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JERUSALEM: (Luke 2:41).
Situated 33 miles east of the Mediterranean Sea and 14 miles west of the Dead Sea. It stands at 2,500 feet above sea level and is surrounded by hills and mountains and steep ledges. It is a naturally protected area. The City of God, the City of the King. It was the center of Jewish worship. It consists of five easily distinguished hills of limestone.
Jerusalem
Called also Salem, Ariel, Jebus, the "city of God," the "holy city;" by
the modern Arabs el-Khuds, meaning "the holy;" once "the city of Judah" (2 Chr.
25:28). This name is in the original in the dual form, and means "possession of
peace," or "foundation of peace." The dual form probably refers to the two
mountains on which it was built, viz., Zion and Moriah; or, as some suppose, to
the two parts of the city, the "upper" and the "lower city." Jerusalem is a
"mountain city enthroned on a mountain fastness" (comp. Ps. 68:15, 16; 87:1;
125:2; 76:1, 2; 122:3). It stands on the edge of one of the highest table-lands
in Palestine, and is surrounded on the south-eastern, the southern, and the
western sides by deep and precipitous ravines.
It is first mentioned in Scripture under the name Salem (Gen. 14:18; comp. Ps.
76:2). When first mentioned under the name Jerusalem, Adonizedek was its king
(Josh. 10:1). It is afterwards named among the cities of Benjamin (Judg. 19:10;
1 Chr. 11:4); but in the time of David it was divided between Benjamin and
Judah. After the death of Joshua the city was taken and set on fire by the men
of Judah (Judg. 1:1-8); but the Jebusites were not wholly driven out of it.
The city is not again mentioned till we are told that David brought the head of
Goliath thither (1 Sam. 17:54). David afterwards led his forces against the
Jebusites still residing within its walls, and drove them out, fixing his own
dwelling on Zion, which he called "the city of David" (2 Sam. 5:5-9; 1 Chr.
11:4-8).
Here he built an altar to the Lord on the threshing-floor of Araunah the
Jebusite (2 Sam. 24:15-25), and thither he brought up the ark of the covenant
and placed it in the new tabernacle which he had prepared for it. Jerusalem now
became the capital of the kingdom.
After the death of David, Solomon built the temple, a house for the name of the
Lord, on Mount Moriah (B.C. 1010). He also greatly strengthened and adorned the
city, and it became the great centre of all the civil and religious affairs of
the nation (Deut. 12:5; comp. 12:14; 14:23; 16:11-16; Ps. 122).
After the disruption of the kingdom on the accession to the throne of Rehoboam,
the son of Solomon, Jerusalem became the capital of the kingdom of the two
tribes. It was subsequently often taken and retaken by the Egyptians, the
Assyrians, and by the kings of Israel (2 Kings 14:13, 14; 18:15, 16; 23:33-35;
24:14; 2 Chr. 12:9; 26:9; 27:3, 4; 29:3; 32:30; 33:11), till finally, for the
abounding iniquities of the nation, after a siege of three years, it was taken
and utterly destroyed, its walls razed to the ground, and its temple and
palaces consumed by fire, by Nebuchadnezzar, the king of Babylon (2 Kings 25; 2
Chr. 36; Jer. 39), B.C. 588.
The desolation of the city and the land was completed by the retreat of the
principal Jews into Egypt (Jer. 40-44), and by the final carrying captive into
Babylon of all that still remained in the land (52:3), so that it was left
without an inhabitant (B.C. 582). Compare the predictions, Deut. 28; Lev.
26:14-39.
But the streets and walls of Jerusalem were again to be built, in troublous
times (Dan. 9:16, 19, 25), after a captivity of seventy years. This restoration
was begun B.C. 536, "in the first year of Cyrus" (Ezra 1:2, 3, 5-11). The Books
of Ezra and Nehemiah contain the history of the re-building of the city and
temple, and the restoration of the kingdom of the Jews, consisting of a portion
of all the tribes.
The kingdom thus constituted was for two centuries under the dominion of
Persia, till B.C. 331; and thereafter, for about a century and a half, under
the rulers of the Greek empire in Asia, till B.C. 167. For a century the Jews
maintained their independence under native rulers, the Asmonean princes. At the
close of this period they fell under the rule of Herod and of members of his
family, but practically under Rome, till the time of the destruction of
Jerusalem, A.D. 70. The city was then laid in ruins.
The modern Jerusalem by-and-by began to be built over the immense beds of
rubbish resulting from the overthrow of the ancient city; and whilst it
occupies certainly the same site, there are no evidences that even the lines of
its streets are now what they were in the ancient city.
Till A.D. 131 the Jews who still lingered about Jerusalem quietly submitted to
the Roman sway. But in that year the emperor (Hadrian), in order to hold them
in subjection, rebuilt and fortified the city. The Jews, however, took
possession of it, having risen under the leadership of one Bar-Chohaba (i.e.,
"the son of the star") in revolt against the Romans.
Some four years afterwards (A.D. 135), however, they were driven out of it with
great slaughter, and the city was again destroyed; and over its ruins was built
a Roman city called Aelia Capitolina, a name which it retained till it fell
under the dominion of the Mohammedans, when it was called el-Khuds, i.e., "the
holy."
In A.D. 326 Helena, mother of the emperor Constantine, made a pilgrimage to
Jerusalem with the view of discovering the places mentioned in the life of our
Lord. She caused a church to be built on what was then supposed to be the place
of the nativity at Bethlehem.
Constantine, animated by her example, searched for the holy sepulchre, and
built over the supposed site a magnificent church, which was completed and
dedicated A.D. 335. He relaxed the laws against the Jews till this time in
force, and permitted them once a year to visit the city and wail over the
desolation of "the holy and beautiful house."
In A.D. 614 the Persians, after defeating the Roman forces of the emperor
Heraclius, took Jerusalem by storm, and retained it till A.D. 637, when it was
taken by the Arabians under the Khalif Omar. It remained in their possession
till it passed, in A.D. 960, under the dominion of the Fatimite khalifs of
Egypt, and in A.D. 1073 under the Turcomans.
In A.D. 1099 the crusader Godfrey of Bouillon took the city from the Moslems
with great slaughter, and was elected king of Jerusalem. He converted the
Mosque of Omar into a Christian cathedral. During the eighty-eight years which
followed, many churches and convents were erected in the holy city.
The Church of the Holy Sepulchre was rebuilt during this period, and it alone
remains to this day. In A.D. 1187 the sultan Saladin wrested the city from the
Christians. From that time to the present day, with few intervals, Jerusalem
has remained in the hands of the Moslems. It has, however, during that period
been again and again taken and retaken, demolished in great part and rebuilt,
no city in the world having passed through so many vicissitudes.
In the year 1850 the Greek and Latin monks residing in Jerusalem had a fierce
dispute about the guardianship of what are called the "holy places." In this
dispute the emperor Nicholas of Russia sided with the Greeks, and Louis
Napoleon, the emperor of the French, with the Latins. This led the Turkish
authorities to settle the question in a way unsatisfactory to Russia. Out of
this there sprang the Crimean War, which was protracted and sanguinary, but
which had important consequences in the way of breaking down the barriers of
Turkish exclusiveness.
Modern Jerusalem "lies near the summit of a broad mountain-ridge, which extends
without interruption from the plain of Esdraelon to a line drawn between the
southern end of the Dead Sea and the southeastern corner of the Mediterranean."
This high, uneven table-land is everywhere from 20 to 25 geographical miles in
breadth. It was anciently known as the mountains of Ephraim and Judah.
"Jerusalem is a city of contrasts, and differs widely from Damascus, not merely
because it is a stone town in mountains, whilst the latter is a mud city in a
plain, but because while in Damascus Moslem religion and Oriental custom are
unmixed with any foreign element, in Jerusalem every form of religion, every
nationality of East and West, is represented at one time."
Jerusalem is first mentioned under that name in the Book of Joshua, and the
Tell-el-Amarna collection of tablets includes six letters from its Amorite king
to Egypt, recording the attack of the Abiri about B.C. 1480. The name is there
spelt Uru-Salim ("city of peace").
Another monumental record in which the Holy City is named is that of
Sennacherib's attack in B.C. 702. The "camp of the Assyrians" was still shown
about A.D. 70, on the flat ground to the north-west, included in the new
quarter of the city. The city of David included both the upper city and Millo,
and was surrounded by a wall built by David and Solomon, who appear to have
restored the original Jebusite fortifications. The name Zion (or Sion) appears
to have been, like Ariel ("the hearth of God"), a poetical term for Jerusalem,
but in the Greek age was more specially used of the Temple hill.
The priests quarter grew up on Ophel, south of the Temple, where also was
Solomon's Palace outside the original city of David. The walls of the city were
extended by Jotham and Manasseh to include this suburb and the Temple (2 Chr.
27:3; 33:14).
Jerusalem is now a town of some 50,000 inhabitants, with ancient mediaeval
walls, partly on the old lines, but extending less far to the south. The
traditional sites, as a rule, were first shown in the 4th and later centuries
A.D., and have no authority. The results of excavation have, however, settled
most of the disputed questions, the limits of the Temple area, and the course
of the old walls having been traced.
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