By Rebecca Harrison
JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Archaeologists have found an ancient quarry where
King Herod's workers may have chiselled the giant stones used to
rebuild the second Jewish temple in Jerusalem some 2,000 years ago.
The Israel Antiquities Authority said on Sunday experts believe stones
as long as 8 meters (24 feet) were extracted from the quarry and then
dragged by oxen to building sites in Jerusalem for major projects such
as the temple.
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"This construction most likely included the walls of the Temple Mount
and other monumental buildings," the authority said in a statement.
Some of the blocks discovered at the site resemble stones used in the
lower parts of the Temple Mount compound, the site of two biblical
Jewish temples, the statement said.
Jews believe King Solomon built the first Jerusalem temple 3,000 years
ago. In 1 BC, King Herod rebuilt and expanded a second temple on the
same site, which was razed by the Romans during the sacking of
Jerusalem in 70 AD.
The complex known as Temple Mount by Jews is also revered by Muslims as
al-Haram al-Sharif (Noble Sanctuary). It houses Islam's third-holiest
mosque, making it Jerusalem's most contested site and giving it a
pivotal role in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
The Israel Antiquities Authority said workers stumbled upon the quarry
during excavations as part of a plan to build a new school in an
outlying Jerusalem neighborhood known as Ramat Shlomo.
Archaeologists also discovered coins and shards of pottery which
confirm the quarry was operating during the Second Temple period, when
rulers of the city under King Herod embarked on major construction
projects.
King Herod looms large in biblical history. Appointed "king of the
Jews" by the Roman Senate in about 40 BC, Herod rebuilt and expanded
the Jewish Temple in Jerusalem.
The Gospel of Matthew says Herod ordered the killing of young male
children in Jesus's birthplace of Bethlehem -- known as the "Massacre
of the Innocents" -- for fear he would lose his throne to a new "king
of the Jews" whose birth had been related to him by the Magi.
Archaeologists also found a complete iron tool at the site which they
believe was used to chisel out the blocks from the quarry.
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