southeastern hill). Traditionalists claim the southeastern hill was extended northward to include the temple and an acropolis, but 3 Kings 2: 35 (Septuagint version) describes Solomon building the temple and his palace before breaching the wall of the City of David to install the daughter of Pharoah in her own house. There is no description of an extension north of the southeastern hill. The northern wall was still in place in the sieges of Pompey and Herod. The extension is assumed with Herod's expansion of the Baris to become Antonia. Other scriptures describe the temple within the city, such as Solomon's temple dedication enjoining the people to pray toward the city, Isaiah 29, which speak of sacrifices being offered in Ariel, the city where David dwelt, or Lamentations describing the stones at the top of all the city streets after the Babylonian destruction. The most crucial descriptions of all, however, are the extant references to Mount Zion (known to have been on the southeastern hill) as the location of the temple. Josephus described the temple hill as "descending toward the east parts of the city," while there has never been a temple on the east parts of the Haram esh-Sharif. Josephus also described the city (on the western hill) as lying "near to the temple in the manner of a theater," describing the curvature of the two hills lying in concert with each other in the lower Tyropoeon Valley, not the upper Tyropoeon Valley where the Haram stands. He also said there was a deep valley on the temple's south side, which can be identified as the confluence of the Lower Tyropoeon, Hinnom, and Kidron Valleys, with no such valley south of the Haram. Josephus also described the east wall of both Solomon's and Herod's temples as lying within the valley, while the Haram's east wall is at the top of the valley. He said that Agrippa II completed the temple, but the Haram is unfinished at its northern corner. He said the temple was built from the ground up to equal a four-furlong square, while the Haram is a 36-acre trapezoid whose northern corner is rock scarp and couldn't have been built as described. Trapezoids do not qualify as the sacred geometry required for building temples. A trapezoid, is, however, a commonplace shape for a Roman camp. The Haram also fits within the average size of a Roman camp (50 acres), while the temple complex described by Josephus was only nine acres--typical of other Roman-Greco temple complexes of the period. Josephus's descriptions of the temple's height (450 feet), its shape (square), and the length of its porticoes (600 feet), does not match with the Haram's dimensions. He also said its south wall reached just to the valley (the lower Tyropeon), while the Haram's southern wall crosses over the Tyropoeon and ends on the western hill.