Difference between revisions of "Jerusalem" - New World Encyclopedia

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'''Jerusalem''' ([[Hebrew language|Hebrew]]: '''יְרוּשָׁלַיִם''' '''Yerushalayim'''; [[Arabic language|Arabic]]: '''القدس''' '''al-Quds'''; (pop. 704,900, as of [[December 31]], [[2004]] [http://www.cbs.gov.il/population/new_2004/tab_3.pdf]), is an ancient [[Middle East]]ern city of key importance to Jews, Christians, and Muslims.
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{{Infobox Settlement
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|name=Jerusalem
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|native_name=<div style="line-height:1.5em">{{lang|he|יְרוּשָׁלַיִם}} (Yerushalayim)<br>{{lang|ar|القُدس}} (al-Quds)
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|settlement_type=City
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|image_skyline=Jerusalem infobox image.JPG
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|imagesize=250px
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|image_caption='''From upper left''': Jerusalem skyline viewed from [[Givat ha'Arba]], [[Mamilla]], the [[Old City (Jerusalem)|Old City]] and the [[Dome of the Rock]], a [[souq]] in the [[Old City (Jerusalem)|Old City]], the [[Knesset]], the [[Western Wall]], the [[Tower of David]] and the Old City walls
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|image_flag=Flag of Jerusalem.svg{{!}}border
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|image_shield=Jerusalem-coat-of-arms.svg
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|shield_size=60px
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|shield_alt=Emblem of Jerusalem
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|shield_link=
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|nickname=''Ir ha-Kodesh'' (Holy City), ''Bayt al-Maqdis'' (House of the Holiness)
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|image_map=Jerusalem WBIL.jpg
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|map_caption=
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|coordinates_region=IL
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|subdivision_type1=[[Autonomous communities of Israel|Region]]
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|latd=31 |latm=47 |lats=|latNS=N
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|longd=35 |longm=13 |longs=|longEW=E
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|coordinates_display=inline,title
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|subdivision_type1=[[Districts of Israel|District]]
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|subdivision_name1=[[Jerusalem District|Jerusalem]]
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|leader_title=Mayor
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|leader_name=[[Nir Barkat]]
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|unit_pref=dunam
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|area_total_km2=125
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|area_metro_km2=652
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|elevation_m=754
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|population_total=901302
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|population_metro=12539000
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|population_as_of=2017
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|population_density_km2=7200
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|population_demonym=Jerusalemite
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|timezone1=[[Israel Standard Time|IST]]
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|utc_offset1=+2
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|timezone1_DST=[[Israel Summer Time|IDT]]
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|region=[[Île-de-Israel (region)|Île-de-Israel]]
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|utc_offset1_DST=+3
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|area_code=overseas dialing +972-2; local dialing 02
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|website=[https://www.jerusalem.muni.il jerusalem.muni.il]
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|footnotes=
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}}
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'''Jerusalem''' ([[Hebrew language|Hebrew]]: '''&#1497;&#1456;&#1512;&#1493;&#1468;&#1513;&#1473;&#1464;&#1500;&#1463;&#1497;&#1460;&#1501;''' '''Yerushalayim;''' [[Arabic language|Arabic]]: '''&#1575;&#1604;&#1602;&#1583;&#1587;''' '''al-Quds''') is an ancient [[Middle East]]ern city of key importance to the religions of [[Judaism]], [[Christianity]], and [[Islam]]. Perhaps no city on earth binds the hearts of believers in so complete a way. Today Jerusalem is the capital of [[Israel]] and the home of its legislature, the [[Knesset]], although that designation is disputed in international circles. Jerusalem is a city of diverse neighborhoods, from the ancient walled Old City to the modern districts of West Jerusalem, and from the Arab sections of East Jerusalem to the Orthodox Jewish neighborhoods of Mea She'arim. It is also a stunningly beautiful city, where by law all buildings are faced with white limestone that sets off the golden [[Dome of the Rock]] that is thought to stand on the site of the ancient [[Jerusalem Temple]].
  
*This paragraph should be moved to a later part of the article
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From 1948 until the [[Six-Day War]] of 1967, Jerusalem was a divided city, with [[Jordan]] controlling East Jerusalem and the Old City while [[Israel]] governed West Jerusalem. Skirmishes were frequent across the Green Line, and Jews were not permitted access to the [[Western Wall]], their most important holy site. The Six-Day War resulted in a unified city under Israeli rule. The Jerusalem city government has tried to balance the needs of these various constituencies in the unified city, and also maintain each community's security and access to their respective holy places. Today the future of a unified Jerusalem faces challenges—tensions arising from the wall of separation that now severs some Palestinian neighborhoods from the city, and from the construction of substantial Jewish suburbs such as the [[Israeli settlement]] of [[Ma'ale Adumim]] within the disputed [[West Bank]].
:''The section called the "Old City" is surrounded by walls and consists of four quarters: [[Jew]]ish, [[Christianity|Christian]], [[Armenian (people)|Armenian]], and [[Muslim]].''
 
  
At present, the status of the city is disputed.  
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Nevertheless, in the hearts of believers all over the world, Jerusalem remains the city of peace. They regard its holy places as the center of the most far-reaching participation of the divine in human affairs. Poetry abounds for the city, as though for a lover, one poet writes in voice of [[God]]:
  
According to Israeli [[Jerusalem Law]], Jerusalem is the capital of the [[State of Israel]], and is the center of [[Jerusalem District]]; it serves as the country's seat of government and otherwise functions as capital. Countries that do not recognize Israeli sovereignty over some or all of the city maintain their embassies in [[Tel Aviv]] or in the [[suburb]]s.
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<blockquote>Only be it known it's you I have married <br>
[[Palestinian]]s also place claims all or part of Jerusalem as the capital of a future [[Palestinian state]].
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Come back to Me, come back to Me <br>
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My Bride – Jerusalem!</blockquote>
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{{toc}}
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The history of the city, and the on-going passion of believers, continues to make the city central in human affairs today.
  
[[Image:Jerusalem from mt olives.jpg|right|thumbnail|300px|Jerusalem and the Old City. View from the Mount of Olives]]
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[[Image:800px-Jerusalem from mt olives.jpg|right|thumb|400px|Jerusalem and the Old City. View from the Mount of Olives]]
  
 
== Name ==
 
== Name ==
The origin of the name of the city is uncertain. It is possible to understand the name ([[Hebrew language|Hebrew]] ''Yerushalayim'') as either "Heritage of Salem" or "Heritage of Peace" - a contraction of "heritage" (''yerusha'') and Salem (''Shalem'' literally "whole" or "complete") or "peace" (''shalom''). (See the Biblical commentator the [[Ramban]] for explanation.) "Salem" is the original name used in [[Genesis]] 14:18 for the city.
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The origin of the city name is uncertain. It is possible to understand the name ([[Hebrew language|Hebrew]] ''Yerushalayim'') as either "Heritage of Salem" or "Heritage of Peace"—a contraction of "heritage" (''yerusha'') and Salem (''Shalem'' literally "whole" or "complete") or "peace" (''shalom''). (See the biblical commentator the [[Ramban]] for explanation.) "Salem" is the original name used in [[Genesis]] 14:18 for the city.
  
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== Geography ==
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Jerusalem is situated at 31° 46′ 45″ N 35° 13′ 25″ on the southern spur of a plateau, the eastern side of which slopes from 2,460 feet above sea-level north of the [[Temple of Jerusalem|Temple area]] to 2,130 feet at its southeastern-most point. The western hill is about 2,500 feet high and slopes southeast from the Judean plateau.
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Jerusalem is surrounded upon all sides by valleys, of which those on the north are least pronounced. The two principal valleys start northwest of the present city. The first runs eastward with a slight southerly bend (the present Wadi al-Joz), then, turns directly south (formerly known as "[[Kidron]] Valley," the modern Wadi Sitti Maryam), dividing the [[Mount of Olives]] from the city. The second runs directly south on the western side of the city. It then turns eastward at its southeastern extremity, to run due east eventually joining the first valley near Bir Ayyub ("Job's Well"). In early times it was called the "[[Valley of Hinnom]]," and in modern times is the Wadi al-Rababi (not to be confused with the first-mentioned valley).
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A third valley starts in the northwest where the Damascus Gate is now located, and runs south-southeast to the [[Pool of Siloam]]. It divides at the lower part into two hills, the lower and the upper cities of Josephus. A fourth valley proceeds from the western hill (near the present Jaffa Gate) toward the Temple area, existing in modern Jerusalem as David Street. A fifth valley cuts the eastern hill into the northern and southern parts of the city. Later, Jerusalem came to be built on these four spurs. Today, neighboring towns are [[Bethlehem]] and [[Beit Jala]] at the southern city border, and [[Abu Dis]] to the east.
  
 
== History ==
 
== History ==
 
=== Antiquity ===
 
=== Antiquity ===
[[Image:Jerusalem ruins from Davids.jpg|thumbnail|150px|[[Archaeology|Archaeological]] ruins from [[King David]]'s time]]
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[[File:Jerusalem ruins from Davids.jpg|thumb|300px|[[Archaeology|Archaeological]] ruins from [[King David]]'s time]]
  
According to Jewish tradition it was founded by [[Abraham]]'s forefathers [[Shem]] and [[Eber]]. In [[Genesis]] it was ruled by [[Melchizedek]], regarded in Jewish tradition as being a priest of God and identical to [[Shem]]. Later it was conquered by the [[Jebusite]]s.  After this it came under Jewish control.  The [[Bible]] records that [[King David]] defeated the Jebusites in war and captured the city without destroying it.  David then expanded the city to the south, and declared it the capital city of the united [[Kingdom of Israel]].
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Since Jerusalem is hotly contested at present, historical inquiry into the city's origins has become politicized.
  
Later, according to the Bible, the [[Temple in Jerusalem|First Jewish Temple]] was built in Jerusalem by [[King Solomon]].  The Temple became a major cultural center in the region, eventually overcoming other ritual centers such as Shilo and Bethel. By the end of the "First Temple Period," Jerusalem was the sole acting religious shrine in the kingdom and a center of regular pilgrimage. It was at this time that historical records begin to corroborate the biblical history, the kings of Judah are historically identifiable, and we learn of the significance the Temple had.
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According to Jewish tradition Jerusalem was founded by [[Abraham]]'s forefathers [[Shem]] and [[Eber]]. [[Genesis]] reports that the city was ruled by [[Melchizedek]], regarded in Jewish tradition as being a priest of God and identical to Shem. Later it was conquered by the [[Jebusite]]s before returning to Jewish control. The [[Bible]] records that [[David|King David]] defeated the Jebusites in war and captured the city without destroying it. David then expanded the city to the south, and declared it the capital city of the united [[Kingdom of Israel]].
  
Near the end of the reign of King Solomon, the northern ten tribes split off to form the [[Kingdom of Israel]] with its capital at [[Samaria]]. Jerusalem then become the capital of the southern kingdom, the [[Kingdom of Judah]].
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Later, according to the Bible, the [[Temple of Jerusalem|First Jewish Temple]] was built in Jerusalem by [[Solomon|King Solomon]]. The Temple became a major cultural center in the region, eventually overcoming other ritual centers such as [[Shiloh]] and [[Bethel]]. By the end of the "First Temple Period," Jerusalem was the sole-acting religious shrine in the kingdom and a center of regular pilgrimage. It was at this time that historical records begin to corroborate biblical history. The kings of Judah are historically identifiable.  
  
Jerusalem was the capital of the [[Kingdom of Judah]] for some 400 years.  It had survived (or, as some historians claim, averted) an [[Assyrian]] [[Siege of Jerusalem (701 B.C.E.)|siege in 701 B.C.E.]], unlike [[Samaria]], the capital of the northern [[Kingdom of Israel]], which had fallen some twenty years previously.  However, the city was overcome by the Babylonians in [[586 B.C.E.]], who then took the young king [[Jehoiachin]] into [[Babylonian captivity]], together with most of the [[aristocracy]]. However, the country rebelled again under [[Zedekiah]], prompting the city's repeated conquest and destruction by [[Nebuchadnezzar II of Babylon|Nebuchadnezzar]]. The temple was burnt, and the city's walls were ruined, thus rendering what remained of the city unprotected.
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Near the end of King Solomon's reign, the northern ten tribes separated, and formed the [[Kingdom of Israel]] with its capital at [[Samaria]]. Jerusalem remained as the capital of the southern [[Kingdom of Judah]].
  
After several decades of [[Babylonian captivity of Judah|captivity]] and the Persian conquest of [[Babylon]], the Persians allowed the Jews to return to Judah and rebuild the city's walls and the Temple. It has continued to be the capital of Judah, as a province under the Persians, Greek and Romans, with a relatively short period of independence. The Temple complex was upgraded and the Temple itself rebuilt under [[Herod the Great]].  That structure is known as the [[Second Temple]].
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Jerusalem continued as the capital of the Kingdom of Judah for some 400 years. It had survived (or, as some historians claim, averted) an [[Assyrian]] [[Siege of Jerusalem (701 B.C.E.)|siege in 701 B.C.E.]], unlike the northern capital, [[Samaria]], which had fallen some twenty years prior.
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In 586 B.C.E., however, the city was overcome by the [[Babylonian Empire|Babylonians]] who took the king [[Jehoiachin]] and most of the aristocracy into [[Babylonian captivity]]. [[Nebuchadrezzar II]] captured and destroyed the city, burnt the temple, ruined the city walls, and left the city unprotected.
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After several decades, Persians conquered [[Babylon]] and allowed the Jews to return to Judah where they rebuilt the city walls and restored the Temple. It continued as the capital of Judah, a province under the Persians, Greeks, and Romans, enjoying only a short period of independence. The Temple (known as the [[Second Temple]]) was rebuilt, and the Temple complex was upgraded under [[Herod the Great]].
  
 
=== First millennium ===
 
=== First millennium ===
[[Image:Sheqel_of_Israel_ca_68_AD.jpg|left|thumb|100px|A coin issued by the rebels in [[68]]. [[Obverse]]: "[[Shekel]] Israel, year 3". [[Reverse]]: "Jerusalem the Holy"]]
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[[Image:Sack_of_jerusalem.JPG|right|thumb|400px|Sack of Jerusalem. A fragment from the [[Arch of Titus]], Rome.]]
[[Image:sack_of_jerusalem.JPG|right|thumb|150px|Sack of Jerusalem. A fragment from the [[Arch of Titus]], Rome.]]
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Internal strife and an uprising against Rome, resulted in the sack and ruin of Jerusalem at the hands of Roman leader [[Titus Flavius]] in 70 C.E.
  
The city was ruined yet again when a civil war accompanied by a [[Great Jewish Revolt|revolt]] against Rome in [[Judea]] led to the city's repeated sack and ruin at the hands of [[Titus Flavius|Titus]] in [[70]] CE.  
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Jerusalem was destroyed and the Second Temple burnt. All that remained was a portion of an external (retaining) wall, which became known as the [[Western Wall]].
  
The [[Second Temple]] was burnt, and the whole city was ruined. The only remaining part of the Temple was a portion of an external (retaining) wall which became known as the [[Western Wall]].
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Sixty years later, after crushing the [[Bar Kokhba's revolt]], the Roman emperor [[Hadrian]] resettled the city as a [[pagan]] [[polis]] under the name [[Aelia Capitolina]]. Jews were forbidden to enter the city, but for a single day of the year, [[Tisha B'Av]], (the Ninth of [[Av]]), when they could weep for the destruction of their city at the Temple's only remaining wall.  
  
Sixty years later, after crushing the [[Bar Kokhba's revolt]], the Roman emperor [[Hadrian]] resettled the city as a [[pagan]] [[polis]] under the name [[Aelia Capitolina]]. Jews were forbidden to enter the city, but for a single day of the year, [[Tisha B'Av]], (the Ninth of [[Av]], see [[Hebrew calendar]]), when they could weep for the destruction of their city at the Temple's only remaining wall.  
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Under the [[Byzantine Empire|Byzantines]], who cherished the city for its Christian history, in accordance with traditions of religious tolerance often found in the ancient East, Jews could return to the city in the fifth century.
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[[Image:Map_1_800px-Jerusalem985-1052.jpg|thumb|right|400px|Map of Jerusalem as it appeared in the years 958–1052, according to [[Arab]] [[geographer]]s such as [[al-Muqaddasi]].]]
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Although the [[Qur'an]] does not mention the name "Jerusalem," the [[hadith]]s hold that it was from Jerusalem that the [[Prophet]] [[Muhammad]] ascended to heaven in the Night Journey, or [[Isra and Miraj]].  
  
The [[Byzantine]]s cherished the city for its Christian history. However, in accordance with traditions of religious tolerance often found in the ancient East, Jews were allowed into it in the [[5th century]].
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In 638 C.E., Jerusalem was one of the [[Arab]] [[Caliphate]]'s first conquests. According to Arab historians of the time, the Caliph [[Umar ibn al-Khattab]] personally went to the city to receive its submission, praying at the [[Temple Mount]] in the process. Some Muslim and non-Muslim sources add that he built a mosque there. Sixty years later, the [[Dome of the Rock]] was built, a structure in which lies the stone on which Muhammad is said to have tethered his mount [[Buraq]] during the [[Isra]]. This is also reputed to be the place where Abraham went to sacrifice his son ([[Isaac]] in the Jewish tradition, [[Ishmael]] in the Muslim one). Note that the octagonal and gold-sheeted Dome is not the same as the [[Al-Aqsa Mosque]] beside it, which was built more than three centuries later.
[[Image:Jerusalem985-1052.jpg|thumbnail|right|150px|Map of Jerusalem as it appeared in the years [[958]]-[[1052]], according to [[Arab]] [[geographer]]s such as [[al-Muqaddasi]].]]
 
Although the [[Qur'an]] does not mention the name "Jerusalem", the [[Hadith]] specifies that it was from Jerusalem that the Prophet [[Muhammad]] ascended to heaven in the Night Journey, or [[Isra and Miraj]]. The city was one of the [[Arab]] [[Caliphate]]'s first conquests in [[638]] CE; according to Arab historians of the time, the Caliph [[Umar ibn al-Khattab]] personally went to the city to receive its submission, cleaning out and praying at the [[Temple Mount]] in the process. Some Muslim and non-Muslim sources add that he built a mosque there. Sixty years later, the [[Dome of the Rock]] was built, a structure in which there lies the stone where Muhammad is said to have tethered his mount [[Buraq]] during the [[Isra]]. This is also reputed to be the place where Abraham went to sacrifice his son ([[Isaac]] in the Jewish tradition, [[Ishmael]] in the Muslim one.) Note that the octagonal and gold-sheeted Dome is not the same thing as the [[Al-Aqsa Mosque]] beside it, which was built more than three centuries later.
 
  
Under the early centuries of Muslim rule, the city prospered; the [[geographer]]s [[Ibn Hawqal]] and [[al-Istakhri]] ([[10th century]]) describe it as "the most fertile province of [[Palestine]]", while its native son the geographer [[al-Muqaddasi]] (born [[946]]) devoted many pages to its praises in his most famous work, ''The Best Divisions in the Knowledge of the Climes.''
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Under the early centuries of Muslim rule, the city prospered; the [[geographer]]s [[Ibn Hawqal]] and [[al-Istakhri]] (tenth century) describe it as "the most fertile province of [[Palestine]]," while its native son the geographer [[al-Muqaddasi]] (born 946) devoted many pages to its praises in his most famous work, ''The Best Divisions in the Knowledge of the Climes.''
  
 
=== Second millennium ===
 
=== Second millennium ===
The early Arab period was also one of religious tolerance. However, in early [[11th century]], the Egyptian Fatimid Caliph [[Al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah]] ordered the destruction of all churches and synagogues in Jerusalem, a policy reversed by his successors.  Reports of this were one cause of the [[First Crusade]], which marched off from Europe to the area, and, on [[July 15]], [[1099]], Christian soldiers took Jerusalem after a difficult [[Siege of Jerusalem (1099)|one month siege]]. They then proceeded to slaughter most of the city's Muslim and Jewish inhabitants. [[Raymond d'Aguiliers]], chaplain to [[Raymond de Saint-Gilles]], Count of Toulouse, wrote:
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The early Arab period was one of religious tolerance, but in the eleventh century, the Egyptian Fatimid Caliph [[Al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah]] ordered the destruction of all churches and synagogues in Jerusalem. This policy was reversed by his successors, but reports of this edict were a major cause for the [[Crusades|First Crusade]]. Europeans captured Jerusalem after a difficult [[Siege of Jerusalem (1099)|one month siege]], on July 15, 1099. The siege and its aftermath are known to be extreme in the loss of life both during and after the siege.  
 
 
:''Piles of heads, hands, and feet were to be seen in the streets of the city. It was necessary to pick one's way over the bodies of men and horses. But these were small matters compared to what happened at the Temple of Solomon, a place where religious ceremonies were ordinarily chanted. What happened there? If I tell the truth, it will exceed your powers of belief. So let it suffice to say this much, at least, that in the Temple and porch of Solomon, men rode in blood up to their knees and bridle-reins. Indeed, it was a just and splendid judgment of God that this place should be filled with the blood of unbelievers, since it had suffered so long from their blasphemies. The city was filled with corpses and blood.'' (Edward Peters, ''The First Crusade: The chronicle of Fulcher of Chartres and other source materials'', p. 214)
 
 
 
Jerusalem became the capital of the [[Kingdom of Jerusalem]], a feudal state, of which the [[Kings of Jerusalem|King of Jerusalem]] was the chief. Neither Jews nor Muslims were allowed into the city during that time.  The Kingdom of Jerusalem lasted until [[1291]]; however, Jerusalem itself was recaptured by [[Saladin]] in [[1187]], who permitted worship of all religions.
 
  
In [[1173]] [[Benjamin of Tudela]] visited Jerusalem. He described it as a small city full of [[Jacobite (Orthodox)|Jacobite]]s, [[Armenia]]ns, [[Greeks]], and [[Georgia (country)|Georgia]]ns. Two hundred [[Jew]]s dwelt in a corner of the city under the [[Tower of David]].
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[[Image:800px-Tower of david jerusalem.jpg|thumb|right|400px|Medieval [[Tower of David]] (Migdal David) in Jerusalem today]]
  
In [[1219]] the walls of the city were taken down by order of the [[Sultan of Damascus]]; in [[1229]], by treaty with [[Egypt]], Jerusalem came into the hands of [[Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor|Frederick II of Germany]]. In [[1239]] he began to rebuild the walls; but they were again demolished by [[Da'ud]], the emir of [[Kerak]].
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From this point, Jerusalem became the capital of the [[Kingdom of Jerusalem]], a feudal state, headed by the [[Kings of Jerusalem|King of Jerusalem]]. Neither Jews nor Muslims were allowed into the city during that time. This kingdom lasted until 1291, though Jerusalem itself was recaptured by [[Saladin]] in 1187. Under Saladin, all worshipers were once again welcomed to the city.
[[Image:Tower of david jerusalem.jpg|thumb|left|Medieval [[Tower of David]] (Migdal David) in Jerusalem today]]
 
In [[1243]] Jerusalem came again into the power of the Christians, and the walls were repaired. The [[Kharezmian Tatar]]s took the city in [[1244]]; and they in turn were driven out by the Egyptians in [[1247]]. In [[1260]] the Tatars under [[Hulaku Khan]] overran the whole land, and the Jews that were in Jerusalem had to flee to the neighboring villages.
 
[[Image:View and Plan of Jerusalem Fac simile of a Woodout in the Liber Chronicarum Mundi large folio Nuremberg 1493.png|right|thumb|View and Plan of Jerusalem. A woodcut in the "Liber Chronicarum Mundi", Nuremberg, 1493]]
 
In [[1244]], Sultan [[Malik al-Muattam]] razed the [[Jerusalem's Old City Walls|city walls]], rendering it again defenseless and dealing a heavy blow to the city's status. In the middle of the [[13th century]], Jerusalem was captured by the Egyptian [[Mameluk]]s. In [[1517]], it was taken over by the [[Ottoman Empire]] and enjoyed a period of renewal and peace under [[Suleiman the Magnificent]] - including the rebuilding of magnificent walls of what is now known as the Old City (however, some of the wall foundations are remains of genuine antique walls). The rule of Suleiman and the following Ottoman Sultans brought an age of "religious peace"; Jew, Christian and Muslim enjoyed the freedom of religion the Ottomans granted them and it was possible to find a synagogue, a church and a mosque in the same street. The city remained open to all religions, although the empire's faulty management after Suleiman meant slow economical stagnation.
 
  
In [[1482]], the visiting [[Dominican Order|Dominican]] priest Felix Fabri described Jerusalem as ''a dwelling place of diverse nations of the world, and is, as it were, a collection of all manner of abominations''. As ''abominations'' he listed [[Saracen]]s, Greeks, [[Syria]]ns, Jacobites, Abyssianians, Nestorians, [[Armenia]]ns, Gregorians, [[Maronite]]s, [[Turcoman]]s, [[Bedouin]]s, [[Assassin]]s, a sect possibly [[Druze]], [[Mameluke]]s, and ''the most accursed of all'', Jews. Only the Latin Christians ''long with all their hearts for Christian princes to come and subject all the country to the authority of the Church of Rome''. (A. Stewart, Palestine Pilgrims Text Society, Vol 9-10, p. 384-391)
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In 1219 the walls of the city were taken down by order of the [[Sultan of Damascus]]; in 1229, by treaty with [[Egypt]], Jerusalem came into the hands of [[Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor|Frederick II of Germany]]. In 1239, he began to rebuild the walls; but they were again demolished by Da'ud, the emir of Kerak.
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In 1243, Jerusalem again came under Christian rule, and the walls were repaired. The [[Kharezmian Tatar]]s took the city in 1244; they, in turn, were driven out by the Egyptians in 1247. In 1260, the Tatars under [[Hulaku Khan]] overran the whole land, and the Jews that were in Jerusalem had to flee to the neighboring villages.
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[[Image:640px-View_and_Plan_of_Jerusalem_Fac_simile_of_a_Woodout_in_the_Liber_Chronicarum_Mundi_large_folio_Nuremberg_1493.png|right|thumb|350px|View and Plan of Jerusalem. A woodcut in the "Liber Chronicarum Mundi," Nuremberg, 1493]]
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In 1244, Sultan [[Malik al-Muattam]] razed the [[Jerusalem's Old City Walls|city walls]], rendering it again defenseless and dealing a heavy blow to the city's status. In the middle of the thirteenth century, Jerusalem was captured by the Egyptian [[Mamluk]]s.  
  
=== 19th &mdash; early 20th centuries ===
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In 1517, it was taken over by the [[Ottoman Empire]] and enjoyed a period of renewal and peace under [[Suleiman the Magnificent]]. The walls of what is now known as the Old City were built at this time. The rule of Suleiman and the following Ottoman Sultans are described by some as an age of "religious peace"; Jews, Christians, and Muslims enjoyed the form of religious freedom interpreted in Muslim law. At this time, it was possible to find [[synagogue]], [[church]], and [[mosque]] on the same street. The city remained open to all religions according to Muslim law. Economic stagnation, however, characterized the region after the rule of Suleiman.
[[Image:Jews in Jerusalem 1895.jpg|thumb|[[Jew]]s in Jerusalem [[1895]]]]
 
The modern history of Jerusalem began in the mid-[[nineteenth century]], with the decline of the [[Ottoman Empire]]. At that time, the city was a backwater, with a population that did not exceed 8,000. Nevertheless, it was, even then, an extremely heterogeneous city because of its significance to [[Judaism]], [[Christianity]], and [[Islam]]. The population was divided into four major communities—Jewish, Christian, Muslim, and [[Armenia]]n—and the first three of these could be further divided into countless subgroups, based on precise religious affiliation or country of origin. An example of this would be the [[Church of the Holy Sepulchre]], which was meticulously partitioned between the [[Greek Orthodox]], [[Catholic]], [[Armenian Church|Armenian]], [[Coptic Church|Coptic]], and [[Ethiopian Church|Ethiopian]] churches. Tensions between the groups ran so deep that the keys to the shrine were kept with a 'neutral' Muslim family for safekeeping.
 
  
At that time, the communities were located mainly around their primary shrines. The [[Muslim]] community, then the largest, surrounded the [[Haram ash-Sharif]] or Temple Mount (northeast), the Christians lived mainly in the vicinity of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre (northwest), the [[Jew]]s lived mostly on the slope above the [[Western Wall]] (southeast), and the Armenians lived near the [[Zion Gate]] (southwest). In no way was this division exclusive, however, it did form the basis of the four quarters during the British Mandate period (1917-1948).
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=== Nineteenth and early twentieth century ===
[[Image:Historische_Karte_von_Jerusalem_MK1888.png|thumb|left|200px|1888 German map of Jerusalem]]
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The modern history of Jerusalem is said to begin in the mid-nineteenth century, with the decline of the [[Ottoman Empire]]. At that time, the city was small and by some measures insignificant, with a population that did not exceed 8,000.  
  
Several changes occurred in the mid-nineteenth century, which had long-lasting effects on the city: their implications can be felt today and lie at the root of the [[Palestinian]]-[[Israel]]i conflict over Jerusalem. The first of these was a trickle of Jewish immigrants, from the Middle East and Eastern Europe, which shifted the balance of population. The first such immigrants were [[Orthodox Judaism|Orthodox]] Jews: some were elderly individuals, who came to die in Jerusalem and be buried on the Mount of Olives; others were students, who came with their families to await the coming of the [[Messiah]], and adding new life to the local population. At the same time, European colonial powers also began seeking toeholds in the city, hoping to expand their influence pending the imminent collapse of the Ottoman Empire. This was also an age of Christian religious revival, and many churches sent missionaries to [[proselytize]] among the Muslim and especially the Jewish populations, believing that this would speed the Second Coming of Christ. Finally, the combination of European colonialism and religious zeal was expressed in a new scientific interest in the biblical lands in general and Jerusalem in particular. Archeological and other expeditions made some spectacular finds, which increased interest in Jerusalem even more.
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It was still a very heterogeneous city because of its significance to [[Judaism|Jews]], [[Christianity|Christians]], and [[Islam|Muslims]].
[[Image:Jewish Quarter 1930.jpg|thumb|The Jewish Quarter in Jerusalem [[1930]]]]
 
By the [[1860s]], the city, with an area of only 1 square kilometer, was already overcrowded. Thus began the construction of the New City, the part of Jerusalem outside of the city walls. Seeking new areas to stake their claims, the Russian Orthodox Church began constructing a complex, now known as the Russian Compound, a few hundred meters from [[Jaffa Gate]]. The first attempt at residential settlement outside the walls of Jerusalem was begun by Jews, who built a small complex on the hill overlooking [[Zion Gate]], across the [[Valley of Hinnom]]. This settlement, known as [[Mishkenot Shaananim]], eventually flourished and set the precedent for other new communities to spring up to the west and north of the Old City. In time, as the communities grew and connected geographically, this became known as the New City.
 
  
=== British conquest ===
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Inhabitants were divided into four major communities; Jewish, Christian, Muslim, and [[Armenia]]n. The first three were further divided into numerous subgroups based on more precise subdivisions of their religious affiliation or country of origin.  
[[Image:Jewish_legion_hakotel_1917.jpg|right|thumb|[[Jewish Legion]] soldiers at the Western Wall after taking part in 1917 British conquest of Jerusalem]]
 
The [[United Kingdom|British]] were victorious over the [[Turks]] in the Middle East and with  victory in Palestine, General Sir [[Edmund Allenby]], commander-in-chief of the Egyptian Expeditionary Force entered Jerusalem on foot, out of respect for the Holy City, on [[December 11th]], [[1917]].
 
By the time [[Edmund Allenby|General Allenby]] took Jerusalem from the Ottomans in 1917, the new city was a patchwork of neighborhoods and communities, each with a distinct ethnic character.  
 
  
This continued under British rule, as the neighborhoods flourished and the Old City of Jerusalem gradually emerged as little more than an impoverished older neighborhood.  One of the British bequests to the city was a [[town planning]] order requiring new buildings in the city to be faced with [[sandstone]] and thus preserving some of the overall look of the city.
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This division into these communities is clearly seen in the [[Church of the Holy Sepulchre]], which was partitioned meticulously among the [[Greek Orthodox]], [[Catholic]], [[Armenian Church|Armenian]], [[Coptic Church|Coptic]], and [[Ethiopian Church|Ethiopian]] churches. Each group was given a different, little section of the sanctuary, and tensions between the groups ran so deep that the keys to the shrine were kept with a “neutral” Muslim family for safekeeping.
  
== Geography ==
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Each community was located around its respective shrine. The [[Muslim]] community, then the largest, surrounded the Haram ash-Sharif or [[Temple Mount]] (northeast), the Christians lived mainly in the vicinity of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre (northwest), the [[Jew]]s lived mostly on the slope above the [[Western Wall]] (southeast), and the Armenians lived near the [[Zion Gate]] (southwest). These weren't total and exclusive. Nevertheless, these came to form the basis of the four quarters established during the British Mandate period (1917–1948).
Jerusalem is situated in {{coor dms|31|46|45|N|35|13|25|E|}}, upon the southern spur of a plateau the eastern side of which slopes from 2,460 ft. above sea-level north of the [[Temple in Jerusalem|Temple area]] to 2,130 ft. at the southeastern extremity. The western hill is about 2,500 ft. high and slopes southeast from the Judean plateau.
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[[Image:596px-Jerusalem1947.png|thumb|right|350px|Main residential areas of Jerusalem in 1947.]]
  
Jerusalem is surrounded upon all sides by valleys, of which those on the north are less pronounced than those on the other three sides. The principal two valleys start northwest of the present city. The first runs eastward with a slight southerly bend (the present Wadi al-Joz), then, deflecting directly south (formerly known as "[[Kidron]] Valley," the modern Wadi Sitti Maryam), divides the [[Mount of Olives]] from the city. The second runs directly south on the western side of the city, turns eastward at its southeastern extremity, then runs directly east, and joins the first valley near Bir Ayyub ("Job's Well"). It was called in olden times the "[[Valley of Hinnom]]," and is the modern Wadi al-Rababi, which is not to be identified with the first-mentioned valley.
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Several changes occurred in the mid-nineteenth century, which had long-lasting effects on the city. The implications of these changes can be felt today and many lie at the root of the present and ongoing [[Palestine|Palestinian]]-[[Israel]] conflict over Jerusalem.  
  
A third valley, commencing in the northwest where is now the Damascus Gate, ran south-southeasterly down to the [[Pool of Siloam]], and divided the lower part into two hills (the lower and the upper cities of Josephus). This is probably the later [[Tyropoeon Valley|Tyropoeon ("Cheese-makers'") valley]]. A fourth valley led from the western hill (near the present Jaffa Gate) over to the Temple area: it is represented in modern Jerusalem by David Street. A fifth cut the eastern hill into a northern and a southern part. Later Jerusalem was thus built upon four spurs.Today, neighboring towns are [[Bethlehem]] and [[Beit Jala]] at the southern city border, and [[Abu Dis]] to the East.
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The first of these was a trickle of Jewish immigrants, from the [[Middle East]] and eastern Europe, which shifted the balance of population. The first such immigrants were [[Orthodox Judaism|Orthodox Jews]]: some were elderly individuals, who came to die in Jerusalem and be buried on the Mount of Olives; others were students, who came with their families to await the coming of the [[Messiah]]. At the same time, European colonial powers also began seeking toeholds in the city, hoping to expand their influence pending the imminent collapse of the Ottoman Empire. This was also an age of Christian religious revival, and many churches sent missionaries to proselytize among the Muslim, and especially, the Jewish populations, believing that this would speed the Second Coming of Christ. Finally, the combination of European colonialism and religious zeal was expressed in a new scientific interest in the biblical lands in general and Jerusalem in particular. Archeological and other expeditions made some spectacular finds, which increased interest in Jerusalem even more.
  
== Neighborhoods, places and monuments ==
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By the 1860s, the city, with an area of only 1 square kilometer, was already overcrowded, leading to the construction of the New City, the part of Jerusalem outside of the city walls. Seeking new areas to stake their claims, the [[Russian Orthodox Church]] began constructing a complex, now known as the Russian Compound, a few hundred meters from [[Jaffa Gate]]. The first attempt at residential settlement outside the walls of Jerusalem was begun by Jews, who built a small complex on the hill overlooking [[Zion Gate]], across the [[Valley of Hinnom]]. This settlement, known as [[Mishkenot Shaananim]], eventually flourished and set the precedent for other new communities to spring up to the west and north of the Old City. In time, as the communities grew and connected geographically, this became known as the New City.
  
* ''See: [[List of places in Jerusalem]]''
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=== British conquest ===
 +
[[Image:Jewish_legion_hakotel_1917.jpg|right|400px|thumb|[[Jewish Legion]] soldiers at the Western Wall after taking part in 1917 British conquest of Jerusalem]]
  
== Local government ==
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Eventually, the [[United Kingdom|British]] conquered the [[Turks]] in the Middle East and Palestine. On December 11, 1917, General Sir [[Edmund Allenby]], commander-in-chief of the Egyptian Expeditionary Force, entered Jerusalem on foot out of respect for the Holy City.
=== Mayors ===
 
''See the [[List of mayors of Jerusalem]]''
 
  
Current mayor of Jerusalem is [[Uri Lupolianski]], member of the local [[United Torah Judaism]] faction and the first [[Haredi Judaism|Haredi]] Jew to attain this position in the city.
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By the time General Allenby took Jerusalem from the Ottomans in 1917, the new city was a patchwork of neighborhoods and communities, each with a distinct ethnic character.  
  
== Demographics ==
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This circumstance continued under British rule. The neighborhoods tended to flourish, leaving the Old City of Jerusalem to slide into little more than an impoverished older neighborhood. One of the British bequests to the city was a [[town planning]] order requiring new buildings in the city to be faced with [[sandstone]] and thus preserving some of the overall look of the city.
''See the [[Demographics of Jerusalem]]''
 
  
== Jerusalem and the Arab-Israeli conflict ==
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===The Status Quo===
The [[United Nations]] proposed, in its 1947 plan for the [[partition of Palestine]], for Jerusalem to be a city under international administration. However, on [[January 23]], [[1950]] the [[Knesset]] passed a resolution that stated Jerusalem was the capital of Israel.
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From the seventeenth to the nineteenth century, various Catholic European nations petitioned the [[Ottoman Empire]] for Catholic control of the “holy places.” The Franciscans traditionally were the Catholic custodians of the holy sites. Control of these sites changed back and forth between the Western and Eastern churches throughout this period. Sultan [[Abd-ul-Mejid I]] (1839–1861), perhaps out of frustration, published a [[firman]] that laid out in detail the exact rights and responsibility of each community at the Holy Sepulchre. This document became known as the ''Status Quo,'' and is still the basis for the complex protocol of the shrine. The ''Status Quo'' was upheld by the British Mandate and [[Jordan]]. After the 1967 Arab-Israeli War, and the passing of the Old City into Israeli hands, the [[Knesset]] passed a law protecting the holy places. Five Christian communities currently have rights in the Holy Sepulchre: the Greek Patriarchate, Latins (Western Rite Roman Catholics), [[Armenian Orthodox Church|Armenians]], [[Coptic Orthodox Church|Copts]], and [[Syriac Orthodox Church|Syriac Orthodox]].
  
Following the [[1948 Arab-Israeli War]], when a Palestinian-Arab state failed to materialize and the British Mandate of Palestine was invaded by [[Egypt]] and [[Jordan]], Jerusalem was divided. The Western half of the New City became part of the new state of Israel, while the eastern half, along with the Old City, was annexed by Jordan. Jordan did not allow Jewish access to the [[Western Wall]] (also known to non-Jews as the Wailing Wall) and [[Temple Mount]], Judaism's holiest sites, in the Old City.
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=== Six-Day War aftermath ===
 +
East Jerusalem was captured by the [[Israel Defense Force]] following the [[Six-Day War]] in 1967. Most Jews celebrated the event as a liberation of the city; a new Israeli holiday was created, [[Jerusalem Day]] (''Yom Yerushalayim''), and the most popular secular [[Hebrew language|Hebrew]] song, "Jerusalem of Gold" (''Yerushalayim shel zahav''), was written in celebration. Following this, the medieval Magharba Quarter was demolished, and a huge public plaza was built in its place behind the Western Wall.
  
[[East Jerusalem]] was captured by the Israelis in the [[Six-Day War]] of 1967, along with the Western Wall and the [[Temple Mount]]. Under Israel, members of all religions were largely granted access to their holy sites. The medieval Magharba neighbourhood in front of the Wall was demolished and a large open air plaza constructed. This plaza is a favored site of Jewish prayer services. However, concerns have been raised about several attacks on the [[Al-Aqsa Mosque]], notably a serious fire in 1969 (arson by a delusional Australian tourist) and tunnels opened beneath that mosque, discovered in 1981, 1988 and 1996. The status of East Jerusalem remains a highly controversial issue.
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== Current status ==
 +
Presently, the status of the city is disputed.  
  
:''See also: [[Crusades]], [[Temple in Jerusalem]], [[Kingdom of Jerusalem]], [[Orient House]]''
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Israeli law designates Jerusalem as the capital of [[Israel]]; only a few countries recognize this designation.
  
== Current status ==
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Additionally, Israeli [[Jerusalem Law]] regards Jerusalem as the capital of the [[State of Israel]], and as the center of [[Jerusalem District]]; it serves as the country's seat of government and otherwise functions as capital. Countries that do not recognize Israeli sovereignty over some or all of the city maintain their embassies in [[Tel Aviv]] or in the [[suburb]]s.  
Israeli law designates Jerusalem as the capital of Israel; only a few countries recognize this designation. See [[#Status_as_Israel's_capital]].
 
  
According to the [[1947 UN Partition Plan]], Jerusalem was supposed to be an international city, not part of either the proposed Jewish or Arab state. Following the [[1948 Arab-Israeli War]], West Jerusalem was occupied by Israel, while East Jerusalem (including the Old City) was occupied by [[Jordan]], along with the [[West Bank]]. The Jordanian annexation of the West Bank (including East Jerusalem) was not internationally recognized, except by the [[United Kingdom]] and [[Pakistan]].
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The [[1947 UN Partition Plan]] states that Jerusalem is supposed to be an international city, not a part of either the proposed Jewish or Arab state. Following the [[1948 Arab-Israeli War]], West Jerusalem was controlled by Israel, while East Jerusalem (including the Old City), and the [[West Bank]] were controlled by [[Jordan]]. Jordan's authority over the West Bank (including East Jerusalem) was not recognized internationally, except by the [[United Kingdom]] and [[Pakistan]].  
  
In the 1967 [[Six-Day War]], Israel occupied East Jerusalem, and began taking steps to unify the city under Israeli control. It annexed 6.4 km² of Jordanian Jerusalem and 64 km² of the nearby West Bank. <!-- renaming the entire area "East Jerusalem" - is this true? ---> (see [http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/static/in_depth/world/2001/israel_and_palestinians/key_maps/3.stm Maps of Jerusalem pre- and post-1967]).  Residents of the annexed territory were offered Israeli citizenship on condition they renounce their Jordanian citizenship, which most of them refused to do.
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Following the 1967 [[Six-Day War]], Israel gained control also of East Jerusalem, and began taking steps to unify the city under Israeli control.  
  
In [[1988]], Jordan withdrew all its claims to the West Bank (including Jerusalem) in favor of the [[Palestine Liberation Organization]].
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In 1988, Jordan withdrew all its claims to the West Bank (including Jerusalem), yielding them to the [[Palestine Liberation Organization]].  
  
The status of Palestinians in East Jerusalem is also controversial. The Palestinian residents of East Jerusalem have a 'permanent resident' status, which allows them to move within Israel proper. However should they move out of Israel proper (e.g. into the Palestinian territories), this status will be lost and they will not be able to return. Since many have extended families in the West Bank, only miles away, this often implies enormous hassles. By Israel's Citizenship Law, they are entitled to Israeli citizenship, which they can receive automatically or almost automatically, provided that they do not have any other citizenship. Thus, many Palestinians who would like to hold their Jordanian passports have to retain the status of permanent residents. Some Palestinians decline to accept citizenship since they consider it equivalent to accepting Israel's annexation.
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The status of Palestinians in East Jerusalem is also controversial. The Palestinian residents of East Jerusalem have a “permanent resident” status, which allows them to move within Israel proper. However should they move out of Israel proper (for example, into the Palestinian territories), this status will be revoked and they will not be able to return. Since many have extended families in the West Bank, only miles away, this often implies great difficulty. The matter of Israeli citizenship and related laws is a complex matter for the Palestinians.  
  
Another issue is the status of family members not recorded in the census preceding the Israeli annexation of East Jerusalem. They must apply for entry into East Jerusalem for family reunification with the Ministry of the Interior. Palestinians complain that such applications have been arbitrarily denied for purposes of limiting the Palestinian population in East Jerusalem, while Israeli authorities claim they treat Palestinians fairly. These and other aspects have been a source of criticism from Palestinians and Israeli [[human rights]] organizations, such as [[B'Tselem]].
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Family members not residing in East Jerusalem prior to the point of Israeli control must apply for entry into East Jerusalem for family reunification with the Ministry of the Interior. Palestinians complain that such applications have been arbitrarily denied for purposes of limiting the Palestinian population in East Jerusalem, while Israeli authorities claim they treat Palestinians fairly. These and other aspects have been a source of criticism from Palestinians and Israeli [[human rights]] organizations, such as [[B'Tselem]].
  
 
== Status as Israel's capital ==
 
== Status as Israel's capital ==
[[Image:Knesset in Jerusalem Israel.jpg|thumb|150px|The modern [[Knesset]] building, Israel's parliament, in Jerusalem today]]
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[[Image:800px-Knesset in Jerusalem Israel.jpg|thumb|400px|The modern [[Knesset]] building, Israel's parliament, in Jerusalem today]]
  
In [[1980]], the Israeli [[Knesset]] confirmed Jerusalem's status as the nation's "eternal and indivisible capital", by passing the ''[[Jerusalem Law|Basic Law: Jerusalem &mdash; Capital of Israel]]''.
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In 1980 the Israeli [[Knesset]] passed the ''[[Jerusalem Law|Basic Law: Jerusalem, Capital of Israel]]'' confirming Jerusalem's status as the nation's "eternal and indivisible capital."
  
As of 2004, only two states, [[Costa Rica]] and [[El Salvador]], have their embassies in Jerusalem (since 1984), but the [[Consulate General]] of [[Greece]] as well as that of the [[United Kingdom]] and the [[United States]] is based there. Additionally, [[Bolivia]] and [[Paraguay]] have their embassies in [[Mevasseret Zion]], a suburb of Jerusalem.
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[[Costa Rica]] and [[El Salvador]] have their embassies in Jerusalem (since 1984), but the [[Consulate General]] of [[Greece]] as well as that of the [[United Kingdom]] and the [[United States]] are based there. Additionally, [[Bolivia]] and [[Paraguay]] have their embassies in [[Mevasseret Zion]], a suburb of Jerusalem.
  
All the branches of Israeli government (Presidential, Legislative, Judicial, and Administrative) are seated in Jerusalem. The Knesset building is well known in Jerusalem.
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All the branches of Israeli government (presidential, legislative, judicial, and administrative) are seated in Jerusalem. The Knesset building is well known in Jerusalem, but still very few countries maintain their embassies in Jerusalem.
  
=== Palestinian aspirations ===
 
 
Palestinian groups claim either all of Jerusalem (''Al-Quds'') or East Jerusalem as the capital of a future [[Palestinian state]].
 
Palestinian groups claim either all of Jerusalem (''Al-Quds'') or East Jerusalem as the capital of a future [[Palestinian state]].
  
=== UN position ===
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=== United Nations position ===
The position of the United Nations on the question of Jerusalem is contained in General Assembly resolution 181(11) and subsequent resolutions of the General Assembly and the Security Council concerning this question.
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The [[United Nations]]’ position on the question of Jerusalem is contained in [[UN General Assembly|General Assembly]] resolution 181(11) and subsequent resolutions of the General Assembly and the [[UN Security Council|Security Council]].
 
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The [[UN Security Council]], in [[UN Security Council Resolution 478|UN Resolution 478]], declared that the 1980 [[Jerusalem Law]] declaring Jerusalem as Israel's "eternal and indivisible" capital was "null and void and must be rescinded forthwith" (14-0-1, with United States abstaining). The resolution instructed member states to withdraw their diplomatic representation from the city as a punitive measure.
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The UN Security Council, in UN Resolution 478, declared that the 1980 [[Jerusalem Law]] declaring Jerusalem as Israel's "eternal and indivisible" capital was "null and void and must be rescinded forthwith" (14-0-1, with the [[United States]] abstaining). The resolution instructed member states to withdraw their diplomatic representation from the city.
 
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Before this resolution, thirteen countries maintained their embassies in Jerusalem: [[Bolivia]], [[Chile]], [[Colombia]], [[Costa Rica]], [[Dominican Republic]], [[Ecuador]], [[El Salvador]], [[Guatemala]], [[Haiti]], [[the Netherlands]], [[Panama]], [[Uruguay]], [[Venezuela]]. Following the UN resolution, all thirteen moved their embassies to Tel Aviv. Costa Rica and El Salvador moved theirs back to Jerusalem in [[1984]].
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Before this resolution, 13 countries maintained embassies in Jerusalem. Following the UN resolution, all 13 moved their embassies to [[Tel Aviv]]. Two moved theirs back to Jerusalem in 1984.
  
 
=== United States position ===
 
=== United States position ===
The United States ''[[Jerusalem Embassy Act]]'', passed by [[U.S. Congress|Congress]] in 1995, states that ''"Jerusalem should be recognized as the capital of the State of Israel; and the United States Embassy in Israel should be established in Jerusalem no later than May 31, 1999"''. Since then, the relocation of the embassy from Tel Aviv is being suspended by the President semi-annually, each time stating that ''"[the] Administration remains committed to beginning the process of moving our embassy to Jerusalem"''. As a result of the Embassy Act, official U.S. documents and web sites refer to Jerusalem as the capital of Israel.
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The [[United States]] ''[[Jerusalem Embassy Act]],'' passed by [[U.S. Congress|Congress]] in 1995, states that "Jerusalem should be recognized as the capital of the State of Israel; and the United States Embassy in Israel should be established in Jerusalem no later than May 31, 1999." As a result of the Embassy Act, official U.S. documents and websites refer to Jerusalem as the capital of Israel.
 
 
Section 214 of the [[Foreign Relations Authorization Act]], 2003 states:
 
 
 
:"The Congress maintains its commitment to relocating the United States Embassy in Israel to Jerusalem and urges the President [...] to immediately begin the process of relocating the United States Embassy in Israel to Jerusalem". [http://www.mideastweb.org/jeruembassy2002.htm]
 
 
 
However, [[George W. Bush|President Bush]] has argued that this section is merely "advisory", stating that it "impermissibly interferes with the President's constitutional authority". [http://www.state.gov/m/rm/rls/rm/2002/13888.htm] The [[U.S. Constitution]] reserves the conduct of foreign policy to the President and acts of Congress which make foreign policy are invalid for that reason.
 
 
 
=== United Kingdom position ===
 
UK government statement [http://www.fco.gov.uk/servlet/Front?pagename=OpenMarket/Xcelerate/ShowPage&c=Page&cid=1076522475865]
 
<!--- better ref: http://www.britishembassy.gov.uk/servlet/Front?pagename=OpenMarket/Xcelerate/ShowPage&c=Page&cid=1064571767798 --->
 
 
 
:"In line with the Declaration of Principles of 13 September 1993 and the Interim Agreement of 28 September 1995, both agreed by Israel and the PLO, the Government regards the status of Jerusalem as still to be determined in permanent status negotiations between the parties. Pending agreement, we recognise de facto Israeli control of West Jerusalem but consider East Jerusalem to be occupied territory. We recognise no sovereignty over the city."
 
 
 
:"Jerusalem has a unique religious and cultural importance for Christians, Jews and Muslims, and we attach great importance to ensuring access to Jerusalem and freedom of worship there for those of all faiths."
 
 
 
==Arguments for and against internationalization==
 
The proposal that Jerusalem should be a city under international administration is still made at times by Christians, the only interested party without a large population in the city. (Internationalization is the proposal favored by the [[Pope]].) Most negotiations regarding the future status of Jerusalem have however been based on partition; for example, one scheme would have Israel keep the Jewish quarter and the [[Western Wall]] (the "Wailing Wall"), with the rest of the Old City and the Temple Mount being transferred to a new Palestinian state. Some Israelis are opposed to any division of Jerusalem, based on cultural, historic, and religious grounds. Others believe that areas such as the Old City which are sacred to Judaism, Christianity, and Islam should be under international or multilateral control. Palestinians have argued for an open city, though its feasibility has been challenged given the existence of mutual distrust.
 
 
 
== Jerusalem in Islam ==
 
Muslims traditionally regard Jerusalem as having a special religious status, partly because of its link with people regarded as [[Prophets of Islam]] - particularly [[David]], [[Solomon]], and [[Jesus]] - and partly because it was the first [[qibla]] (direction of prayer) in Islam before the [[Kaaba|kabah]] in [[Makka]], but also because the "farthest Mosque" (''[[Al-Aqsa Mosque|al-masjid al-Aqsa]]'') in verse ([[Al-Isra|17]]:1) of the [[Qur'an]] is traditionally interpreted by Muslims as referring to the [[Temple Mount]] in Jerusalem, on which the mosque of that name now stands:
 
 
 
: &#1587;&#1576;&#1581;&#1575;&#1606; &#1575;&#1604;&#1584;&#1610; &#1571;&#1587;&#1585;&#1609; &#1576;&#1593;&#1576;&#1583;&#1607; &#1604;&#1610;&#1604;&#1575;&#1611; &#1605;&#1606; &#1575;&#1604;&#1605;&#1587;&#1580;&#1583; &#1575;&#1604;&#1581;&#1585;&#1575;&#1605; &#1573;&#1604;&#1609; &#1575;&#1604;&#1605;&#1587;&#1580;&#1583; &#1575;&#1604;&#1571;&#1602;&#1589;&#1609; &#1575;&#1604;&#1584;&#1610; &#1576;&#1575;&#1585;&#1603;&#1606;&#1575; &#1581;&#1608;&#1604;&#1607;
 
: Glory to (Allah) Who did take His servant for a Journey by night from the Sacred Mosque to the farthest Mosque, whose precincts We did bless (Yusuf Ali's translation)
 
 
 
On that night, the night of the [[Isra]] and [[Mi'raj]] ([[Rajab]] [[27]]), [[Muhammad]] is believed to have been taken by the flying steed [[Buraq]] to visit Jerusalem, and thence [[heaven]], in a single night.  Many Muslims celebrate its anniversary with gatherings and feasting, although [[Wahhabi]]s and several other groups take the position that no regular festivals are permissible except the two [[Eid]]s.
 
 
 
Several [[hadith]]s refer to Jerusalem (Bayt al-Maqdis) as the place where all mankind will be gathered on the [[Day of Judgement]].
 
 
 
The earliest dated stone inscriptions containing verses from the [[Qur'an]] appear to be [[Abd al-Malik]]'s in the [[Dome of the Rock]] in Jerusalem, from 72 AH.
 
 
 
After the conquest of Jerusalem by the armies of the second [[Caliph]], [[Umar ibn al-Khattab]], parts of the city soon took on a Muslim character. According to Muslim historians, the city insisted on surrendering to the [[Caliph]] directly rather than to any general, and he signed a pact with its Christian inhabitants, the [[Covenant of Umar]].  He was horrified to find the [[Temple Mount]]/[[Haram al Sharif]] being used as a rubbish dump, and ordered that it be cleaned up and prayed there.  However, when the Bishop invited him to pray in the [[Church of the Holy Sepulchre]], he refused, lest he create a precedent for its use as a mosque.  According to some Muslim historians, he also built a crude mosque on the Temple Mount, which would be replaced by Abd al-Malik. The [[Byzantine]] chronicler [[Theophanes Confessor]] ([[751]]-[[818]]) gives a slightly different picture of this event, claiming that Umar "began to restore the Temple at Jerusalem" with encouragement from local Jews.
 
 
 
In [[688]] the [[Caliph]] [[Abd al-Malik]] built the [[Dome of the Rock]] on the [[Temple Mount]], also known as [[Noble Sanctuary]]; in [[728]] the cupola over the [[Al-Aqsa Mosque]] was erected, the same being restored in [[758]]-[[775]] by [[Al-Mahdi]]. In [[831]] [[Al-Ma'mun]] restored the Dome of the Rock and built the octagonal wall. In [[1016]] the Dome was partly destroyed by [[earthquake]]s; but it was repaired in [[1022]].
 
 
 
In the context of proposals to radically reinterpret early Islamic history, certain [[Orientalist]]s, such as [[John Wansbrough]], have proposed that Muhammad's Night Journey to Jerusalem - the [[Isra and Miraj]], one of the principal foundations of Jerusalem's sanctity in Islam - was a later invention intended to account for an otherwise obscure verse. Others, such as [[Patricia Crone]], have proposed that Jerusalem was in fact the original Islamic holy city, and that the sanctity of [[Mecca]] and [[Medina]] was a later innovation. Neither of these controversial theories enjoys wide acceptance, least of all among Muslims.
 
 
 
== Jerusalem in the Torah and Tanakh / Old Testament ==
 
Jerusalem is mentioned over 700 times in the [[Torah]] and [[Tanakh]], or [[Old Testament]], a text sacred to both [[Judaism]] and [[Christianity]]. In Judaism it is considered the [[Written Law]], the basis for the [[Oral Law]] ([[Mishnah]], [[Talmud]] and [[Shulkhan Arukh]]) studied, practiced and treasured by [[Jew]]s and [[Judaism]] for three millennia. ([[List of Jewish Prayers and Blessings]]).  In Christianity, it is considered as the account of God's relationship with His chosen people - the original [[covenant]] - and the essential prelude to the events narrated in the [[New Testament]], including both universal commandments (eg the [[Ten Commandments]]) and obsolete or Judaism-specific ones.
 
 
 
For example, the book of [[Psalms]], which has been frequently recited and memorized by Jews and Christians for centuries, says: (etc.)
 
 
 
*"By the rivers of Babylon we sat down and wept when we remembered Zion." (Psalms 137:1)
 
*"For there they that carried us away captive required of us a song; and they that wasted us ''required of us'' mirth, ''saying'', Sing us ''one'' of the songs of Zion.  How shall we sing the Lord's song in a strange land? '''If I forget thee, O Jerusalem, let my right hand forget ''her cunning'' '''.  If I do not remember thee, let my tongue cleave to the roof of my mouth; if I prefer not Jerusalem above my chief joy.  Remember, O Lord, the children of Edom in the day of Jerusalem; who said, Rase ''it'', rase ''it'', even to the foundation thereof; O daughter of Babylon, that art to be destroyed; happy shall he be, that repayeth thee as thou hast served us." (Psalms 137:3-8) ([[King James Version]], with italics for words not in the original Hebrew)
 
*"O God, the nations have entered into your inheritance, they have defiled the sanctuary of your holiness, they have turned Jerusalem into heaps of rubble...they have shed their blood like water round Jerusalem..." (Psalms 79:1-3);
 
*"...O Jerusalem, the built up Jerusalem is like a city that is united together...Pray for the peace of Jerusalem..." (Psalms 122:2-6);
 
*"Jerusalem is surrounded by mountains as God surrounds his people forever" (Psalms 125:3);
 
*"The builder of Jerusalem is God, the outcast of Israel he will gather in...Praise God O Jerusalem, laud your God O Zion." (Psalms 147:2-12)
 
  
== Jerusalem, Jews and Judaism ==
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However, for years the relocation of the embassy from Tel Aviv was suspended semi-annually by the United States president, stating each time that "[the] Administration remains committed to beginning the process of moving our embassy to Jerusalem.”
  
[[Image:JerusalemEmblem.jpg|right|thumb|120px|Jewish emblem of Jerusalem]]
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On December 6, 2017 U.S. President [[Donald Trump]] officially recognized Jerusalem as Israel's capital and announced his intention to move the American embassy to Jerusalem. On May 14, 2018, the United States officially moved the location of its embassy to Jerusalem, transforming its Tel Aviv location into a consulate.
  
=== Jerusalem in Torah and Tanakh ===
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== Jerusalem and Judaism ==
Jerusalem has long been embedded into the religious consciousness of the Jewish people. [[Jew]]s have always studied and personalized the struggle by [[King David]] to capture Jerusalem and his desire to build the [[Jewish temple]] there as described in the [[Book of Samuel]] and his yearnings about Jerusalem which became part of the popular prayers and songs.
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Jerusalem has long been embedded into the religious consciousness of the Jewish people. [[Judaism|Jews]] have always identified with the struggle of [[David|King David]] to capture Jerusalem and his desire to build the [[Jewish temple]] there as described in the [[Book of Samuel]].
 
 
=== Jerusalem and the Jewish religious calendar ===
 
[[Image:Western wall jerusalem night.jpg|thumb|Orthodox Jews worship at the Western Wall, Jerusalem]]
 
Two major Jewish festivals observed by most [[Jew]]s conclude with the words: "Next Year in Jerusalem" ("''l'shanah haba'ah birushalayim''") or "Next Year in Rebuilt Jerusalem" ("''l'shanah haba'ah birushalayim hab'nuyah''"):
 
 
 
*At the end of the [[Passover]] [[Seder]] on each night, the night's meal and recitation of prayers about the miracles of the ancient [[Exodus]] from Egypt concludes with the loud repetitious singing of "Next Year in Jerusalem".
 
*The holiest day on the Jewish calendar, [[Yom Kippur]], also concludes with the singing and exclamation of "Next Year in Jerusalem".
 
 
 
Each of these days has an associated holy text, the ''[[Hagada]]'' for ''Pesach'' (Passover) and the ''[[Machzor]]'' for ''Yom Kippur'' (Day of Atonement), which stresses the desire to return to Jerusalem.
 
 
 
Today, with over a quarter million Jews practicing [[Orthodox Judaism]] living in Jerusalem, the Jewish festivals come to life, and result in many synagogues and the [[Western Wall]] witnessing tens of thousands of fervent worshipers flooding the Jewish places of worship.
 
 
 
[[Image:Second Temple Destroyed.jpg|thumb|Artist's impression of Jerusalem's [[Second Temple]] fiery destruction 2,000 years ago by [[Roman Empire|Rome]].]]
 
The saddest fast-day on the Jewish religious calendar is the [[Ninth of Av]] when Jews traditionally spent the day crying for the loss of their two Holy Temples and the destruction of Jerusalem. This major (24 hour) fast is preceded on the calendar by two minor [[dawn]] to [[dusk]] fast days, the  [[Tenth of Tevet]] mourning for the time [[Babylonia]] laid siege to the [[First Temple]], and for the tragedy of the [[Seventeenth of Tammuz]] when [[Rome]] broke through the outer walls of the [[Second Temple]].  
 
 
 
The words used when Jews console any mourner during the customary [[Seven Days of Mourning]] are:
 
:"May God comfort you among all the mourners for Zion and Jerusalem"
 
  
 
=== Jerusalem and prayer ===
 
=== Jerusalem and prayer ===
[[Image:Building_Aish_HaTorah_Jerusalem.jpg|thumb|Opposite the [[Western Wall]] in [[Jerusalem]], at the Western Wall Plaza, a huge [[yeshiva]] building used for [[Torah study]] and [[Jewish prayer|prayers]] is built today]]
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The daily prayers recited by religious Jews three times a day over the last two thousand years mention Jerusalem and its functions multiple times. Some examples from the [[siddur]] (prayer book) and the [[amidah]] are:  
The daily prayers, recited by religious Jews three times a day over the last two thousand years, mention Jerusalem and its functions multiple times. Some examples from the [[siddur]] and the [[amidah]] are:  
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<blockquote>(Addressing God): "And to Jerusalem, your city, may you return in compassion, and may you rest within it, as you have spoke. May you rebuild it soon in our days as an eternal structure, and may you speedily establish the throne of (King) David within it. Blessed are you God, the builder of Jerusalem...May our eyes behold Your return to Zion in compassion. Blessed are you God, who restores his presence to Zion."</blockquote>
:(Addressing God): "And to Jerusalem, your city, may you return in compassion, and may you rest within it, as you have spoke. May you rebuild it soon in our days as an eternal structure, and may you speedily establish the throne of (King) David within it. Blessed are you God, the builder of Jerusalem...May our eyes behold Your return to Zion in compassion. Blessed are you God, who restores his presence to Zion."
 
  
Additionally when partaking of a daily meal with bread, the following is part of the required "Grace After Meals" which must be recited:
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Additionally when partaking of a daily meal with bread, the following is part of the "Grace after Meals" which must be recited:
:"Have mercy Lord our God, on Israel your people, on Jerusalem your city, on Zion the resting place of your glory, on the monarchy of (King David) your anointed, and on the great and holy (Temple) house upon which your name is called...Rebuild Jerusalem, the holy city, soon in our days. Blessed are you God who rebuilds Jerusalem in his mercy, amen."
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<blockquote>Have mercy, Lord our God, on Israel your people, on Jerusalem your city, on Zion, the resting place of your glory, on the monarchy of (King David) your anointed, and on the great and holy (Temple) house upon which your name is called…. Rebuild Jerusalem, the holy city, soon in our days. Blessed are you God who rebuilds Jerusalem in his mercy. Amen.</blockquote>
  
 
When partaking of a light meal, the thanksgiving blessing states:
 
When partaking of a light meal, the thanksgiving blessing states:
:"...Have mercy, Lord, our God, on Israel, your people; on Jerusalem, your city; and on Zion, the resting place of your glory; upon your altar, and upon your temple. Rebuild Jerusalem, the city of holiness, speedily in our days. Bring us up into it and gladden us in its rebuilding and let us eat from its fruit and be satisfied with its goodness and bless you upon it in holiness and purity. For you, God, are good and do good to all and we thank you for the land and for the nourishment..."
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<blockquote>Have mercy, Lord, our God, on Israel, your people; on Jerusalem, your city; and on Zion, the resting place of your glory; upon your altar, and upon your temple. Rebuild Jerusalem, the city of holiness, speedily in our days. Bring us up into it and gladden us in its rebuilding and let us eat from its fruit and be satisfied with its goodness and bless you upon it in holiness and purity. For you, God, are good and do good to all and we thank you for the land and for the nourishment…</blockquote>
 
 
When the Jews were exiled, first by the [[Babylonian Empire]] about 2,500 years ago and then by the [[Roman Empire]] 2,000 years ago, the great [[rabbis]] and scholars of the [[mishnah]] and [[Talmud]] instituted the policy that each [[synagogue]] should replicate the original [[Jewish temple]] and that it be constructed in such a way that all prayers in the [[siddur]] (prayer book) be recited while facing Jerusalem, as that is where the ancient temple stood and it was the only permissible place of the sacrificial offerings.
 
 
 
Thus synagogues in [[Europe]] face [[south]]; synagogues in [[North America]] face [[east]], countries to the [[south]] of Israel, such as [[Yemen]] or [[South Africa]] face north; and those to the east of Israel, face [[west]].  Even when in private prayer and not in a synagogue, a Jew faces Jerusalem, as mandated by Jewish law compiled by the rabbis in the [[Shulkhan Arukh]].
 
  
=== Customs in rememberance of Jerusalem ===
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When the Jews were exiled, first by the [[Babylonian Empire]] about 2,500 years ago and then by the [[Roman Empire]] 2,000 years ago, the great [[rabbi]]s and scholars of the [[mishnah]] and [[Talmud]] instituted the policy that each [[synagogue]] should replicate the original [[Jewish temple]] and that it be constructed in such a way that all prayers in the [[siddur]] be recited while facing Jerusalem, as that is where the ancient temple stood and it was the only permissible place of the sacrificial offerings.
[[Image:Breaking_glass_by_groom.jpg|thumb|[[Jew]]ish [[Jewish view of marriage|groom]] today, center, with right foot raised, about to break glass cup (covered by a small white cloth) with his right heel, recalling Jerusalem's destruction]]
 
There is a custom practiced by some, prior to when a Jewish groom walks to take his place beneath the bridal canopy, that a tiny amount of ash be touched upon his forehead earlier, so that he not allow his own rejoicing to be "greater" than the ongoing need to recall Jerusalem's fall. The well-known custom of the groom breaking a glass with the heel of his shoe after the ceremony is also related to the subject of mourning for Jerusalem. The groom recites the sentence from Psalms "If I forget thee, O Jerusalem, let my right hand forget ''her cunning''." (Psalms 137:5). The translation given is from the [[King James Version|KJV]], the italicized words are not present in the Hebrew. All traditional Jewish commentators, however, agree with this translation; it was common in Biblical Hebrew to not explicitly express any possible negative consequence.
 
  
Traditionally, there was an ancient custom to leave a patch near the entrance to one's home unpainted as a remembrance of the destruction (''zecher lechurban''), of the temples and Jerusalem.
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Thus, synagogues in [[Europe]] face south; synagogues in [[North America]] face east, synagogues in countries to the south of Israel, such as [[Yemen]] and [[South Africa]], face north; and synagogues in those countries to the east of Israel, face west. Even when in private prayer and not in a synagogue, a Jew faces Jerusalem, as mandated by Jewish law compiled by the rabbis in the [[Shulkhan Arukh]].
  
 
=== Western Wall in Jerusalem ===
 
=== Western Wall in Jerusalem ===
The [[Western Wall]], in the heart of the [[Old City]] of Jerusalem, is generally considered to be the only remains of the [[Second Temple]] from the era of the Roman conquests.  There are said to be esoteric texts in [[Midrash]] that mention God's promise to keep this one remnant of the outer temple wall standing as a memorial and reminder of the past. Hence the significance of the "Western Wall" (''kotel hama'aravi'') - also called the "Wailing Wall" by non-Jews, attesting to their perception of Jews' propensity to cry whenever they came before it.
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[[Image:800px-Western wall jerusalem night.jpg|thumb|400px|Orthodox Jews worship at the Western Wall, Jerusalem]]  
 
 
=== Rabbis and Jerusalem ===
 
 
 
The [[Talmud]] records that the rabbinical leader [[Yohanan ben Zakkai]] (c. 70 C.E.) urged a peaceful surrender, in order to save Jerusalem from destruction, but was not heeded as the city was under the control of the [[Zealots]].
 
 
 
An early expression of the Jewish desire to "return to Zion" is the journey of [[Yehuda Halevi]], who died in about [[1140]]. Jewish legend relates that as he came near Jerusalem, overpowered by the sight of the Holy City, he sang his most beautiful elegy, the celebrated "Zionide" ''Tzion ha-lo Tish'ali'' and that at that instant he was ridden down and killed by an Arab.
 
 
 
[[Image:Ramban_Synagogue_Jerusalem.jpg|thumb|Interior of restored Ramban synagogue in Jerusalem today]]
 
He was followed by [[Nahmanides]], the ''Ramban'', who, in [[1267]] emigrated to the land of Israel, and came for a short stay to live in Jerusalem. He wrote that he found barely ten Jews, as it had been desolated by the [[Crusades]], nevertheless, together they built a [[synagogue]] that is the oldest that still stands to this day, known as the "Ramban Synagogue".
 
 
 
Both [[Elijah ben Solomon]] (d. [[1797]]) known as the ''Vilna Gaon'', and [[Israel ben Eliezer]] (d. [[1760]]) known as the ''Ba'al Shem Tov'' instructed and sent small successive waves of their disciples to settle in Jerusalem then under [[Turkey|Turkish]] [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] rule. They created a Jewish religious infrastructure that remains the core of the ''[[Haredi]]'' Jewish community in Jerusalem to this day.
 
 
 
The [[British Mandate of Palestine]] authorities created the new offices of "Chief Rabbi" in [[1921]] for both [[Ashkenazi Jews]] and [[Sephardic Jews]] with central offices in Jerusalem. Rabbi [[Abraham Isaac Kook]] (d. [[1935]]) moved to Jerusalem to set up this office, associated with the "Religious Zionist" ''[[Mafdal]]'' group, becoming the first modern Chief Rabbi together with Sephardic Chief Rabbi Yaakov Meir. The official structure housing the Chief Rabbinate was completed in [[1958]] and is known as ''Heichal Shlomo''.
 
 
 
Jerusalem is also home to a number of the world's largest ''[[yeshivot]]'' (Talmudical and Rabbinical schools), and has become the undisputed capital of Jewish scholarly, religious and spiritual life for most of world Jewry.
 
 
 
=== Six Day War aftermath ===
 
[[Image:Generals_Rabin_Dayan_Narkis_Jerusalem_1967.jpg|thumb|General [[Moshe Dayan]] (center); General [[Yitzchak Rabin]] (right); General [[Uzi Narkiss]] (left), entering [[Old City|Old Jerusalem]] in June 1967]]
 
 
 
[[East Jerusalem]] was captured by [[Israel Defense Force]] following the [[Six Day War]] in [[1967]]. Most Jews celebrated the event as a liberation of the city; a new Israeli holiday was created, [[Jerusalem Day]] (''Yom Yerushalayim''), and the most popular secular [[Hebrew language|Hebrew]] song, "Jerusalem of Gold" (''Yerushalayim shel zahav''), was written in celebration.  Following this the medieval Magharba Quarter was demolished, and a huge public plaza was built in its place behind the Western Wall.
 
 
 
[[Image:Soldiers_at_night_at_KOTEL.jpg|left|thumb|[[Israel Defense Forces|Israeli troops]] on parade at the [[Western Wall]] plaza]]
 
Many large state gatherings of the [[State of Israel]] take place there now, including the official swearing-in of different Israel army officers units, national ceremonies such as memorial services for fallen Israeli soldiers on ''[[Yom Hazikaron]]'', huge celebrations on [[Israel Independence Day]] (''Yom Ha'atzmaut''), huge gatherings of tens of thousands on [[Jewish religious holidays]], and on-going daily prayers by regular attendees.  It is also a major high-point for tourists visiting Jerusalem.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
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The [[Western Wall]], in the heart of the Old City of Jerusalem, is generally considered to be the only remains of the [[Temple of Jerusalem|Second Temple]] from the era of the Roman conquests. There are said to be esoteric texts in [[Midrash]] that mention God's promise to keep this one remnant of the outer temple wall standing as a memorial and reminder of the past, hence, the significance of the "Western Wall" (''kotel hama'aravi'').
  
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=== Jerusalem and the Jewish religious calendar ===
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The yearning of Jews for Jerusalem can be seen in the words by which two major Jewish festivals conclude, namely the phrase "Next Year in Jerusalem" (''l'shanah haba'ah birushalayim'').
  
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*At the end of the ''[[Passover Seder]]'' prayers about the miracles surrounding the [[Exodus]] from [[ancient Egypt]] conclude with the loud repetitious singing of "Next Year in Jerusalem."
 +
*The holiest day on the Jewish calendar, [[Yom Kippur]], also concludes with the singing and exclamation of "Next Year in Jerusalem."
  
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Each of these days has a sacred test associated with it, the ''[[Hagada]]'' for ''Pesach'' ([[Passover]]) and the ''[[Machzor]]'' for ''Yom Kippur'' (Day of Atonement), which stresses the longing to return to Jerusalem.
  
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The saddest day of fasting on the Jewish religious calendar is the [[Ninth of Av]], when Jews traditionally spend the day crying for having lost two of their most holy temples and for the destruction of Jerusalem. This major 24-hour fast is preceded on the calendar by two minor dawn to dusk fasts. These are the [[Tenth of Tevet]], mourning the time [[Babylonian Empire|Babylonia]] laid siege to the [[Temple of Jerusalem|First Temple]], and the [[Seventeenth of Tammuz]], that mourns the time [[Rome]] broke through the outer walls of the [[Temple of Jerusalem|Second Temple]].
  
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Many large state gatherings of the [[State of Israel]] take place at the old site of the Second Temple, including the official swearing-in of different Israel army officers units, national ceremonies such as memorial services for fallen Israeli soldiers on ''[[Yom Hazikaron]],'' huge celebrations on [[Israel Independence Day]] (''Yom Ha'atzmaut''), huge gatherings of tens of thousands on [[Jewish religious holidays]], and on-going daily prayers by regular attendees.
  
 
== Jerusalem in Christianity ==
 
== Jerusalem in Christianity ==
For [[Christianity|Christians]], Jerusalem's place in the life of [[Jesus]] gives it great importance, in addition to its place in the [[Old Testament]], the [[Hebrew Bible]].
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For [[Christianity|Christians]], Jerusalem gains its importance from its place in the life of [[Jesus]], in addition to its place in the [[Old Testament]], the [[Hebrew Bible]], which is part of Christian sacred scripture.
  
Jerusalem is the place where Jesus was brought as a child, to be 'presented' at the [[Temple in Jerusalem|Temple]] ([[Gospel of Luke|Luke]] 2:22) and to attend festivals (Luke 2:41). According to the [[Gospel]]s, Jesus preached and healed in Jerusalem, especially in the Temple courts. There is also an account of Jesus' 'cleansing' of the Temple, chasing various traders out of the sacred precincts ([[Gospel of Mark|Mark]] 11:15). At the end of each of the Gospels, there are accounts of Jesus' [[Last Supper]] in an 'upper room' in Jerusalem, his arrest in [[Gethsemane]], his trial, his crucifixion at [[Golgotha]], his burial nearby and his [[Resurrection of Jesus|resurrection]] and [[ascension]].
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Jerusalem is the place where Jesus was brought as a child to be “presented” at the [[Temple in Jerusalem|Temple]] ([[Gospel of Luke|Luke]] 2:22) and to attend festivals (Luke 2:41). According to the [[Gospel]]s, Jesus preached and healed in Jerusalem, especially in the Temple courts. There is also an account of Jesus chasing traders from the sacred precincts ([[Gospel of Mark|Mark]] 11:15). At the end of each of the Gospels, there are accounts of Jesus' [[Last Supper]] in an “upper room” in Jerusalem, his arrest in [[Gethsemane]], his trial, his [[crucifixion]] at [[Golgotha]], his [[burial]] nearby, and his [[resurrection]] and [[ascension]].
  
Tradition holds that the place of the Last Supper is the Cenacle, on the second floor of the Mosque of the Prophet David (Masjid an-Nabi Daud), with the supposed tomb of [[David]] on the first floor. The place of Jesus' anguished prayer and betrayal, Gethsemane, is probably somewhere near the [[Church of All Nations]] on the [[Mount of Olives]]. Jesus' trial before [[Pontius Pilate]] may have taken place at the Antonia fortress, to the north of the Temple area. Popularly, the exterior pavement where the trial was conducted is beneath the Convent of the Sisters of Zion. Other Christians believe that Pilate tried Jesus at Herod's Palace on Mount Zion.
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The place of Jesus' anguished prayer and betrayal, Gethsemane, is probably somewhere near the [[Mount of Olives]]. Jesus' trial before [[Pontius Pilate]] may have taken place at the Antonia fortress, to the north of the Temple area. Popularly, the exterior pavement where the trial was conducted is beneath the Convent of the Sisters of Zion. Other Christians believe that Pilate tried Jesus at Herod's Palace on Mount Zion.
  
The [[Via Dolorosa]], or way of suffering, is the traditional route to Golgotha, the place of crucifixion, and is an important pilgrimage. The route ends at the [[Church of the Holy Sepulchre]] (perhaps the most holy place for Christians). The Holy Sepulchre is traditionally believed to be the location of Golgotha and Jesus' nearby tomb. The original church was built in [[336]] by [[Constantine I]]. The [[Garden Tomb]] is a popular pilgrimage site near the [[Damascus Gate]]. It was suggested by [[Charles George Gordon]] that this site, rather than the Holy Sepulchre, is the true place of Golgotha.
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The [[Via Dolorosa]], or way of suffering, is regarded by many as the traditional route to [[Golgotha]], the place of [[crucifixion]], and now functions as an important [[pilgrimage]] destination. The route ends at the [[Church of the Holy Sepulchre]]. The [[Holy Sepulchre]] is traditionally believed to be the location of Golgotha and Jesus' nearby tomb. The original church was built there in 336 by [[Constantine I]]. The [[Garden Tomb]] is a popular pilgrimage site near the [[Damascus Gate]].
  
The [[Acts of the Apostles]] and [[Pauline Epistles]] show [[James the Just]], the brother of Jesus, as leader of the early Jerusalem church. He and his successors were the focus for [[Jewish Christians]] until the destruction of the city by Emperor [[Hadrian]] in [[135]]. The exclusion of Jews from the new city of Aelia meant that gentile bishops were appointed under the authority of the Metropolitans of [[Caesarea]] and, ultimately, the [[Patriarch of Antioch|Patriarchs of Antioch]]. Emperor [[Constantine I]] and his mother, Helena, endowed Jerusalem with churches and shrines, making it the foremost centre of Christian pilgrimage. The [[Council of Chalcedon]] in [[451]] raised the bishop of Jerusalem to the rank of [[patriarch]], fifth in rank behind [[Rome]], [[Constantinople]], [[Alexandria]] and [[Antioch]]. However, Byzantine politics meant that Jerusalem simply passed from the Syrian jurisdiction of Antioch to the Greek authorities in Constantinople. For centuries, Greek clergy dominated the Jerusalem church.
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Tradition holds that the place of the Last Supper is the Cenacle, a site the history of which is debated by Jews, Christians, and Muslims, who all make historical claims of ownership.
  
In [[638]], Sophronius, Patriarch of Jerusalem, handed over the keys of the city to [[Umar ibn al-Khattab|Calif Umar]]'s Muslim forces. The relation between the Christian populace and the Muslim authorities in the city appear to have been good (with the one exception of [[Al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah|Calif al-Hakim]]'s execution of the patriarch and destruction of the Holy Sepulchre), and Christian artisans were used to build the [[Dome of the Rock]].
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== Jerusalem in Islam ==
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Muslims traditionally regard Jerusalem as having a special religious status. This reflects the fact that [[David]], [[Solomon]], and [[Jesus]] are considered by Muslims as [[Prophets]] of [[Islam]]. Furthermore, the first [[qibla]] (direction of prayer) in Islam, even before the [[Kaaba|kabah]] in [[Mecca]] is Jerusalem. The "farthest Mosque" (''[[Al-Aqsa Mosque|al-masjid al-Aqsa]]'') in verse 17:1of the [[Qur'an]] is traditionally interpreted by Muslims as referring to the [[Temple Mount]] in Jerusalem.  
  
On [[15 July]] [[1099]], the army of the [[First Crusade]] captured Jerusalem and brutalised its inhabitants. The crusaders showed equal, if not greater, animosity towards [[Eastern Christianity|Eastern Christians]] to that showed against Muslims. Jerusalem became the capital of a 'Latin Kingdom' with a Latin church and a Latin Patriarch, all under the authority of the [[Pope]]. In [[1187]], when [[Saladin]] captured the city, the Holy Sepulchre and many other churches were returned to the care of Eastern Christians.
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For Muslims, [[Muhammad]] is believed to have been taken by the flying steed [[Buraq]] in a single night to visit Jerusalem on the night of the [[Isra]] and [[Mi'raj]] ([[Rajab]] 27).  
  
From the [[17th century|17th]] to the [[19th century]], various Catholic European nations petitioned the [[Ottoman Empire]] for Catholic control of the 'holy places'. The [[Franciscan]]s are the traditional Catholic custodians of the holy places. Control swung back and forth between the western and eastern churches throughout this period. Sultan [[Abd-ul-Mejid I]] ([[1839]]-[[1861]]), perhaps out of despair, published a [[firman]] that laid out in detail the exact rights and responsibility of each community at the Holy Sepulchre. This document became known as the ''Status Quo'', and is still the basis for the complex protocol of the shrine. The ''Status Quo'' was upheld by the British Mandate and [[Jordan]]. After the [[1967]] Arab-Israeli War, and the passing of the Old City into Israeli hands, the [[Knesset]] passed a law protecting the holy places. Five Christian communities currently have rights in the Holy Sepulchre: the Greek Patriarchate, Latins (Western Rite Roman Catholics), [[Armenian Orthodox Church|Armenians]], [[Coptic Orthodox Church|Copts]] and [[Syriac Orthodox Church|Syriac Orthodox]].
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Several [[hadith]]s refer to Jerusalem (Bayt al-Maqdis) as the place where all mankind will be gathered on the [[Day of Judgment]].
  
The 'New Jerusalem' is the focus of a vision at the end of the [[Book of Revelation]]. It is the perfect city where God lives among his people.
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The earliest dated stone inscriptions containing verses from the [[Qur'an]] appear to be [[Abd al-Malik]]'s* in the [[Dome of the Rock]] in Jerusalem, from 693 <small>C.E.</small>
  
== Jerusalem in Mandaeanism ==
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After the conquest of Jerusalem by the armies of the second [[Caliph]], [[Umar ibn al-Khattab]], parts of the city soon took on a Muslim character. According to Muslim historians, the city insisted on surrendering to the Caliph directly rather than to any general, and he signed a pact with its Christian inhabitants, the [[Covenant of Umar]]. He was horrified to find the [[Temple Mount]] (''Haram al Sharif'') being used as a rubbish dump, and ordered that it be cleaned up and prayed there. However, when the [[bishop]] invited him to pray in the [[Church of the Holy Sepulchre]], he refused, lest he create a precedent for its use as a mosque. According to some Muslim historians, he also built a crude mosque on the Temple Mount, which would be replaced by Abd al-Malik. The Byzantine chronicler [[Theophanes Confessor]] (751–818) gives a slightly different picture of this event, claiming that Umar "began to restore the Temple at Jerusalem" with encouragement from local Jews.
In [[Mandaeanism]], a small, ancient [[Gnostic]] sect still found in southern [[Iraq]], Jerusalem is considered a city of wickedness, dedicated to the god of [[Judaism]], whom they call Adunay or Yurba and consider to be an evil spirit; according to [[Sidra d-Yahia]] 54, Jerusalem is "the stronghold that Adunay built... [he] brought to it falsehood in plenty, and it meant persecution against my ''tarmidia'' ([[Manda d-Hiia]]'s disciples)."  In the [[Ginza Rba]] (15.11), it is said to have come into being as a result of the incestuous union of the seven [[planet]]s with their evil mother [[Ruha d-Qudsha]], who "left [[lewdness]], [[perversion]], and [[fornication]] in it.  They said: 'Whoever lives in the city of Jerusalem will not mention the name of God.'"  (Elsewhere, however, it more prosaically says the city was built by [[Solomon]].)  However, [[Yahya]] ([[John the Baptist]]), an important figure in the religion, is said to have been born there.
 
  
Later on, in the days of [[Pontius Pilate]], it says the good spirit [[Anush Utra]] went there, healed the sick and worked miracles, and made converts, confronting [[Jesus]] (whom they consider a false prophet) and refuting his arguments; but its inhabitants opposed him and persecuted the converts, 365 of whom were killed (GR 15.11) or forced out (GR 2.1.)  [[Miriai]], a Jewish or Chaldean princess, was converted, and fled to the shores of the [[Euphrates]]. This angered Anush Utra, who received permission from God to destroy Jerusalem and the temple, smash the "seven columns", and slay the Jews who lived there, after bringing out the remaining "believers". Elsewhere, the Ginza Rba (18) prophesises that Jerusalem "must flourish for a thousand years, remain a thousand years destroyed, and then the entire [[Tibil]] (material world) will be destroyed."
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In 688, the [[Caliph]] Abd al-Malik built the [[Dome of the Rock]] on the [[Temple Mount]], also known as [[Noble Sanctuary]]; in 728, the cupola over the [[Al-Aqsa Mosque]] was erected, the same being restored in 758–775 by [[Al-Mahdi]]. In 831, [[Al-Ma'mun]] restored the Dome of the Rock and built the octagonal wall. In 1016, the Dome was partly destroyed by [[earthquake]]s, but it was repaired in 1022.
  
In the [[Abahatan Qadmaiia]] prayer, repeated during [[baptism]] of the dead, the Mandaeans invoke blessings upon the 365 who they believe were killed or forced out of Jerusalem:
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==Arguments for and against internationalization==
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The proposal that Jerusalem should be a city under international administration is still considered the best possible solution by many with an interest in a future of peace and prosperity for the region.
  
: "Those 365 priests who came forth from the city of Jerusalem, the city of this ''masiqta'' and ''dukhrana'', a forgiveness of sins may there be for them."
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Other negotiations regarding the future status of Jerusalem are based on the concept of partition. One scheme, for example, would give Israel the Jewish quarter and the [[Western Wall]], but the rest of the Old City and the Temple Mount would be transferred to a new Palestinian state. Many Israelis however, are opposed to any division of Jerusalem. This is based on cultural, historic, and religious grounds. Since so many parts of the Old City are sacred to [[Judaism]], [[Christianity]], and [[Islam]], many argue that the city should be under international or multilateral control.
  
== Culture in Jerusalem ==
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==References==
=== Museums ===
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*Abdul Hadi, Mahdi. 1995/96. "The Future of Jerusalem-A Palestinian Perspective." Shu'un Tanmawiyyeh 5, nos. 2 -3: 11-16.
* The [[Israel Museum]]
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*Abdul Hadi, Mahdi. 1996. "The Ownership of Jerusalem: A Palestinian View." In Jerusalem Today: What future for the Peace Process? Reading: Garnet Publishing.
* The [[Rockefeller Museum]].
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*Abdul Hadi, Mahdi Meron Benvenisti, Naomi Chazan, and Ibrahim Dakkak, 1995. "In Search of Solutions: A Roundtable Discussion." Palestine-Israel Journal 2, no. 2: 87-96.
* The [[Ticho House]].
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*Abu Odeh, Adnan. 1992. "Two Capitals in an Undivided Jerusalem." ''Foreign Affairs 70'': 183-88.
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*Abu Arafah, Adel Rahman. 1995/96. "Projection of the Future Status of Jerusalem." ''Shu'un Tanmawiyyeh 5'', nos. 2-3: 2-10.
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*Albin, Cecilia, Moshe Amirav, and Hanna Siniora. 1991/92. Jerusalem: An Undivided City as Dual Capital. Israeli-Palestinian Peace Research Project, Working Paper Series No. 16.
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*Amirav, Moshe. "Blueprint for Jerusalem." ''The Jerusalem Report'', 12 March 1992, p. 41.
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*Baskin, Gershon. 1994. ''Jerusalem of Peace''. Jerusalem: Israel/Palestine Center for Research and Information.
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*Baskin, Gershon and Robin Twite, eds. 1993. The Future of Jerusalem. Proceedings of the First Israeli-Palestinian International Academic Seminar on the Future of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, March 1993. Jerusalem: Israel/Palestine Center for Research and Information.
 +
*Baskin, Gershon, ed. June 1994. "New Thinking on the Future of Jerusalem. A Model for the Future of Jerusalem: Scattered Sovereignty. The IPCRI Plan." Israel/Palestine Issues in Conflict, Issues for Cooperation 3, no. 2.
 +
*Beckerman, Chaia, ed. 1996. ''Negotiating the Future: Vision and Realpolitik in the Quest for a Jerusalem of Peace''. Jerusalem: Israel/Palestine Center for Research and Information.
 +
*Beilin, Yossi. 1999. ''Touching Peace: From the Oslo Accord to a Final Agreement''. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 0297643169
 +
*Benvenisti, Meron. 1996. "Unraveling the Enigma." Chapter 7 of ''City of Stone: The Hidden History of Jerusalem''. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0520205219
 +
*Bring, Ove. 1996. "The Condominium Solution as a Gradual Process: Thoughts of an International Lawyer After the Conference." Afterword to ''Negotiating the Future: Vision and Realpolitik in the Quest for a Jerusalem of Peace''. Ed. Chaia Beckerman. Jerusalem: Israel/Palestine Center for Research and Information.
 +
*Bundy, Rodman. 1997. "Jerusalem in International Law." In Ghada Karmi (ed.) ''Jerusalem Today: What future for the Peace Process?'' Ithaca Press. ISBN  0863722261
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*Chazan, Naomi. 1991. "Negotiating the Non-Negotiable: Jerusalem in the Framework of an Israeli-Palestinian Settlement." Occasional Paper, no. 7. Cambridge, MA: American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
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*Cheshin, Amir S., Bill Hutman and Avi Melamed. 1999. "A Path to Peace Not Taken." Chapter 12 of ''Separate and Unequal: The Inside Story of Israeli Rule in East Jerusalem''. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0674801369
 +
*Emmett, Chad F. 1997. "The Status Quo Solution For Jerusalem." ''Journal of Palestine Studies'' 26, no. 2: 16-28.
 +
*Friedland, Roger, and Richard Hecht. 1996. "Heart of Stone." Chapter 18 of ''To Rule Jerusalem''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521440467
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*Gold, Dore. 1995. "Jerusalem: Final Status Issues." ''Israel-Palestinian Study'' No. 7. Tel Aviv: Jaffee Centre.
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*Heller, Mark A. and Sari Nusseibeh. 1991. ''No Trumpets, No Drums: A Two-State Settlement of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict''. New York: Hill and Wang. ISBN 0809073935
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*Hirsch, Moshe, Deborah Housen-Couriel, and Ruth Lapidoth. 1995. ''Whither Jerusalem? Proposals and Positions Concerning the Future of Jerusalem''. Springer. ISBN 9041100776 
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*Klein, Menachem. 1999. "Doves in the Skies of Jerusalem". ''Jerusalem'': Jerusalem Institute for Israel Studies. [Hebrew]  
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*Kollek, Teddy. 1977. "Jerusalem." ''Foreign Affairs'' 55, no. 4: 701-16.
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*Kollek, Teddy. 1998/89. "Sharing United Jerusalem." ''Foreign Affairs'' (Winter): 156-68.
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*Kollek, Teddy. 1990. "Whose Jerusalem?" ''New Outlook'' (Jan./Feb): 18 and 20.
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*Latendresse, Anne. 1995-96. "Between Myth and Reality: Israeli Perspectives on Jerusalem." ''Shu'un Tanmawiyyeh'' 5, nos. 2-3: 2-10.
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*Lustick, Ian S. 1993/94. "Reinventing Jerusalem." ''Foreign Policy'' 93: 41-59.
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*Mansour, Camille. 1977. "Jerusalem: International Law and Proposed Solutions." ''Jerusalem: What makes for Peace! A Palestinian Christian Contribution to Peacemaking''. Ed. Naim Ateek, Dedar Duaybis, and Marla Schrader. Jerusalem: Sabeel Liberation Theology Center.
 +
*Nusseibeh, Sari, Ruth Lapidoth, Albert Aghazarian, Moshe Amirav and Hanna Seniora. 1993. "Sovereignty; City Government: Creative Solutions." Section 3 of ''Jerusalem: Visions of Reconciliation. An Israeli-Palestinian Dialogue''. Proceedings of the United Nations Department of Public Information's Encounter for Greek Journalists on the Question of Palestine, 27-28 April 1993, Athens, Greece.
 +
*Palestinian Academic Society for the Study of International Affairs (PASSIA). 1996. Documents on Jerusalem. ''Jerusalem'': PASSIA.
 +
*Quigley, John. 1996. "Jerusalem in International Law." In ''Jerusalem Today: What future for the Peace Process?'' Reading: Garnet Publishing.
 +
*Segal, Jerome M. 1997. "Is Jerusalem Negotiable?" Israel/Palestine Center for Research and Information, Final Status Publications Series Number 1, July 1997. Jerusalem: IPCRI.
 +
*Shtayyeh, Mohammad, ed. 1998. "Scenarios on the Future of Jerusalem." ''Jerusalem'': Palestinian Center for Regional Studies.
 +
*Shuqair, Riziq. 1996. "Jerusalem: Its Legal Status and the Possibility of a Durable Settlement. Ramallah": ''Al-Haq''.
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*Tufakji, Khalil. 1995. "Proposal for Jerusalem." ''Palestine Report'', 20 October, pp. 8-9.
 +
*Whitbeck, John V. 1998. "The Jerusalem Question: Condominium as Compromise." ''The Jerusalem Times'', 24 July, p. 5.  
 +
*Whitbeck, John V. 1998. "The Road to Peace Starts in Jerusalem: The Condominium Solution." ''Middle East Policy'' 3, no. 3 (1994). Reprinted in Mohammad Shtayyeh, ed. Scenarios on the Future of Jerusalem (Jerusalem: Palestinian Center for Regional Studies), pp. 169-184. (Page references are to reprint edition).
  
=== Transportation ===  
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==External links==
[[Image:View_of_Jerusalem_(small).jpg|right|thumbnail|200px|A view of the Old City of Jerusalem taken from the Jewish Cemetery on the [[Mount of Olives]].]]Begin Boulevard is Jerusalem's inner city [[expressway]]. It goes North to South from [[Atarot]] to [[Malcha]].  
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All links retrieved July 31, 2022.
  
The [[Jerusalem Central Bus Station]] is Jerusalem's intercity [[bus]] [[bus station|station]]. It is served by [[Egged]] and [[Dan Bus Cooperative|Dan]] buses. City buses are are run by Egged.  
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*[https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-26934435 What makes Jerusalem so holy?] ''BBC''
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*[https://main.knesset.gov.il/EN/Pages/default.aspx The Knesset]
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*[https://www.jpost.com/ ''The Jerusalem Post'']
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*[https://www.touristisrael.com/jerusalem/268/ Jerusalem] ''Tourist Israel''
  
[[Israel Railways]] operates train service to Southern Jerusalem with 2 stops: The [[Biblical Zoo]] and Jerusalem [[Malcha]] near the [[Malcha Mall]]. In 2009, there will be a new high speed train line from [[Tel Aviv]] to Jerusalem which will terminate at a new underground station under construction underneath the Jerusalem Central Bus Station. There are future plans to extend the line from the Jerusalem Central Bus Station to the current Jerusalem Malcha Train Station, the terminus of the current historic (now upgraded) railroad.
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{{credit|14411300}}
 
 
[[Atarot Airport]] is Jerusalem's airport but it is currently not in use due to the security situation.
 
 
 
== Born in Jerusalem ==
 
*[[Suha Arafat]] (public figure)
 
*[[Chaim Joseph David Azulai]] (author)
 
*[[Saeb Erekat]] (politician)
 
*[[Yuval Gabay]] (drummer)
 
*[[David Grossman]] (author)
 
*[[Amin al-Husayni]] (public figure)
 
*[[Flavius Josephus]] (historian)
 
*[[George Khouri]] (victim)
 
*[[Raphael Maklouf]] (sculptor)
 
*[[Yitzhak Navon]] (president)
 
*[[Amos Oz]] (author)
 
*[[Natalie Portman]] (actress)
 
*[[Yitzhak Rabin]] (politician)
 
*[[Edward Said]] (scientist)
 
*[[Sirhan Sirhan]] (murderer)
 
*[[Yigael Yadin]] (archeologist)
 
 
 
== See also ==
 
* [[Jerusalem syndrome]]
 
* [[Timeline of Jerusalem]]
 
* [[List of Holy Cities]]
 
 
 
== External reference and links ==
 
*[http://www.jerusalem.muni.il/jer_main/f1_main.asp?lng=2/ Official website of the Municipality of Jerusalem]
 
* [http://www.globalpolitician.com/articles.asp?ID=132 Legal Status of West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem]
 
* [http://haqaonline.lightuponlight.com/pg/thumbnails.php?album=19 Pictures of the Holy Mosque in Jerusalem]
 
*Wasserstein, Bernard (2002). ''Divided Jerusalem: The Struggle for the Holy City''. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-09730-1.
 
* [http://ancientneareast.tripod.com/Jerusalem_Jebusites.html The History of the Ancient Near East]
 
* [http://www.centuryone.com/hstjrslm.html Main events in the history of Jerusalem]
 
*[http://www.nad-plo.org/permanent/jerusalem.html Palestinian position on Jerusalem]
 
*[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/in_depth/middle_east/2001/israel_and_the_palestinians/issues/1682594.stm BBC article on Jerusalem]
 
*[http://www.us-israel.org/jsource/Peace/jerutoc.html Jewish Position on Jerusalem]
 
*[http://www.usm.maine.edu/~maps/exhibit1/ Jerusalem 3000: Celebrating Three Millennia of History]
 
*[http://www.us-israel.org/jsource/vie/Jerusalem1.html History of Jerusalem]
 
*[http://www.mfa.gov.il/MFA/MFAArchive/1980_1989/Basic%20Law-%20Jerusalem-%20Capital%20of%20Israel  Basic Law: Jerusalem, Capital of Israel, Government of Israel]
 
 
 
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[[Category:Holy cities]]
 
  
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[[ca:Jerusalem]]
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[[Category:Geography]]
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Revision as of 02:34, 1 August 2022

Jerusalem
יְרוּשָׁלַיִם (Yerushalayim)
القُدس (al-Quds)
—  City  —
From upper left: Jerusalem skyline viewed from Givat ha'Arba, Mamilla, the Old City and the Dome of the Rock, a souq in the Old City, the Knesset, the Western Wall, the Tower of David and the Old City walls
From upper left: Jerusalem skyline viewed from Givat ha'Arba, Mamilla, the Old City and the Dome of the Rock, a souq in the Old City, the Knesset, the Western Wall, the Tower of David and the Old City walls
Flag of Jerusalem
Flag
Coat of arms of Jerusalem
Coat of arms
Nickname: Ir ha-Kodesh (Holy City), Bayt al-Maqdis (House of the Holiness)
Jerusalem WBIL.jpg
Coordinates: 31°47′N 35°13′E
District Jerusalem
Government
 - Mayor Nir Barkat
Area
 - City 125 km² (48.3 sq mi)
 - Metro 652 km² (251.7 sq mi)
Elevation 754 m (2,474 ft)
Population (2017)
 - City 901,302
 - Density 7,200/km² (18,647.9/sq mi)
 - Metro 12,539,000
Area code(s) overseas dialing +972-2; local dialing 02
Website: jerusalem.muni.il

Jerusalem (Hebrew: יְרוּשָׁלַיִם Yerushalayim; Arabic: القدس al-Quds) is an ancient Middle Eastern city of key importance to the religions of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. Perhaps no city on earth binds the hearts of believers in so complete a way. Today Jerusalem is the capital of Israel and the home of its legislature, the Knesset, although that designation is disputed in international circles. Jerusalem is a city of diverse neighborhoods, from the ancient walled Old City to the modern districts of West Jerusalem, and from the Arab sections of East Jerusalem to the Orthodox Jewish neighborhoods of Mea She'arim. It is also a stunningly beautiful city, where by law all buildings are faced with white limestone that sets off the golden Dome of the Rock that is thought to stand on the site of the ancient Jerusalem Temple.

From 1948 until the Six-Day War of 1967, Jerusalem was a divided city, with Jordan controlling East Jerusalem and the Old City while Israel governed West Jerusalem. Skirmishes were frequent across the Green Line, and Jews were not permitted access to the Western Wall, their most important holy site. The Six-Day War resulted in a unified city under Israeli rule. The Jerusalem city government has tried to balance the needs of these various constituencies in the unified city, and also maintain each community's security and access to their respective holy places. Today the future of a unified Jerusalem faces challenges—tensions arising from the wall of separation that now severs some Palestinian neighborhoods from the city, and from the construction of substantial Jewish suburbs such as the Israeli settlement of Ma'ale Adumim within the disputed West Bank.

Nevertheless, in the hearts of believers all over the world, Jerusalem remains the city of peace. They regard its holy places as the center of the most far-reaching participation of the divine in human affairs. Poetry abounds for the city, as though for a lover, one poet writes in voice of God:

Only be it known it's you I have married

Come back to Me, come back to Me

My Bride – Jerusalem!

The history of the city, and the on-going passion of believers, continues to make the city central in human affairs today.

Jerusalem and the Old City. View from the Mount of Olives

Name

The origin of the city name is uncertain. It is possible to understand the name (Hebrew Yerushalayim) as either "Heritage of Salem" or "Heritage of Peace"—a contraction of "heritage" (yerusha) and Salem (Shalem literally "whole" or "complete") or "peace" (shalom). (See the biblical commentator the Ramban for explanation.) "Salem" is the original name used in Genesis 14:18 for the city.

Geography

Jerusalem is situated at 31° 46′ 45″ N 35° 13′ 25″ on the southern spur of a plateau, the eastern side of which slopes from 2,460 feet above sea-level north of the Temple area to 2,130 feet at its southeastern-most point. The western hill is about 2,500 feet high and slopes southeast from the Judean plateau.

Jerusalem is surrounded upon all sides by valleys, of which those on the north are least pronounced. The two principal valleys start northwest of the present city. The first runs eastward with a slight southerly bend (the present Wadi al-Joz), then, turns directly south (formerly known as "Kidron Valley," the modern Wadi Sitti Maryam), dividing the Mount of Olives from the city. The second runs directly south on the western side of the city. It then turns eastward at its southeastern extremity, to run due east eventually joining the first valley near Bir Ayyub ("Job's Well"). In early times it was called the "Valley of Hinnom," and in modern times is the Wadi al-Rababi (not to be confused with the first-mentioned valley).

A third valley starts in the northwest where the Damascus Gate is now located, and runs south-southeast to the Pool of Siloam. It divides at the lower part into two hills, the lower and the upper cities of Josephus. A fourth valley proceeds from the western hill (near the present Jaffa Gate) toward the Temple area, existing in modern Jerusalem as David Street. A fifth valley cuts the eastern hill into the northern and southern parts of the city. Later, Jerusalem came to be built on these four spurs. Today, neighboring towns are Bethlehem and Beit Jala at the southern city border, and Abu Dis to the east.

History

Antiquity

Archaeological ruins from King David's time

Since Jerusalem is hotly contested at present, historical inquiry into the city's origins has become politicized.

According to Jewish tradition Jerusalem was founded by Abraham's forefathers Shem and Eber. Genesis reports that the city was ruled by Melchizedek, regarded in Jewish tradition as being a priest of God and identical to Shem. Later it was conquered by the Jebusites before returning to Jewish control. The Bible records that King David defeated the Jebusites in war and captured the city without destroying it. David then expanded the city to the south, and declared it the capital city of the united Kingdom of Israel.

Later, according to the Bible, the First Jewish Temple was built in Jerusalem by King Solomon. The Temple became a major cultural center in the region, eventually overcoming other ritual centers such as Shiloh and Bethel. By the end of the "First Temple Period," Jerusalem was the sole-acting religious shrine in the kingdom and a center of regular pilgrimage. It was at this time that historical records begin to corroborate biblical history. The kings of Judah are historically identifiable.

Near the end of King Solomon's reign, the northern ten tribes separated, and formed the Kingdom of Israel with its capital at Samaria. Jerusalem remained as the capital of the southern Kingdom of Judah.

Jerusalem continued as the capital of the Kingdom of Judah for some 400 years. It had survived (or, as some historians claim, averted) an Assyrian siege in 701 B.C.E., unlike the northern capital, Samaria, which had fallen some twenty years prior.

In 586 B.C.E., however, the city was overcome by the Babylonians who took the king Jehoiachin and most of the aristocracy into Babylonian captivity. Nebuchadrezzar II captured and destroyed the city, burnt the temple, ruined the city walls, and left the city unprotected.

After several decades, Persians conquered Babylon and allowed the Jews to return to Judah where they rebuilt the city walls and restored the Temple. It continued as the capital of Judah, a province under the Persians, Greeks, and Romans, enjoying only a short period of independence. The Temple (known as the Second Temple) was rebuilt, and the Temple complex was upgraded under Herod the Great.

First millennium

Sack of Jerusalem. A fragment from the Arch of Titus, Rome.

Internal strife and an uprising against Rome, resulted in the sack and ruin of Jerusalem at the hands of Roman leader Titus Flavius in 70 C.E.

Jerusalem was destroyed and the Second Temple burnt. All that remained was a portion of an external (retaining) wall, which became known as the Western Wall.

Sixty years later, after crushing the Bar Kokhba's revolt, the Roman emperor Hadrian resettled the city as a pagan polis under the name Aelia Capitolina. Jews were forbidden to enter the city, but for a single day of the year, Tisha B'Av, (the Ninth of Av), when they could weep for the destruction of their city at the Temple's only remaining wall.

Under the Byzantines, who cherished the city for its Christian history, in accordance with traditions of religious tolerance often found in the ancient East, Jews could return to the city in the fifth century.

Map of Jerusalem as it appeared in the years 958–1052, according to Arab geographers such as al-Muqaddasi.

Although the Qur'an does not mention the name "Jerusalem," the hadiths hold that it was from Jerusalem that the Prophet Muhammad ascended to heaven in the Night Journey, or Isra and Miraj.

In 638 C.E., Jerusalem was one of the Arab Caliphate's first conquests. According to Arab historians of the time, the Caliph Umar ibn al-Khattab personally went to the city to receive its submission, praying at the Temple Mount in the process. Some Muslim and non-Muslim sources add that he built a mosque there. Sixty years later, the Dome of the Rock was built, a structure in which lies the stone on which Muhammad is said to have tethered his mount Buraq during the Isra. This is also reputed to be the place where Abraham went to sacrifice his son (Isaac in the Jewish tradition, Ishmael in the Muslim one). Note that the octagonal and gold-sheeted Dome is not the same as the Al-Aqsa Mosque beside it, which was built more than three centuries later.

Under the early centuries of Muslim rule, the city prospered; the geographers Ibn Hawqal and al-Istakhri (tenth century) describe it as "the most fertile province of Palestine," while its native son the geographer al-Muqaddasi (born 946) devoted many pages to its praises in his most famous work, The Best Divisions in the Knowledge of the Climes.

Second millennium

The early Arab period was one of religious tolerance, but in the eleventh century, the Egyptian Fatimid Caliph Al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah ordered the destruction of all churches and synagogues in Jerusalem. This policy was reversed by his successors, but reports of this edict were a major cause for the First Crusade. Europeans captured Jerusalem after a difficult one month siege, on July 15, 1099. The siege and its aftermath are known to be extreme in the loss of life both during and after the siege.

Medieval Tower of David (Migdal David) in Jerusalem today

From this point, Jerusalem became the capital of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, a feudal state, headed by the King of Jerusalem. Neither Jews nor Muslims were allowed into the city during that time. This kingdom lasted until 1291, though Jerusalem itself was recaptured by Saladin in 1187. Under Saladin, all worshipers were once again welcomed to the city.

In 1219 the walls of the city were taken down by order of the Sultan of Damascus; in 1229, by treaty with Egypt, Jerusalem came into the hands of Frederick II of Germany. In 1239, he began to rebuild the walls; but they were again demolished by Da'ud, the emir of Kerak.

In 1243, Jerusalem again came under Christian rule, and the walls were repaired. The Kharezmian Tatars took the city in 1244; they, in turn, were driven out by the Egyptians in 1247. In 1260, the Tatars under Hulaku Khan overran the whole land, and the Jews that were in Jerusalem had to flee to the neighboring villages.

View and Plan of Jerusalem. A woodcut in the "Liber Chronicarum Mundi," Nuremberg, 1493

In 1244, Sultan Malik al-Muattam razed the city walls, rendering it again defenseless and dealing a heavy blow to the city's status. In the middle of the thirteenth century, Jerusalem was captured by the Egyptian Mamluks.

In 1517, it was taken over by the Ottoman Empire and enjoyed a period of renewal and peace under Suleiman the Magnificent. The walls of what is now known as the Old City were built at this time. The rule of Suleiman and the following Ottoman Sultans are described by some as an age of "religious peace"; Jews, Christians, and Muslims enjoyed the form of religious freedom interpreted in Muslim law. At this time, it was possible to find synagogue, church, and mosque on the same street. The city remained open to all religions according to Muslim law. Economic stagnation, however, characterized the region after the rule of Suleiman.

Nineteenth and early twentieth century

The modern history of Jerusalem is said to begin in the mid-nineteenth century, with the decline of the Ottoman Empire. At that time, the city was small and by some measures insignificant, with a population that did not exceed 8,000.

It was still a very heterogeneous city because of its significance to Jews, Christians, and Muslims.

Inhabitants were divided into four major communities; Jewish, Christian, Muslim, and Armenian. The first three were further divided into numerous subgroups based on more precise subdivisions of their religious affiliation or country of origin.

This division into these communities is clearly seen in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, which was partitioned meticulously among the Greek Orthodox, Catholic, Armenian, Coptic, and Ethiopian churches. Each group was given a different, little section of the sanctuary, and tensions between the groups ran so deep that the keys to the shrine were kept with a “neutral” Muslim family for safekeeping.

Each community was located around its respective shrine. The Muslim community, then the largest, surrounded the Haram ash-Sharif or Temple Mount (northeast), the Christians lived mainly in the vicinity of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre (northwest), the Jews lived mostly on the slope above the Western Wall (southeast), and the Armenians lived near the Zion Gate (southwest). These weren't total and exclusive. Nevertheless, these came to form the basis of the four quarters established during the British Mandate period (1917–1948).

Main residential areas of Jerusalem in 1947.

Several changes occurred in the mid-nineteenth century, which had long-lasting effects on the city. The implications of these changes can be felt today and many lie at the root of the present and ongoing Palestinian-Israel conflict over Jerusalem.

The first of these was a trickle of Jewish immigrants, from the Middle East and eastern Europe, which shifted the balance of population. The first such immigrants were Orthodox Jews: some were elderly individuals, who came to die in Jerusalem and be buried on the Mount of Olives; others were students, who came with their families to await the coming of the Messiah. At the same time, European colonial powers also began seeking toeholds in the city, hoping to expand their influence pending the imminent collapse of the Ottoman Empire. This was also an age of Christian religious revival, and many churches sent missionaries to proselytize among the Muslim, and especially, the Jewish populations, believing that this would speed the Second Coming of Christ. Finally, the combination of European colonialism and religious zeal was expressed in a new scientific interest in the biblical lands in general and Jerusalem in particular. Archeological and other expeditions made some spectacular finds, which increased interest in Jerusalem even more.

By the 1860s, the city, with an area of only 1 square kilometer, was already overcrowded, leading to the construction of the New City, the part of Jerusalem outside of the city walls. Seeking new areas to stake their claims, the Russian Orthodox Church began constructing a complex, now known as the Russian Compound, a few hundred meters from Jaffa Gate. The first attempt at residential settlement outside the walls of Jerusalem was begun by Jews, who built a small complex on the hill overlooking Zion Gate, across the Valley of Hinnom. This settlement, known as Mishkenot Shaananim, eventually flourished and set the precedent for other new communities to spring up to the west and north of the Old City. In time, as the communities grew and connected geographically, this became known as the New City.

British conquest

Jewish Legion soldiers at the Western Wall after taking part in 1917 British conquest of Jerusalem

Eventually, the British conquered the Turks in the Middle East and Palestine. On December 11, 1917, General Sir Edmund Allenby, commander-in-chief of the Egyptian Expeditionary Force, entered Jerusalem on foot out of respect for the Holy City.

By the time General Allenby took Jerusalem from the Ottomans in 1917, the new city was a patchwork of neighborhoods and communities, each with a distinct ethnic character.

This circumstance continued under British rule. The neighborhoods tended to flourish, leaving the Old City of Jerusalem to slide into little more than an impoverished older neighborhood. One of the British bequests to the city was a town planning order requiring new buildings in the city to be faced with sandstone and thus preserving some of the overall look of the city.

The Status Quo

From the seventeenth to the nineteenth century, various Catholic European nations petitioned the Ottoman Empire for Catholic control of the “holy places.” The Franciscans traditionally were the Catholic custodians of the holy sites. Control of these sites changed back and forth between the Western and Eastern churches throughout this period. Sultan Abd-ul-Mejid I (1839–1861), perhaps out of frustration, published a firman that laid out in detail the exact rights and responsibility of each community at the Holy Sepulchre. This document became known as the Status Quo, and is still the basis for the complex protocol of the shrine. The Status Quo was upheld by the British Mandate and Jordan. After the 1967 Arab-Israeli War, and the passing of the Old City into Israeli hands, the Knesset passed a law protecting the holy places. Five Christian communities currently have rights in the Holy Sepulchre: the Greek Patriarchate, Latins (Western Rite Roman Catholics), Armenians, Copts, and Syriac Orthodox.

Six-Day War aftermath

East Jerusalem was captured by the Israel Defense Force following the Six-Day War in 1967. Most Jews celebrated the event as a liberation of the city; a new Israeli holiday was created, Jerusalem Day (Yom Yerushalayim), and the most popular secular Hebrew song, "Jerusalem of Gold" (Yerushalayim shel zahav), was written in celebration. Following this, the medieval Magharba Quarter was demolished, and a huge public plaza was built in its place behind the Western Wall.

Current status

Presently, the status of the city is disputed.

Israeli law designates Jerusalem as the capital of Israel; only a few countries recognize this designation.

Additionally, Israeli Jerusalem Law regards Jerusalem as the capital of the State of Israel, and as the center of Jerusalem District; it serves as the country's seat of government and otherwise functions as capital. Countries that do not recognize Israeli sovereignty over some or all of the city maintain their embassies in Tel Aviv or in the suburbs.

The 1947 UN Partition Plan states that Jerusalem is supposed to be an international city, not a part of either the proposed Jewish or Arab state. Following the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, West Jerusalem was controlled by Israel, while East Jerusalem (including the Old City), and the West Bank were controlled by Jordan. Jordan's authority over the West Bank (including East Jerusalem) was not recognized internationally, except by the United Kingdom and Pakistan.

Following the 1967 Six-Day War, Israel gained control also of East Jerusalem, and began taking steps to unify the city under Israeli control.

In 1988, Jordan withdrew all its claims to the West Bank (including Jerusalem), yielding them to the Palestine Liberation Organization.

The status of Palestinians in East Jerusalem is also controversial. The Palestinian residents of East Jerusalem have a “permanent resident” status, which allows them to move within Israel proper. However should they move out of Israel proper (for example, into the Palestinian territories), this status will be revoked and they will not be able to return. Since many have extended families in the West Bank, only miles away, this often implies great difficulty. The matter of Israeli citizenship and related laws is a complex matter for the Palestinians.

Family members not residing in East Jerusalem prior to the point of Israeli control must apply for entry into East Jerusalem for family reunification with the Ministry of the Interior. Palestinians complain that such applications have been arbitrarily denied for purposes of limiting the Palestinian population in East Jerusalem, while Israeli authorities claim they treat Palestinians fairly. These and other aspects have been a source of criticism from Palestinians and Israeli human rights organizations, such as B'Tselem.

Status as Israel's capital

The modern Knesset building, Israel's parliament, in Jerusalem today

In 1980 the Israeli Knesset passed the Basic Law: Jerusalem, Capital of Israel confirming Jerusalem's status as the nation's "eternal and indivisible capital."

Costa Rica and El Salvador have their embassies in Jerusalem (since 1984), but the Consulate General of Greece as well as that of the United Kingdom and the United States are based there. Additionally, Bolivia and Paraguay have their embassies in Mevasseret Zion, a suburb of Jerusalem.

All the branches of Israeli government (presidential, legislative, judicial, and administrative) are seated in Jerusalem. The Knesset building is well known in Jerusalem, but still very few countries maintain their embassies in Jerusalem.

Palestinian groups claim either all of Jerusalem (Al-Quds) or East Jerusalem as the capital of a future Palestinian state.

United Nations position

The United Nations’ position on the question of Jerusalem is contained in General Assembly resolution 181(11) and subsequent resolutions of the General Assembly and the Security Council.

The UN Security Council, in UN Resolution 478, declared that the 1980 Jerusalem Law declaring Jerusalem as Israel's "eternal and indivisible" capital was "null and void and must be rescinded forthwith" (14-0-1, with the United States abstaining). The resolution instructed member states to withdraw their diplomatic representation from the city.

Before this resolution, 13 countries maintained embassies in Jerusalem. Following the UN resolution, all 13 moved their embassies to Tel Aviv. Two moved theirs back to Jerusalem in 1984.

United States position

The United States Jerusalem Embassy Act, passed by Congress in 1995, states that "Jerusalem should be recognized as the capital of the State of Israel; and the United States Embassy in Israel should be established in Jerusalem no later than May 31, 1999." As a result of the Embassy Act, official U.S. documents and websites refer to Jerusalem as the capital of Israel.

However, for years the relocation of the embassy from Tel Aviv was suspended semi-annually by the United States president, stating each time that "[the] Administration remains committed to beginning the process of moving our embassy to Jerusalem.”

On December 6, 2017 U.S. President Donald Trump officially recognized Jerusalem as Israel's capital and announced his intention to move the American embassy to Jerusalem. On May 14, 2018, the United States officially moved the location of its embassy to Jerusalem, transforming its Tel Aviv location into a consulate.

Jerusalem and Judaism

Jerusalem has long been embedded into the religious consciousness of the Jewish people. Jews have always identified with the struggle of King David to capture Jerusalem and his desire to build the Jewish temple there as described in the Book of Samuel.

Jerusalem and prayer

The daily prayers recited by religious Jews three times a day over the last two thousand years mention Jerusalem and its functions multiple times. Some examples from the siddur (prayer book) and the amidah are:

(Addressing God): "And to Jerusalem, your city, may you return in compassion, and may you rest within it, as you have spoke. May you rebuild it soon in our days as an eternal structure, and may you speedily establish the throne of (King) David within it. Blessed are you God, the builder of Jerusalem...May our eyes behold Your return to Zion in compassion. Blessed are you God, who restores his presence to Zion."

Additionally when partaking of a daily meal with bread, the following is part of the "Grace after Meals" which must be recited:

Have mercy, Lord our God, on Israel your people, on Jerusalem your city, on Zion, the resting place of your glory, on the monarchy of (King David) your anointed, and on the great and holy (Temple) house upon which your name is called…. Rebuild Jerusalem, the holy city, soon in our days. Blessed are you God who rebuilds Jerusalem in his mercy. Amen.

When partaking of a light meal, the thanksgiving blessing states:

Have mercy, Lord, our God, on Israel, your people; on Jerusalem, your city; and on Zion, the resting place of your glory; upon your altar, and upon your temple. Rebuild Jerusalem, the city of holiness, speedily in our days. Bring us up into it and gladden us in its rebuilding and let us eat from its fruit and be satisfied with its goodness and bless you upon it in holiness and purity. For you, God, are good and do good to all and we thank you for the land and for the nourishment…

When the Jews were exiled, first by the Babylonian Empire about 2,500 years ago and then by the Roman Empire 2,000 years ago, the great rabbis and scholars of the mishnah and Talmud instituted the policy that each synagogue should replicate the original Jewish temple and that it be constructed in such a way that all prayers in the siddur be recited while facing Jerusalem, as that is where the ancient temple stood and it was the only permissible place of the sacrificial offerings.

Thus, synagogues in Europe face south; synagogues in North America face east, synagogues in countries to the south of Israel, such as Yemen and South Africa, face north; and synagogues in those countries to the east of Israel, face west. Even when in private prayer and not in a synagogue, a Jew faces Jerusalem, as mandated by Jewish law compiled by the rabbis in the Shulkhan Arukh.

Western Wall in Jerusalem

Orthodox Jews worship at the Western Wall, Jerusalem

The Western Wall, in the heart of the Old City of Jerusalem, is generally considered to be the only remains of the Second Temple from the era of the Roman conquests. There are said to be esoteric texts in Midrash that mention God's promise to keep this one remnant of the outer temple wall standing as a memorial and reminder of the past, hence, the significance of the "Western Wall" (kotel hama'aravi).

Jerusalem and the Jewish religious calendar

The yearning of Jews for Jerusalem can be seen in the words by which two major Jewish festivals conclude, namely the phrase "Next Year in Jerusalem" (l'shanah haba'ah birushalayim).

  • At the end of the Passover Seder prayers about the miracles surrounding the Exodus from ancient Egypt conclude with the loud repetitious singing of "Next Year in Jerusalem."
  • The holiest day on the Jewish calendar, Yom Kippur, also concludes with the singing and exclamation of "Next Year in Jerusalem."

Each of these days has a sacred test associated with it, the Hagada for Pesach (Passover) and the Machzor for Yom Kippur (Day of Atonement), which stresses the longing to return to Jerusalem.

The saddest day of fasting on the Jewish religious calendar is the Ninth of Av, when Jews traditionally spend the day crying for having lost two of their most holy temples and for the destruction of Jerusalem. This major 24-hour fast is preceded on the calendar by two minor dawn to dusk fasts. These are the Tenth of Tevet, mourning the time Babylonia laid siege to the First Temple, and the Seventeenth of Tammuz, that mourns the time Rome broke through the outer walls of the Second Temple.

Many large state gatherings of the State of Israel take place at the old site of the Second Temple, including the official swearing-in of different Israel army officers units, national ceremonies such as memorial services for fallen Israeli soldiers on Yom Hazikaron, huge celebrations on Israel Independence Day (Yom Ha'atzmaut), huge gatherings of tens of thousands on Jewish religious holidays, and on-going daily prayers by regular attendees.

Jerusalem in Christianity

For Christians, Jerusalem gains its importance from its place in the life of Jesus, in addition to its place in the Old Testament, the Hebrew Bible, which is part of Christian sacred scripture.

Jerusalem is the place where Jesus was brought as a child to be “presented” at the Temple (Luke 2:22) and to attend festivals (Luke 2:41). According to the Gospels, Jesus preached and healed in Jerusalem, especially in the Temple courts. There is also an account of Jesus chasing traders from the sacred precincts (Mark 11:15). At the end of each of the Gospels, there are accounts of Jesus' Last Supper in an “upper room” in Jerusalem, his arrest in Gethsemane, his trial, his crucifixion at Golgotha, his burial nearby, and his resurrection and ascension.

The place of Jesus' anguished prayer and betrayal, Gethsemane, is probably somewhere near the Mount of Olives. Jesus' trial before Pontius Pilate may have taken place at the Antonia fortress, to the north of the Temple area. Popularly, the exterior pavement where the trial was conducted is beneath the Convent of the Sisters of Zion. Other Christians believe that Pilate tried Jesus at Herod's Palace on Mount Zion.

The Via Dolorosa, or way of suffering, is regarded by many as the traditional route to Golgotha, the place of crucifixion, and now functions as an important pilgrimage destination. The route ends at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. The Holy Sepulchre is traditionally believed to be the location of Golgotha and Jesus' nearby tomb. The original church was built there in 336 by Constantine I. The Garden Tomb is a popular pilgrimage site near the Damascus Gate.

Tradition holds that the place of the Last Supper is the Cenacle, a site the history of which is debated by Jews, Christians, and Muslims, who all make historical claims of ownership.

Jerusalem in Islam

Muslims traditionally regard Jerusalem as having a special religious status. This reflects the fact that David, Solomon, and Jesus are considered by Muslims as Prophets of Islam. Furthermore, the first qibla (direction of prayer) in Islam, even before the kabah in Mecca is Jerusalem. The "farthest Mosque" (al-masjid al-Aqsa) in verse 17:1of the Qur'an is traditionally interpreted by Muslims as referring to the Temple Mount in Jerusalem.

For Muslims, Muhammad is believed to have been taken by the flying steed Buraq in a single night to visit Jerusalem on the night of the Isra and Mi'raj (Rajab 27).

Several hadiths refer to Jerusalem (Bayt al-Maqdis) as the place where all mankind will be gathered on the Day of Judgment.

The earliest dated stone inscriptions containing verses from the Qur'an appear to be Abd al-Malik's* in the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem, from 693 C.E.

After the conquest of Jerusalem by the armies of the second Caliph, Umar ibn al-Khattab, parts of the city soon took on a Muslim character. According to Muslim historians, the city insisted on surrendering to the Caliph directly rather than to any general, and he signed a pact with its Christian inhabitants, the Covenant of Umar. He was horrified to find the Temple Mount (Haram al Sharif) being used as a rubbish dump, and ordered that it be cleaned up and prayed there. However, when the bishop invited him to pray in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, he refused, lest he create a precedent for its use as a mosque. According to some Muslim historians, he also built a crude mosque on the Temple Mount, which would be replaced by Abd al-Malik. The Byzantine chronicler Theophanes Confessor (751–818) gives a slightly different picture of this event, claiming that Umar "began to restore the Temple at Jerusalem" with encouragement from local Jews.

In 688, the Caliph Abd al-Malik built the Dome of the Rock on the Temple Mount, also known as Noble Sanctuary; in 728, the cupola over the Al-Aqsa Mosque was erected, the same being restored in 758–775 by Al-Mahdi. In 831, Al-Ma'mun restored the Dome of the Rock and built the octagonal wall. In 1016, the Dome was partly destroyed by earthquakes, but it was repaired in 1022.

Arguments for and against internationalization

The proposal that Jerusalem should be a city under international administration is still considered the best possible solution by many with an interest in a future of peace and prosperity for the region.

Other negotiations regarding the future status of Jerusalem are based on the concept of partition. One scheme, for example, would give Israel the Jewish quarter and the Western Wall, but the rest of the Old City and the Temple Mount would be transferred to a new Palestinian state. Many Israelis however, are opposed to any division of Jerusalem. This is based on cultural, historic, and religious grounds. Since so many parts of the Old City are sacred to Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, many argue that the city should be under international or multilateral control.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

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External links

All links retrieved July 31, 2022.

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