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Jerusalem (jr´slm,
zlm) (KEY) , Heb. Yerushalayim, Arab. Al Quds, city (1994 pop. 578,800),
capital of Israel. It is situated on a ridge 2,500 ft (760 m) high that
lies west of the Dead Sea and the Jordan River. Jerusalem is an administrative,
religious, educational, cultural, and market center. Tourism and the construction
of houses and hotels are the citys major industries. Manufactures
include cut and polished diamonds, plastics, clothing, and shoes, and
electronic printing and other high-technology industries have been developed.
The city is served by road, rail, and air transport.
Jerusalem is a holy city for Jews, Christians, and Muslims. Often under
the name of Zion, it figures prominently in Jewish and Christian literature
as a symbol of the capital of the Messiah. Jerusalems churches and
shrines are legion. The traditional identifications vary in reliability
from certainty (such as Gethsemane) to pious supposition (such as the
Tomb of the Virgin). The most famous and most difficult identification
is that of Calvary. Excavations have been made in Jerusalem since 1835,
and after 1967, the Israelis increased this activity, uncovering remains
of the Herodian period and ruins of a Muslim structure of the 7th or 8th
cent. Many of Jerusalems original streets, including the main Cardo,
have been excavated and turned into tourist sites.
The Old City
The eastern part of Jerusalem is the Old City, a quadrangular area built
on two hills and surrounded by a wall completed in 1542 by the Ottoman
sultan Sulayman I. Within the wall are four quarters. The Muslim quarter,
in the east, contains a sacred enclosure, the Haram esh-Sherif (known
as the Temple Mount to Jews), within which, built on the old Mt. Moriah,
are the Dome of the Rock (completed 691), or Mosque of Omar, and the Mosque
of al-Aksa. The wall of the Haram incorporates the Western Wall, or Wailing
Wall, a remnant of the retaining wall of the Second Temple and a holy
place for Jews. Nearby and southwest of the Haram is the Jewish quarter,
with several famous old synagogues. Partially destroyed in previous Arab-Israeli
fighting, the Old City was captured in 1967 by the Israelis, who began
to rebuild and renovate the Jewish quarter. To the west of the Jewish
quarter is the Armenian quarter, site of the Gulbenkian Library. The Christian
quarter occupies the northern and northwestern parts of the Old City.
Its greatest monument is the Church of the Holy Sepulcher. Through the
area runs the Via Dolorosa, along which Jesus is said to have carried
his cross.
The New City and Other Districts
The New City, extending west and southwest of the Old City, has developed
tremendously since the 19th cent. It is the site of several educational
institutions, as well as the Knesset (Israeli parliament) and other government
buildings (including the striking Supreme Court building, which opened
in 1992). Yad Vashem, a memorial to the Holocaust, is also in that section
of the city. To the east of the Old City is the Valley of the Kidron,
beyond which lie the Garden of Gethsemane and the Mount of Olives. To
the north is Mt. Scopus, a Jewish intellectual center that is the site
of the Hadassah Medical Center, Hebrew Univ., and the Jewish National
Library. Another campus of Hebrew Univ. is located on the western edge
of the city at Ein Karem. From 1948 to 1967, Mt. Scopus was an Israeli
exclave in Arab territory. To the west and south of the Old City runs
the Valley of Hinnom; this meets the Kidron near the pool of Siloam, which
is next to the site of the original city of Jerusalem, now partly excavated
and called the City of David (see Ophel).
Cultural and Educational Institutions
Jerusalem has numerous museums; one of the finest is the Israel Museum,
in the New City, whose collection ranges from the contemporary to displays
of the Dead Sea Scrolls. The city is the seat of Hebrew Univ., the British
School of Archaeology, the Dominican Fathers Convent of St. Étienne,
with the attached Bible School and French Archaeological School, the American
College, the Greek Catholic Seminary of St. Anne, the Pontifical Biblical
Institute, the Swedish Theological Institute, the Near East School of
Archaeology, the Rubin Academy of Music, and the Israel Academy of Sciences
and Humanities.
History: Early History to 1900
Despite incomplete archaeological work, it is evident that Jerusalem was
occupied as far back as the 4th millenium B.C. In the late Bronze Age
(20001550 B.C.), it was a Jebusite (Canaanite) stronghold. David
captured it (c.1000 B.C.) from the Jebusites and walled the city. After
Solomon built the Temple on Mt. Moriah in the 10th cent. B.C., Jerusalem
became the spiritual and political capital of the Hebrews. In 586 B.C.
it fell to the Babylonians, and the Temple was destroyed.
The city was restored to Hebrew rule later in the 6th cent. B.C. by Cyrus
the Great, king of Persia. The Temple was rebuilt (538515 B.C.;
known as the Second Temple) by Zerubbabel, a governor of Jerusalem under
the Persians. In the mid-5th cent. B.C., Ezra reinvigorated the Jewish
community in Jerusalem. The city was the capital of the Maccabees in the
2d and 1st cent. B.C.
After Jerusalem had been taken for the Romans by Pompey, it became the
capital of the Herod dynasty, which ruled under the aegis of Rome. The
Roman emperor Titus ruined the city and destroyed the Temple (A.D. 70)
in order to punish and discourage the Jews. After the revolt of Bar Kokba
(A.D. 13235), Hadrian rebuilt the city as a pagan shrine called
Aelia Capitolina but forbade Jews to live on the site.
With the imperial toleration of Christianity (from 313), Jerusalem underwent
a revival, greatly aided by St. Helena, who sponsored much building in
the early 4th cent. Since that time Jerusalem has been a world pilgrimage
spot. Muslims, who believe that the city was visited by Muhammad, treated
Jerusalem favorably after they captured it in 637, making it the chief
shrine after Mecca. From 688 to 691 the Dome of the Rock mosque was constructed.
In the 11th cent. the Fatimids began to hinder Christian pilgrims; their
destruction of the Church of the Holy Sepulcher helped bring on the Crusades.
Jerusalem was conquered by the Crusaders in 1099 and for most of the 12th
cent. Was the capital of the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem. In 1187, Muslims
under Saladin recaptured the city. Thereafter, under Mamluk and then Ottoman
rule, Jerusalem was rebuilt and restored (especially by Sulayman I); but
by the late 16th cent. it was declining as a commercial and religious
center.
In the early 19th cent., Jerusalem began to revive. The flow of Christian
pilgrims increased, and churches, hospices, and other institutions were
built. Jewish immigration accelerated (especially from the time of the
Egyptian occupation of Jerusalem by Muhammad Ali in 183241), and
by 1900, Jews made up the largest community in the city and expanded settlement
outside the Old City walls.
The Twentieth Century
In 1917, during World War I, Jerusalem was captured by British forces
under Gen. Edmund Allenby. After the war it was made the capital of the
British-held League of Nations Palestine mandate (192248). As the
end of the mandate approached, Arabs and Jews both sought to hold sole
possession of the city. Most Christians favored a free city open to all
religions. This view prevailed in the United Nations, which, in partitioning
Palestine into Arab and Jewish states, declared that Jerusalem and its
environs (including Bethlehem) would be an internationally administered
enclave in the projected Arab state. Even before the partition went into
effect (May 14, 1948), fighting between Jews and Arabs broke out in the
city. On May 28, the Jews in the Old City surrendered. The New City remained
in Jewish hands. The Old City and all areas held by the Arab Legion (East
Jerusalem) were annexed by Jordan in Apr., 1949. Israel responded by retaining
the area it held. On Dec. 14, 1949, the New City of Jerusalem was made
the capital of Israel.
In the Arab-Israeli War of 1967, Israeli forces took the Old City. The
Israeli government then formally annexed the Old City and placed all of
Jerusalem under a unified administration. Arab East Jerusalemites were
offered regular Israeli citizenship but chose to maintain their status
as Jordanians. Israel transferred many Arabs out of the Old City but promised
access to the holy places to people of all religions. In July, 1980, Israels
parliament approved a bill affirming Jerusalem as the nations capital.
With suburbanization and housing developments in formerly Jordanian-held
territory, Jerusalem has become Israels largest city. Strife between
Arabs and Jews persists. The issue of the status of East Jerusalem, annexed
by Israel but regarded by Palestinians as the eventual capital of their
own state, remains difficult. In 1998, Israel announced a controversial
plan to expand Jerusalem by annexing nearby towns.
Bibliography
See S. B. Cohen, Jerusalem: Bridging the Four Walls (1977); M. Har-El,
This Is Jerusalem (1977); L. Collins and D. Lapierre, O Jerusalem (1980);
M. Gilbert, Jerusalem: Rebirth of a City (1985); F. E. Peters, Jerusalem
(1985); A. L. Eckardt, ed., Jerusalem: City of Ages (1987); A. Rabinovich,
Jerusalem on Earth (1988); H. Shanks, Jerusalem: An Archaeological Biography
(1995).
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright © 2001 Columbia
University Press.
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