Archaeologists Discover Road That Lead To Pool Of Siloam
Archaeologists Discover Road That Lead To Pool Of Siloam
By Marie
Archaeologists in Jerusalem have discovered a quarry, where stones paving a road Jesus walked would have been mined.
Stone from the site in southeast Jerusalem paved the 2000-year-old ‘Pilgrim’s Road’, thought to lead to the pool of Siloam, where Jesus healed a blind man (John 9).
The Archaeologists found several building stones at the site which matched those found at the Pilgrim’s Road site two miles away.
Archaeologists found that Pilgrim’s Road, which connected the City of David to the Temple, had paving slabs of the same size and depth as those at the building site.
Slabs from both sites bore identical markings, caused by cutting trenches around the rock and extracting it from the ground.
The stones are estimated to weigh around 2.5 tons and would have been used for projects ordered by King Herod in the first Century BCE.
Michael Chernin and Lara Shilov, the IAA’s co-leaders said: “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.”
“Amazingly, it turns out that the paving stones of this street are 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.”
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