Tombs of the Kings (Jerusalem)

Coordinates: 31°47′18.67″N 35°13′45.08″E / 31.7885194°N 35.2291889°E / 31.7885194; 35.2291889
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Tombs of the Kings
Tombs of the Kings
Map
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LocationEast Jerusalem
Coordinates31°47′18.67″N 35°13′45.08″E / 31.7885194°N 35.2291889°E / 31.7885194; 35.2291889
TypeCatacombs
Plan of the Tomb of the Kings 1872

The Tombs of the Kings (

Old City walls in the Sheikh Jarrah
neighborhood (Hebrew: שכונת שייח ג'ראח‎; Arabic: حي الشيخ جرّاح)

The grandeur of the site led to the belief that the tombs had once been the burial place of the kings of Judah, hence the name Tombs of the Kings; but the tombs are now associated with Queen Helena of

The site is located east of the intersection of Nablus Road and Saladin Street. The gate of the property is marked "Tombeau des Rois", French for "Tomb of the Kings."

Public access

Tomb of the Kings gate

On May 15, 2019, Hekdesh, a Jewish organisation (Association Hekdesh du Tombeau des rois), hired Gilles-William Goldnadel, a French lawyer, and took the French government to court. Goldnadel tried to prove that the site, after being purchased in 1878 by a French-Jewish woman, Berthe Amélie Bertrand, or by the brothers Péreire, French-Jewish bankers, was left to the French state on condition that the Jews would preserve the right to visit the site (see below at History).[4][5] Goldnadel also hopes to reclaim the sarcophagus of queen Helena of Adiabene, presently housed at the Louvre.[6]

On June 27, 2019, the French consulate in Jerusalem reopened the site to visitors purchasing tickets in advance.[4]

General layout

From street level a hewn staircase, measuring 9 metres (30 ft) in width and having a length of 30 metres (98 ft), descends into a carved courtyard.

triglyphs, with a cluster of grapes in the center and wreaths of acanthus leaves next to it.[7] A leaf plexus extends along the architrave.[7]

The inner tomb is made-up of a complex labyrinth consisting of eight chambers, with a total of 48 burial niches, some of which formerly contained decorated

arcosolia in the Roman fashion.[9]

History

Detail from Richard Pococke's 1745 A Plan of Jerusalem and the Adjacent Country, showing both names for the site

Queen Helena of Adiabene

The tomb is mentioned by the Roman-Jewish historian

City of David. Helena's son Monobaz II had her remains and those of his brother buried "three stadia from Jerusalem." Medieval Europeans mistakenly identified the tomb as belonging to the kings of Judah.[10]

Discovery and exploration

"Tombs of the Kings" (top center) shown in the 1841 Aldrich and Symonds map of Jerusalem

In 1847, the Turkish governor ordered a search for treasures in the tomb but none were found. In 1863, the French archaeologist Félicien de Saulcy was given permission to excavate the tomb. The German architect Conrad Schick drew up a map of the site. De Saulcy found sarcophagi, one of which was bearing the Hebrew inscription "Queen Tzaddah". He believed this was the sarcophagus of the wife of Zedekiah, the last king of Judah.[10]

After human bones were found, the Jewish community appealed to Sir Moses Montefiore to persuade the Ottomans to halt the excavations. De Saulcy smuggled out some of his findings, which are now at the Louvre in Paris.[10]

Purchase and property

In 1864, the French-Jewish banker

children of Israel".[11]. It's a part of the Domaine national français
.

Traditions

The Tomb of the Kings was described by the Greek geographer Pausanias as the second most beautiful tomb in the world (after the tomb of Mausolus, one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World) who visited in Jerusalem. He declares that he "knows many wonderful tombs" and mentions two of them, one of which is in Halicarnassus and the other "in [the Land of] the Hebrews" (Greek: ἐν τῇ Ἑβραίων) and has a sophisticated opening mechanism aimed at a certain day of the year and for a certain time: "The Hebrews have a tomb, that of Helena, a local woman, in the city of Jerusalem (Greek:πόλει Σολύμοις), which the Roman emperor razed to the ground. There is a contrivance in the tomb whereby the door, which like the entire tomb is made of stone, does not open until the year brings back the same day and the same hour. Then the mechanism, unaided, opens the door, which, after a short interval, closes itself again. It happens at the same time, but if you try at any other time to open the door, you will not be able to do so; Power will not open it, but will only break it."[12]

A small stone house was built on top of the tomb by Irhimeh clan (

Arabic: ارحيمه), a Jerusalemite family.[13]

Archaeological findings

Tombs of the Kings, 1842
Tombs of the Kings in Jerusalem (click to enlarge)

From the house there is a 9 meter wide staircase (23 steps) that was originally paved and leads to a forecourt. The rain water is collected in baths, which are carved in the steps, and carried via a channel system to the water wells. At the bottom of the stairs there are ancient ritual baths (mikva’ot) as well as a stone wall to the left with a gate. This gate leads to a courtyard that was cut from the rock at the same date. The dimensions of this courtyard are roughly 27 meters long from north to south and 25 meters wide from west to east.

The entrance to the tombs is via this courtyard. The tombs are entered via a rock-cut arch (facade) in the western side. The 28-meter facade was originally crowned with three pyramids, which no longer exist,[14] and decorated with reliefs of grapes, plexus leaves, acorns and fruit, reflecting the Greek architectural style. The architrave was originally supported by two pillars, fragments of which were found in the excavations.

The tombs are arranged on two levels around a central chamber, with four rooms upstairs and three rooms downstairs. The central chamber itself is entered from the courtyard via an antechamber that goes down into a dimly lit maze of chambers. The access from the antechamber to the exterior courtyard could be sealed closed by rolling a round stone across it, and the stone still remains in-situ. In the first century CE, a "secret mechanism" operated by water pressure moved the stone.

arcosolia
, resting places made of a bench with an arch over it. Some of the arcosolia have triangular niches where oil lamps were placed to give light during the burial process.

The two most common types of tombs in the first century CE are found in this tomb complex. Shaft tombs were long narrow shafts in which the deceased were placed and closed with a stone slab which probably had the name of the occupant inscribed on it. Channels in the center of the shafts were probably carved to drain the water that seeped through the rock.

The tombs are now empty, but previously housed a number of

Louis Felicien de Saulcy
, who took them back to France. They are exhibited at the Louvre.

Although no kings are known to have been buried here, one of the

Louvre Museum in Paris. The decorative architecture of the tomb complex is Seleucid
, which would fit with this identification.

  • Sarcophagus of Helena of Adiabene
    Sarcophagus of Helena of Adiabene
  • Sarcophagus from the Tombs of the Kings
    Sarcophagus from the Tombs of the Kings
  • The Sarcophagus in the Louvre
    The Sarcophagus in the Louvre

See also

External links

References

  1. ^ The term applied for this site in Josephus, The Jewish War (5.4.2.). Cf. ibid. Antiquities (20.4.3.).
  2. ^ "Ancient Jerusalem's Funerary Customs and Tombs: Part Three, L. Y. Rahmani, The Biblical Archaeologist, Vol. 45, No. 1 (Winter, 1982), pp. 43–53
  3. ^ Dospěl, Marek. "New insights into the Tomb of the Kings". BAR Jan 2022. Biblical Archeology. Retrieved 5 January 2022.
  4. ^ a b French consulate opens disputed Second Temple site in East Jerusalem, Nir Hasson for Haaretz, 28 June 2019
  5. ^ À Jérusalem, les juifs ultra-orthodoxes réclament l'accès au Tombeau des rois, Le Figaro and Agence France Presse, 27 January 2019, accessed 15 May 2020
  6. ^ Des rabbins israéliens veulent chasser la France du Tombeau des rois, Thierry Oberlé for Le Figaro, 16 May 2019
  7. ^
    OCLC 745203905
    .
  8. )
  9. .
  10. ^ a b c d e In Memoriam: The Tomb of the Kings, Ron Peled for Ynetnews, 8 June 2006
  11. Arab World Institute
    , Paris, February 2014. Posted by l'Œuvre d'Orient, accessed 15 May 2020.
  12. ^ Pausanias Graeciae Descriptio, ed. Teubner, VIII, 16:4–5
  13. . בלובר שבפריס מוצגים ארונות קבורה, ממצאים ושרידים שנמצאו בקברי המלכים – מערת הקברים הידועה בירושלים המזרחית.
  14. Monobazus sent her bones, as well as those of Izates, his brother, to Jerusalem, and gave order that they should be buried at the pyramids (Greek: Πυραμίσιν) which their mother had erected; they were three in number, and distant no more than three stadia
    from the city Jerusalem."
  15. ^ cf. Pausanias, Description of Greece (on Arcadia, 8.16.4–5), where the author writes: "[8.16.4] I know many wonderful tombs, and will mention two of them, the one at Halicarnassus (i.e. Mausoleum at Halicarnassus) and one in the land of the Hebrews. The one at Halicarnassus was made for Mausolus, king of the city, and it is of such vast size, and so notable for all its ornament, that the Romans in their great admiration of it call remarkable tombs in their country Mausolea (i.e. mausoleum). [8.16.5] The Hebrews have a tomb, that of Helena, a native woman, in the city of Jerusalem, which the Roman Emperor razed to the ground. There is a contrivance in the tomb whereby the door, which like the entire tomb is made of stone, does not open until the year brings back the same day and the same hour. Then the mechanism, unaided, opens the door, which, after a short interval, shuts itself again. This happens at that time, but should you at any other try to open the door you cannot do so; force will not open it, but only break it down."
  16. ^ Corpus Inscriptionum Semiticarum, Volume 2, plate 156, p. 179; cf. Ecclesiastical History 2:12