Magnificent Roman-era building unearthed under Israel’s Western Wall

Good News Notes:

Inside the tunnels beneath the Western Wall in Israel, archaeologists have uncovered the final parts of an elaborate building that may have been used as a reception area for members of Jerusalem’s local council and their guests on their journey to Temple Mount. 

The building consists of two hallways that were connected by a fountain fed by lead pipes located at the top of Corinthian-style columns, Shlomit Weksler-Bdolach, an archaeologist with the Israel Antiquities Authority, said in a video announcing the discovery. Though there is almost no trace left of them today, ornate sofas for reclining likely furnished the halls, archaeologists said. 

Archaeologist Charles Warren discovered parts of the building in the 19th century, and several other archaeologists in the 20th century also uncovered parts of it. Over the past few years, archaeologists with the Israel Antiquities Authority and the Western Wall Heritage Foundation have excavated the remainder of the structure, allowing researchers to get a better understanding of what it was used for, Weksler-Bdolach said. 

The archaeological team thinks elite individuals would have gathered in this building before ascending to the Temple Mount, the holiest site in Judaism. It’s possible that the area was also used for dining, archaeologists said in a statement. 

Such reclining dining rooms — where you eat while lying down — were common in the Greek, Hellenistic and Roman worlds from the fifth century B.C. to the third-fourth centuries A.D., according to the statement. “They are known in the archaeological record from private homes, palaces, temples, synagogue complexes and civilian compounds,” the statement said. The Hebrew Bible also mentions the use of these rooms for dining, the researchers added….”

View the whole story here: https://www.livescience.com/amp/magnificent-building-under-western-wall-israel.html

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