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We leave the cistern area, and are delighted with the full
beauty of the Herodian Street. This originally was a promenade that ran the full length of
the Western Wall. Notice the well-planned and paved stones of the flooring.
Strangely, one huge paving stone was never incorporated
into the floor. Was it left here in haste as the Roman army advanced? If stones could
speak! What stories it could tell, waiting here century after century for the Jewish
people to return.
During the rainy season the gutter in front of us channeled
water into the Hasmonean Cistern, which was used by Herod. During good weather people
would stroll along the wall with the guardrail running along the open pool of the cistern.
Looking up, you see the vault system built in the 14th
century. Try to put yourself even further back in time, back 2,000 years ago, with the sky
above us.
They were also able to stroll west, away from the Western Wall. The two pillars on the
left date back to the Second Temple. When this area was excavated, they found additional
pillars behind these two.
Most archaeologists take this as evidence that a major street ran
perpendicular to and away from the Wall, toward the west. It may have been a market or
some other public gathering area.
When the Mamelukes took over Jerusalem, they simply
incorporated these structures into their own buildings, as did those regimes who followed.
But where did the original stones come from?
The answer lies just a few feet ahead.
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