Birket Israel

Birket Israel
بئر إسرائيل
Birket Israel
Birket Israel is located in Jerusalem
Birket Israel
Birket Israel
Shown within Jerusalem
Alternative namePool of Israel, Birket Israil, Birket Isra'in
LocationOld City of Jerusalem
Coordinates31°46′49.22″N 35°14′10.35″E / 31.7803389°N 35.2362083°E / 31.7803389; 35.2362083
TypePublic cistern
Length109.7 m (360 ft)
Width38.4 m (126 ft)
Area0.31 ha (0.77 acres)
Height26 m (85 ft)
History
BuilderEzekiel or Hezekiah (According to Muslim tradition)
MaterialStone, Roman concrete, cement
FoundedLate Roman or Umayyad period
Abandoned1934
Site notes
Public accessYes

Birket Israel (trans. Pool of Israel) also Birket Israil or Birket Isra'in,[1] abbreviated from Birket Beni Israìl (trans. Pool of the Children of Israel) was a public cistern located on the north-eastern corner of the Temple Mount, in Jerusalem. The structure is believed to have been built either in the Late Roman or the Umayyad period[2] for use as a water reservoir and also to protect the northern wall of the Temple Mount. Hackett attests that Arab locals knew it by this name in 1857.[3]

By the mid-19th century it had gone out of use as a reservoir; being partly filled with rubbish and reused as a vegetable garden. In 1934 it was filled in and is now known as el-Ghazali Square. It is currently in mixed use for shops, as a car park, and as a transshipment point for refuse.

  1. ^ Koenen, Klaus. (2004) Bethel: Geschichte, Kult and Theologie
  2. ^ Gibson, Shimon (2011). "The Excavations at the Bethesda Pool in Jerusalem: Preliminary Report on a Project of Stratigraphic and Structural Analysis (1999-2009)". Proche-Orient Chrétien (special issue). Missionaries of Africa: 17-45 (18, cont. of note 1). Retrieved 28 May 2024 – via academia.edu.
  3. ^ Hackett (1857), p. 186