In Jerusalem there is a scale model of the city around the time of Jesus.
The Jerusalem of ancient times revolved around the Temple. The First Temple had been built by King Solomon. It had lasted for about four hundred years until the Babylonians destroyed it and took the Jews into exile. When Persia conquered Babylon the Jews that wanted to were allowed to return and rebuild the Temple. But this Second Temple was not as elaborate as the First.
During Roman times, Israel was ruled by a king named Herod. He was allowed to rule as long as he stayed in favor with the Romans. Herod was actually an Idumean, the area formerly known as Edom, that had been forcibly converted to Judaism. Herod decided to dismantle the Second Temple in order to build a much grander one.
The first two Temples had been built atop a hill called Mount Moriah. This was the site of two important events. It had been where Abraham had been willing to sacrifice his son, Isaac, and where God had halted a plague that had been sent as punishment because David had sinned by conducting a census. Herod built a massive retaining wall around Mount Moriah, this is what remains today as the Temple Mount, then he built the new Temple on it.
ALL IMAGES ARE FROM GOOGLE STREET VIEW
This is looking at the Temple from the east. The blue dot is on the Royal Stoa. Non-Jews were permitted in the open area, known as the Court of the Gentiles, but only Jews in the Inner Precinct indicated by the green dot. The red dot is on one of the four towers of the Antonia, the Roman fortress in Jerusalem.
In another view of the Temple from the east, the yellow dot is on the East Gate to the Temple Mount, the cubic structure indicated by the green dot is the Holy of Holies, and the red dot is on one of the four towers of the Antonia.
These two images, both from the east, are of the Holy of Holies, in the Inner Precinct. Only the High Priest was allowed to enter the Holy of Holies and only on one day out of the year, Yom Kippur. The site is now occupied by the Dome of the Rock.
This is a closer look at the Royal Stoa. The red dot is where the Al-Aqsa Mosque is now located.
The is a closer look at the Antonia Fortress. It is generally believed that this is where Jesus' trial took place. The Temple Mount is to the left (south).
The Temple Mount is often pictured from the south. In the following two images the green dot indicates the south wall of the Temple Mount. The red dot indicates what was "downtown" Jerusalem at the time, and is now an archeological site known as the "City of David". The yellow dot indicates a residential neighborhood and the purple dot is the "Upper City", a wealthier neighborhood. At right, to the east, is the Kidron Valley.
In both of the following images, of the southern side of the Temple Mount, the two Huldah Gates are indicated by the red dots and the yellow dot shows where the Al-Aqsa Mosque is now located.
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