Mount Zion 2004 Overview
The Mount Zion Expedition, Israel
Abstract
In the 1970s there was a tremendous boost of archaeological activity
in Jerusalem, with important work undertaken in various parts of the Old
City, notably in the immediate vicinity of the Temple Mount, in the Jewish
Quarter, in the City of David and on Mount Zion. The Mount Zion expedition,
directed by Magen Broshi, included work at the following locations (made
between 1970 and 1981): the Armenian Garden, Christ Church, along the
western and southern Old City walls, in the courtyard of the Armenian
St Saviours ("House of Caiaphas"), at Zion Gate and at the Ayyubid
Gate situated at the southern end of the Cardo (Area E).
Mount Zion comprises the south-western hill of Jerusalem, i.e. the general
area of the present-day Armenian Quarter in the Old City and the area
of the traditional Tomb of David which is located outside the walls to
the south. In the Iron Age (eighth to sixth centuries BC) the hill was
first incorporated into the city and a new fortification wall was erected
along its edges; prior to this time the settled area was situated exclusively
in the area of the "City of David". During the present excavations
on Mount Zion the following Iron Age remains were discovered: dwellings
with pottery assemblages, segments of possible fortifications, an industrial
building (perhaps a tannery), stone quarries and tombs. The numerous finds
include incised potsherds, human and animal figurines and "lmlk"
stamped handles and an array of pottery.
In the Late Hellenistic period (late second century BC), Mount Zion
was incorporated into the Hasmonean city by the construction of the "First
Wall". This area, which is referred to by the first-century historian
Josephus Flavius as the "Upper City", was substantially rebuilt
at the time of Herod the Great. The finds from the Early Roman period
from the Mount Zion excavations include: dwellings with well preserved
w all paintings of a quality similar to those known from Pompeii, the
foundations of the palace of Herod the Great (later the Praetorium used
by the Roman governors), and a 200-metre stretch of the fortification
wall known as the "First Wall" with curtain walls, four towers
and a gateway with a stepped approach.
Important finds were also made concerning the Byzantine, Early Islamic,
Crusader, Ayyubid and Ottoman periods, with the discovery of a stretch
of a paved street which is the same as the one depicted parallel to the
Cardo on'the Madaba mosaic map of Jerusalem (mid-sixth century), dwellings
from the Abbasid period, and an Ayyubid gateway with a 2.75 metre-long
monumental inscription from the early thirteenth century. An enormous
quantity of pottery, small finds, and coins were uncovered during these
excavations, including a number of rare and important artifacts, such
as a sword still in its scabbard from the destruction level of AD 70 and
a reliquary cross with artistic representations of saints from the ninth
century.
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