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Calvary & Golgotha
Only in Luke 23:33, the Latin name Calvaria, which was used as a
translation of the Greek word Kranion, by which the Hebrew word Gulgoleth was
interpreted, "the place of a skull." It probably took this name from its shape,
being a hillock or low, rounded, bare elevation somewhat in the form of a human
skull. It is nowhere in Scripture called a "hill." The crucifixion of our Lord
took place outside the city walls (Heb. 13:11-13) and near the public
thoroughfare. "This thing was not done in a corner." (See GOLGOTHA.)
Golgotha
The common name of the spot where Jesus was crucified. It is interpreted
by the evangelists as meaning "the place of a skull" (Matt. 27:33; Mark 15:22;
John 19:17). This name reepresents in Greek letters the Aramaic word Gulgaltha,
which is the Hebrew Gulgoleth (Num. 1:2; 1 Chr. 23:3, 24; 2 Kings 9: 35),
meaning "a skull." It is identical with the word Calvary (q.v.). It was a
little knoll rounded like a bare skull.
It is obvious from the evangelists that it was some well-known spot outside the
gate (comp. Heb. 13:12), and near the city (Luke 23:26), containing a "garden"
(John 19: 41), and on a thoroughfare leading into the country. Hence it is an
untenable idea that it is embraced within the present "Church of the Holy
Sepulchre." The hillock above Jeremiah's Grotto, to the north of the city, is
in all probability the true site of Calvary. The skull-like appearance of the
rock in the southern precipice of the hillock is very remarkable.
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