Herod the Great; enlarged by a Roman Procurators (Pontius Pilate?)
Material
Limestone
Founded
20 BCE-20 CE; enlarged between 30-60 CE
Site notes
Condition
preserved
Wilson's Arch (Hebrew: קשת וילסון, romanized: Keshet Vilson) is the modern name for an ancient stone arch in Jerusalem, the first in a row of arches that supported a large bridge connecting the HerodianTemple Mount with the Upper City on the opposite Western Hill. The Arch springs from the Western Wall and is still visible underneath later buildings set against the Wall. The name Wilson's Arch is also used to denote the hall that it partially covers, which is currently used as a synagogue. This hall opens towards the Western Wall Plaza at the Plaza's northeast corner, so that it appears on the left of the prayer section of the Western Wall to visitors facing the Wall.
The Arch once spanned 42 feet (13 m), supporting a bridge that carried both a street and an aqueduct. Excavations between 2015 and 2019 collected organic material in the mortar used during various stages of construction. Radiocarbon dating indicated that the initial bridge to the Temple Mount was completed between 20 BCE and 20 CE, and a doubling in width occurred between 30 CE and 60 CE.[1] The ground level during the Second Temple period was lower by some 3 meters than its height during the period of the Early Arab conquest.[2] Today the original stones of the arch lie within the fillings at a depth of about 8 meters below the contemporary paved level.[2] This arch once served as a bridge over a stone-paved street that passed beneath it, similar to Robinson's Arch. The older bridge, no longer extant, is thought to have allowed access to a gate that was level with the surface of the Temple Mount during the late Second Temple period.[2]
Name
In the description of the survey he made at the site, Charles Wilson wrote about "[t]he arch, which Sir Henry James has called after my name".[3]
The bridge it was part of is sometimes called the "royal bridge", sometimes capitalised,[4][5] based on Josephus' description of the Herodian Temple.[6]
It connects to the Western Wall to the east and can be accessed by men from the Western Wall Plaza and by women from inside adjacent buildings.
Purpose
Wilson's Arch was built as part of a bridge described by Josephus that connected the Temple Mount to the Upper City on the Western Hill; it carried a road as well as the last section of an aqueduct bringing water from Solomon's Pools near Bethlehem to the Temple Mount.[8]
Date
The remains of the first arch of the bridge, known as Wilson's Arch, are distinct from those of the rest of the bridge and possible later additions to it.
Absolute date
Excavations between 2015 and 2019 collected organic material in the mortar used during various stages of construction.
CE, and a doubling in width occurred between 30 CE and 60 CE.[1] The 2020 study concluded that Wilson's Arch was initiated by Herod the Great, and enlarged during the Roman Procurators, such as Pontius Pilate, in a range of 70 years.[1]
Structural correlations and relative date
Herodian and/or Late Roman
Stinespring argued already in the 1960s that the Arch is still preserved in his original Herodian form, based on the way it is bonded to the retaining wall of the Temple Mount, which indicates that it is "a definitive part of the ancient Temple structure."[8]
The fact that a Roman theater-like structure, which was discovered right underneath the arch, was never finished due to the outbreak of the
The oldest of the pools beneath the arch was dated to 1305–1340 CE.[1]
Alternative theory: Umayyad date
There are scholars who have favored dating the Arch's construction to the
Umayyad period (651–750), basing their conclusions on what they see as evidence from the period of excavation after the Six-Day War, when Israel's Ministry of Religious Affairs began to excavate the area of the Western Wall still unexposed, and dig a tunnel beneath the existing structures above. During much of the time of these excavations, which went on between 1968–82 and were restarted in 1985, the Israel Antiquities Authority's (IAA) District Archeologist for Jerusalem was Dan Bahat, who became the archaeologist of the site after resigning from the IAA. In his book, Jerusalem Down Under: Tunneling Along Herod's Temple Mount Wall, he writes that the evidence found was enough to convince him that despite earlier beliefs that the Arch was built during Herod's time, the later dating is correct.[citation needed
]
It is believed by those who date the current arch to the later period, that it was a replacement for an earlier arch erected during the Second Temple period, and that the Umayyads didn't just restore the retaining walls surrounding the Mount, but also rebuilt the arches of the "Great Bridge".[citation needed]
Dimensions
The Arch was measured by Wilson, who noted that its crown reaches a height of 72 feet 9 inches (22.17 m) above bedrock, its span being of 42 feet (13 m).[9] Only a 20-foot (6.1 m) portion of the Arch is visible today.[citation needed]
A square shaft cut down under the arch allows sighting of the wall's original massive foundations, "with fourteen courses of dressed stone below the present ground level."[10][dubious – discuss]
Suk Bab es-Sinsleh to Bab es-Sinsleh" (sic, es-Silsileh).[11][7] The arch was scientifically documented for the first time in 1865 by explorer and surveyor Charles Wilson, for whom it was named.[7] Wilson had joined the Ordnance Survey of Jerusalem in 1864, continuing to participate in the city surveying project that was established to improve the city's water system.[12] Not long after Wilson, Charles Warren excavated under the arch by digging two trial shafts, one along the western pier all the way down to bedrock. He published his discoveries in 1876.[13]
In 1968, only a few months after the Six-Day War, Israel began excavations to uncover the portion of the Western Wall that was not exposed.[14] As the excavations continued, the opening to the arch was uncovered, and rubble began to be removed.[14] The entire length of the Western Wall was only cleared in 1985, 17 years later.[14]
The space under the arch was fitted out after
Mamluk-Ottoman water reservoir, called by Warren 'Pool Al Burak'.[13] The presence of the synagogue restricted further excavation under Wilson's Arch to a large degree, with limited digs being carried out in 2006 and 2011,[13] followed by a substantial dig between 2015 and 2018 over a 200 m³[dubious – discuss] total area.[7] This large project focused on dating the arch and, after exposing a theatre-like structure directly beneath it, the date and function of this unexpected finding.[7]
Associated structures
Herodian "Western Stone"
The
the largest building blocks in the world. The stone is 13.6 meters (45 feet) long, 4.5 meters (15 feet) wide and has an estimated height of 3.5 meters (11 feet). It is considered to be one of the heaviest objects ever lifted by human beings without powered machines. It is the largest building stone found in Israel and second in the world. It is only partially intact, the rest was destroyed in 70 CE during the Roman siege of Jerusalem.[15]
Roman theater-like structure
A small Roman theater-like structure was discovered directly below the Arch. The theater was never finished, this being possibly the result of the Bar Kokhba Revolt (132–135) or the death of Emperor Hadrian (r. 117–138).[1]
Mamluk-Ottoman "Al-Buraq" Pool
The modern synagogue under the arch covers the
Mamluk-Ottoman cistern known in the time of Wilson and Warren as the 'Pool Al Burak'.[13][9]
Over the prayer hall area partially covered by the Arch is the large building known as the Makhkama or Tankiziyya, that includes a porch looking over the Temple Mount.[citation needed] Former Chief Rabbi Shlomo Goren used to use that porch to recite special "Kinot" prayers on the night of Tisha B'Av.[16]
Modern synagogue
After the 1967 Six-Day War, the space under the arch was transformed into a synagogue.[13]
In 2005, the
Western Wall Heritage Foundation initiated a major renovation effort under Rabbi Rabinovich, then-rabbi of the wall ("Rabbi of the Kotel", as the title is usually referenced, using the Hebrew word for the Wall).[17] Israeli workers renovated and restored the area for three years, strengthening the arch in preparation for access for visitors and use for prayer.[18] Scaffolding remained in place for over a year to allow workers to remove cement that had been applied as patches over the stone.[18] The restoration included additions to the men's section included a Torah ark that can house over one hundred Torah scrolls, in addition to new bookshelves, a library, and heating for the winter and air conditioning for the summer.[18] There is also a new room built for the scribes who maintain and preserve the Torah scrolls used at the Wall.[18]