A huge quarry from late Second Temple period uncovered in Jerusalem


A huge quarry from late Second Temple period uncovered in Jerusalem

A huge quarry, the largest ever discovered from the late Second Temple period, was uncovered in Jerusalem’s Har Hotzvim Hi-Tech Park

The excavation provides a glimpse into Jerusalem’s past at its zenith, just before the Romans destroyed it in 70 CE. Two stone vessels, impervious to ritual defilement in Jewish law, were discovered in the quarry; a find which by its nature always signals the presence of a Jewish population. The vessels will be displayed to the public at the Jay and Jeanie Schottenstein National Campus for the Archaeology of Israel in Jerusalem, which just opened for visitation this summer.

A huge quarry – one of the largest ever found in Jerusalem, dating from the end of the Second Temple period, in recent weeks is being uncovered by an Israel Antiquities Authority excavation in the Har Hotzvim industrial area in Jerusalem, funded by the Vitania real estate development company on its grounds. The excavated area extends about 3,500 square meters and is just one section of a massive quarry. A stone tool was found here which, according to the Jewish Halacha/Law, does not become impure, and was widely used by the Jewish population in Temple times.

The ancient quarry (source: Israel Antiquities Authority)

During the excavation, the archaeologists uncovered tens of various-sized building stones, as well as quarrying and cutting trenches whose outlines indicate the size of the blocks being quarried. “Most of the building stones extracted from here were huge rock slabs, whose length reached ca. 2.5 meters, their width was 1.2 meters and they were 40 centimeters thick,” say Michael Chernin and Lara Shilov, excavation directors on behalf of the Israel Antiquities Authority. “Each such quarried block weighed two-and-a-half tons! The impressive size stones this quarry produced likely attests to their intended use in one of Jerusalem’s many royal construction projects in the late Second Temple period, beginning under King Herod the Great’s reign between 37-4 BCE. Historical sources tell us that Herod’s construction projects in Jerusalem included, first and foremost, the expansion of the Temple Mount area and the Temple itself. In addition, during his reign, a series of impressive public buildings – palaces and fortifications – were built throughout the city, requiring a huge supply of high-quality construction stones. Monumental construction projects continued in the city under his successors as well: the most important of these projects was the construction of the city’s “Third Wall” by Herod’s grandson – King Agrippa I, who reigned between 37-44 CE.

“It is reasonable to assume, with due caution, that at least some of the building stones extracted here were intended to be used as pavement slabs for Jerusalem’s streets in that period,” say Chernin and Shilov. “In another Israel Antiquities Authority excavation ongoing for the past few years in the City of David, the archaeologists discovered a paved street (the “stepped street” – the “Pilgrim’s Road”) which is also dated to the late Second Temple period, under the rule of successive Roman Procurators – amazingly, it turns out that the paving stones of this street are exactly the

same size and thickness, and share the identical geological signature as the stone slabs that were extracted from the quarry now being exposed in Har Hotzvim.

In one corner of the quarry, the archaeologists were surprised to discover A stone vessel. intact receptacle, hidden in that corner for two thousand years, was discovered almost by chance by archaeologist Alex Pechuro. “This is a stone purification vessel of the type that served the Jewish community during the Second Temple period,” explains Lara Shilov. “It is possible that it was produced on the spot in the quarry itself, or was especially brought to the site for the benefit of the workers.”

The current excavation reveals another aspect of Jerusalem’s history during its golden age shortly before its destruction by the Romans in 70 CE.

One of two stone vessels identified with the Second Temple period Jewish population, discovered in the quarry. They will be exhibited this summer at the Jay and Jeanie Schottenstein National Campus for the Archaeology of Israel in Jerusalem. (source: Israel Antiquities Authority)

According to Dr. Amit Re’em, Israel Antiquities Authority Jerusalem District Supervisor: “We are working tirelessly, together with the developer Vitania, to preserve and present the quarry and integrate it into the planned commercial complex which will be erected here. In this manner, the entire public will gain a lasting impression of this tremendous enterprise’s grandeur – quarrying the building stones for Jerusalem when the Second Temple was standing.”

According to Eli Escusido, Israel Antiquities Authority Director, “Revealing this huge quarry, just before the Nine Days and the Ninth of Av, the time of year when the Jewish People the world over mourns the Jerusalem that was lost in these days, is symbolic and very moving. The special stone vessels discovered here will be presented for families to see at the Jay and Jeannie Schottenstein National Archaeological Campus in Jerusalem, which opened this summer for the first time to the public. I invite everyone to join our tours, and to meet a piece of the past that just now surfaced out of the ground.”

Details on (English speaking) visits to the Jay and Jeanie Schottenstein National Campus for the Archaeology of Israel can be found here.

To download pictures click here. Photography: Emil Aladjem, Israel Antiquities Authority

2-5. The ancient quarry

6. Lara Shilov, Excavation Director on behalf of the Israel Antiquities Authority

7-8. Stone vessels identified with the Second Temple period Jewish population, discovered in the quarry. They will be exhibited this summer at the Jay and Jeanie Schottenstein National Campus for the Archaeology of Israel in Jerusalem.

9. The main street that led to the Temple Mount approximately 2,000 years ago. It is being uncovered in the excavations of the Israel Antiquities Authority at the City of David.
10. Michael Chernin, Excavation Director on behalf of the Israel Antiquities Authority

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