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Jacob's Well (John 4:5, 6).
This is one of the few sites in Palestine about which
there is no dispute. It was dug by Jacob, and hence its name, in the "parcel of
ground" which he purchased from the sons of Hamor (Gen. 33:19). It still
exists, but although after copious rains it contains a little water, it is now
usually quite dry. It is at the entrance to the valley between Ebal and
Gerizim, about 2 miles south-east of Shechem.
It is about 9 feet in diameter and about 75 feet in depth, though in ancient
times it was no doubt much deeper, probably twice as deep. The digging of such
a well must have been a very laborious and costly undertaking. "Unfortunately,
the well of Jacob has not escaped that misplaced religious veneration which
cannot be satisfied with leaving the object of it as it is, but must build over
it a shrine to protect and make it sacred.
A series of buildings of various styles, and of different ages, have cumbered
the ground, choked up the well, and disfigured the natural beauty and
simplicity of the spot. At present the rubbish in the well has been cleared
out; but there is still a domed structure over it, and you gaze down the shaft
cut in the living rock and see at a depth of 70 feet the surface of the water
glimmering with a pale blue light in the darkness, while you notice how the
limestone blocks that form its curb have been worn smooth, or else furrowed by
the ropes of centuries" (Hugh Macmillan).
At the entrance of the enclosure round the well is planted in the ground one of
the wooden poles that hold the telegraph wires between Jerusalem and Haifa.
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