Report:
Herod's Temple quarry found
By
SEAN GAFFNEY, Associated Press Writer Mon Sep 24, 8:00 AM ET
JERUSALEM
- Israeli archaeologists said they have discovered a quarry that provided King
Herod with the stones he used to renovate the biblical Second Temple compound
offering rare insight into construction of the holiest site in Judaism.
The
source of the huge stones used 2,000 years ago to reconstruct the compound in
Jerusalem's Old City was discovered on the site of a proposed school in a Jerusalem
suburb.
Today,
the compound Herod renovated houses the most explosive religious site in the Holy
Land, known as the Temple Mount to Jews and the Noble Sanctuary to Muslims.
"This
is the first time stones which were used to build the Temple Mount walls were
found," said Yuval Baruch, an archaeologist with the Israeli Antiquities
Authority involved in the dig. Quarries mined for the massive stones, each weighing
more than 20 tons, eluded researchers until now, he said Sunday.
Baruch
said coins and pottery found in the quarry confirm the stone was used during the
period of Herod's expansion of the Temple Mount in 19 B.C.
But
researchers said the strongest piece of evidence was found wedged into one of
the massive cuts in the white limestone an iron stake used to split the
stone. The tool was apparently improperly used, accidentally lodged in the stone
and forgotten.
"It
stayed here for 2,000 years for us to find because a worker didn't know what to
do with it," said archaeologist Ehud Nesher, also of the Antiquities Authority.
Nesher
said the large outlines of the stone cuts indicated the site was a massive public
project worked by hundreds of slaves. "Nothing private could have done this,"
Nesher said. "This is Herod's, this is a sign of him."
Herod
was the Jewish proxy ruler of the Holy Land under imperial Roman occupation from
37 B.C. Herod's most famous construction project was the renovation of the Temple,
replacing a smaller structure that itself replaced the First Temple, destroyed
by the Babylonians in 586 B.C.
Stephen
Pfann, president of the University of The Holy Land and an expert in the Second
Temple period, said the discovery was encouraging.
"It
would be very difficult to find any other buildings in any other period that would
warrant stones of that size," said Pfann, who was not involved in the dig.
He said further testing of the rock is necessary to confirm the findings.
The
Second Temple was leveled by Roman conquerors in A.D. 70. The Western Wall, the
holiest prayer site for Jews, is the best known surviving remnant.
Atop
the adjacent compound, where Jews believe the Temple once stood, now stand two
of the holiest sites in Islam, the al-Aqsa Mosque and the gold-capped Dome of
the Rock.
The
site is at the heart of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, with both sides claiming
the area. Israel captured Jerusalem's Old City from Jordan during the 1967 Mideast
war. While retaining security responsibility for the site, Israel allows Muslims
to handle day-to-day responsibilities there.
(This
version corrects the previous version by delete "nearly" 2000 years
old.)