Bezetha

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Bezetha (

Agrippa I, had been enclosed by the newer third wall.[2] In Josephus' time, the hill on which Bezetha was built could be distinguished by its elevation in relation to the tower of Antonia
, which was built beyond the intermediate valley below (partly dug on purpose), between Bezetha and the north side of the Temple Mount. Topographical maps still show the contours in elevation.

American missionary and explorer, James Turner Barclay, in his seminal work The City of the Great King, calls Zedekiah's Cave by the hill on which it is located, "Mount Bezetha".[3] The Holyland Model of Jerusalem depicts Bezetha as one of five major districts of the first century CE Jerusalem.[4]

History

During the outbreak of the

Cestius Gallus set fire to this sparsely inhabited part of the city.[5]

Today, the area of Bezetha comprises part of the Muslim Quarter in Jerusalem's Old City.

See also

References

  1. ^ Josephus, De Bello Judaico (Wars of the Jews) v.iv.§ 2
  2. ^ Josephus, De Bello Judaico (Wars of the Jews) v.iv.§ 2
  3. ^ Barclay, J.T., The City of the Great King, or Jerusalem as It Was, and It Is, and as It Is To Be. Philadelphia 1857 (Reprint New York 1977), p. 458
  4. ^ "Holyland Model of Jerusalem: Bezetha". Madain Project. Retrieved 26 July 2022.
  5. ^ Josephus, The Jewish War 2.19.4. (2.527).