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Untold Archaeology of the Temple Mount — Rare Footage

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Untold Archaeology of the Temple Mount — Rare Footage

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Archaeology at the Temple Mount is strictly forbidden. However, over the past hundred years, the Temple Mount went through many renovations, during which archaeologists were able to document incredible findings. These findings and much more we reveal in this video.
We will enter the Temple Mount through the Moors Gate, walk to the Dome of the Rock and examine where the Ark of the Covenant could have stood, see the Golden Gate, and then peak into the archives of the Al-Aqsa mosque to find out what lies underneath it.
So join us for this adventure as we explore the Temple Mount.

Links:
Temple Mount guide book --
Temple Mount Sifting Project --

A special thanks to Leen Ritmeyer who provided the illustrations and much of the information in his incredible book Jerusalem: The Temple Mount - A Carta Guide Book”. We highly recommend to get a copy —

A special thanks to the Temple Mount Sifting Project for the incredible work they have done in the past 30 years to uncover many archaeological artifacts and data. Make sure to see Prof. Gabi Barkay and archaeologist Zachi Dvira who share incredible information on their YouTube page:

Credits:
Temple Mount Aerial Photo by Andrew Shiva / Wikipedia / CC BY-SA 4.0
Temple Mount Aerial Videos by Guy
Illustrations by Ritmeyer Archaeological Designs
Abraham Isaac Illustration by Phillip Medhurst
Well of Souls Photo by AP
Muslim Cemetery by Nikodem Nijaki
Archive pictures from Temple Mount are by IAA Archives
Temple Mount Sifting Project photo by Ana al'ain / Wiki

Timeline:
00:00 Intro
02:38 Entry via Moors Gate
04:55 Temple Mount
06:21 Dome of the Rock
09:00 Well of Souls
10:29 Golden Gate
14:05 Al-Aqsa Mosque
16:37 More Findings
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The Temple Mount Secrets: An Archaeological Goldmine

Temple Mount has a few mysterious that most people don't know about. The mountain of trash that is behind the Dome of the Rock is actually a debris from the illegal excavation at Temple Mount in 1999. This Debris holds 1st and 2nd temple period artifacts. In this video, Rhoda and I, together with our friends Jeremy and Jocelyn go on an unscripted expedition to the Temple Mount. Little did we know, today happens to be the Jerusalem day. A day which is usually known for civil unrest in this area. But this did not prevent us from seeing the debris, and also, accessing a completely new spot - the wall on top of the Eastern Gate. Join us in another adventure of the Unscripted series.
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Discrimination against Jews and Christians in Jerusalem (Ascending the Temple Mount)

Jews, Christians and basically any people who are not Muslims are being discriminated against in Jerusalem and yet nobody is talking about it.
Everything I’m going to say in this video is as clear as day but, as so often happens, the big stories are right in front of us but everybody chooses to look the other way.
Today we’re not going to look the other way. Today we’re going to look directly at the sad reality of the Temple Mount.

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The day I touched Mount Kailash!

An experience of a few lifetimes!

This is Charansparsh or the North Face of Mount Kailash in Tibet . I'm at an elevation of 21000 ft. This close, Kailash is SO MASSIVE, that no camera can truly capture its grandeur or girth!
#Kailash #Charansparsh #Northface
For a more complete picture, please visit @youtube.com/raushnigupta
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The Burning Man They DON'T Want YOU To See! (RARE FOOTAGE)

Burning Man is an annual festival held in the Black Rock Desert on the barren playa in Nevada, claiming to be the world's largest Leave No Trace event. For one week, 80,000 people gather to camp out and create an experimental city known as Black Rock City. Today, we travel to the location of Burning Man 2019 to conduct an investigation into what they leave behind. What we found was SHOCKING...

In this documentary, we cover the aftermath of the Burning Man festival: from around the area of Reno, Nevada to the environment around the Black Rock Desert, this is the impact of 80,000 people camping at Burning Man in the Nevada desert.

WATCH OUR FIRST VIDEO COVERING BURNING MAN'S PREPARATIONS & GERLACH, NEVADA:

I'm On Temple Mount in Jerusalem | Exclusive Footage

We got yelled at by Palestinians.

The Temple Mount has become the epicenter of the conflict surrounding Al Aqsa and the Dome of the Rock. Many words can be said about Jerusalem - but there is nothing like taking you with me on a rare walk in the holiest site for the Jewish nation. ????????

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AD 70 to AD 2022. The history of the Temple Mount in Jerusalem

Pilate, crucifixion, and the Temple in Jerusalem - Rare archaeological evidence for their existence

Information about the Israel Museum, Jerusalem itself will be provided after this announcement.

Unfortunately, I have not been able to work as a tour guide as from Feb 2020
Should you wish to support me and my videos please subscribe to my channel and let me guide you through the Holy Land via my videos. In this way, I will be able to continue to do my work of uploading to YouTube. Upon your request and in return I am very much happy to pray for you at the Western Wall and/or light a candle in your name at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre or anywhere else in the Holy Land of Israel.

Should you have a personal request I will be more than happy to respond and even film it in a personal video.
Support and purchase of goods from the Holy Land:
Support using PayPal:
Kindly share this site with your other friends/family that are interested in the rich and sacred history of Israel.

Thank you so much
Your tour guide
Zahi Shaked





The Roman conquest in 63 BCE and the appointment of Herod as king of Judea mark the beginning of a new era. One of the most important building projects carried out by Herod, known as the greatest builder ever in the Land, was the Temple Mount in Jerusalem. Only a few vestiges of this temple have survived, most of them on display here; a unique, stone inscription in Hebrew from the parapet at the southwestern corner of the Temple Mount indicates the place where the priest once stood to sound the trumpet announcing the beginning and end of the Sabbath. King Herod's death in 4 BCE put an end to a relatively peaceful, and prosperous era. Fragments from his impressive mausoleum at Herodium are displayed, alongside the king's coffin.

Religious turmoil, and social tension as the Second Temple period drew to a close, were the backdrop to the activity of Jesus of Nazareth, whose teachings created a new religion – Christianity. Jesus’ dramatic life story is reflected in two rare objects relating to his trial and crucifixion. A Latin dedicatory inscription from Caesarea, mentioning Pontius Pilate, the Roman procurator of Judea who sentenced Jesus to his crucifixion; and an ossuary (a box for the burial of bones). The ossuary contained, according to the name appearing twice on it the high priest Joseph son of Caiaphas, who was involved in Jesus’ arrest, according to the New Testament. An iron nail, embedded in a heel bone, displayed next to the ossuary in which it was found, is the only archaeological evidence of the Roman practice of execution by crucifixion to have survived in the world.

This turbulent period ended in the Great Revolt of the Jewish population against the Roman Empire (CE 66 - 70), which led to the destruction of the Temple and Jerusalem. Masada became the last stronghold. There, as contemporary Jewish historian Flavius Josephus tells us, the last of the rebels barricaded themselves in, where they probably died in the year 73 CE. The personal belongings of a man, a woman and a child, and a woman’s braid, the only such remains to have been found in the archaeological excavations at Masada are a moving testimony to their last moments.
Zahi Shaked A tour guide in Israel and his camera zahigo25@walla.com +972-54-6905522 tel סיור עם מורה הדרך ומדריך הטיולים צחי שקד 0546905522
My name is Zahi Shaked
In 2000 I became a registered licensed tourist guide.
My dedication in life is to pass on the ancient history of the Holy Land.

Following upon many years of travel around the world, which was highlighted by a very exciting emotional and soul-searching meeting with the Dalai Lama, I realized that I had a mission. To pass on the history of the Holy Land, its religions, and in particular, the birth and development of Christianity.

In order to fulfill this calling in the best way possible, I studied in depth, visited, and personally experienced each and every important site of the ancient Christians. I studied for and received my first bachelors degree in the ancient history of the Holy Land, and am presently completing my studies for my second degree.(Masters)

Parralel to my studies, and in order to earn a living, I was employed for many years in advertising. What I learned there was how to attract the publics attention, generate and, increase interest, and assimilate information. All this I use as tools to describe, explain and deepen the interest in the sites that we visit. From my experience, I have learned that in this way, the Holy Land becomes more than just history, and that the large stones that we see scattered about in dissaray, join together one by one until they become - a Byzantine Church.

Temple Mount looks different at Night

What does Jerusalem look like at night? Join us to find out as we walk the streets of ancient city into the Western Wall area and navigate our way to the terraces above it that overlook the Temple Mount. The views were unbelievable, but so was the story that unfolded and our escape.





English Closed Captions created by Terri Adams. Looking for English Captions of your own? Contact Terri at I.Create.Captions@gmail.com

Tour of Temple Mount in Jerusalem

Explore the Temple Mount in Jerusalem, considered one of the most sacred sites to the three monotheistic religions.

To find out about more tours in Jerusalem, please visit:
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har habayit עליה להר הבית...מדהים

עליה להר הבית לרגל בת המצוה של מוריה. ח' אלול תשעה.

Kibbutz Tour with Rare Archaeological Finds

We are invited to take a sneak peek into the first religious kibbutz in Israel by the name Tirat Zvi. It is home to a few rare archaeological finds, such as an ancient Mosaic with a menorah, and an ancient Roman milestone marking the 6th mile from Scythapolis (Beit Shean). Join us on this adventure as Danny Herman, aka Danny the Digger, takes us on an incredible adventure.

Copyright Notices:
— Kibbutz photos attribution: ארכיון גן-שמואל, ארכיון קיבוץ גת
— Acts illustrations: John Paul Stanley / YoPlace.com
— Scripture taken from the New King James Version®. Copyright © 1982 by Thomas Nelson. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

Season 4, Episode 2

Temple Mount Above and Below

Dome of the Rock, Temple Mount Jerusalem

The Dome of the Rock (Arabic: قبة الصخرة, romanized: Qubbat aṣ-Ṣakhra) is an Islamic shrine located on the Temple Mount in the Old City of Jerusalem, a site also known to Muslims as the al-Haram al-Sharif or the Al-Aqsa Compound. Its initial construction was undertaken by the Umayyad Caliphate on the orders of Abd al-Malik during the Second Fitna in 691–692 CE, and it has since been situated on top of the site of the Second Jewish Temple (built in c. 516 BCE to replace the destroyed Solomon's Temple), which was destroyed by the Romans in 70 CE. The original dome collapsed in 1015 and was rebuilt in 1022–23. The Dome of the Rock is the world's oldest surviving work of Islamic architecture.

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Its architecture and mosaics were patterned after nearby Byzantine churches and palaces, although its outside appearance was significantly changed during the Ottoman period and again in the modern period, notably with the addition of the gold-plated roof, in 1959–61 and again in 1993. The octagonal plan of the structure may have been influenced by the Byzantine-era Church of the Seat of Mary (also known as Kathisma in Greek and al-Qadismu in Arabic), which was built between 451 and 458 on the road between Jerusalem and Bethlehem.
The Foundation Stone (or Noble Rock) that the temple was built over bears great significance in the Abrahamic religions as the place where God created the world as well as the first human, Adam. It is also believed to be the site where Abraham attempted to sacrifice his son, and as the place where God's divine presence is manifested more than in any other place, towards which Jews turn during prayer. The site's great significance for Muslims derives from traditions connecting it to the creation of the world and the belief that the Night Journey of Muhammad began from the rock at the centre of the structure.
Designated by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site, it has been called Jerusalem's most recognizable landmark along with two nearby Old City structures: the Western Wall and the Resurrection Rotunda in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. It is the earliest archaeologically attested religious structure to be built by a Muslim ruler and the building's inscriptions contain the earliest epigraphic proclamations of Islam and of the Islamic prophet Muhammad; the inscriptions proved to be a milestone, as afterward they became a common feature in Islamic structures and almost always mention Muhammad. The Dome of the Rock remains a unique monument of Islamic culture in almost all respects, including as a work of art and as a cultural and pious document, according to historian Oleg Grabar.
#domeoftherock #templemount #jerusalem

Monumental Jerusalem street was built by Pontius Pilate was discovered in 'City of David', Jerusalem

Information about the Monumental Jerusalem street was built by Pontius Pilateitself will be provided after this announcement.

Unfortunately, I have not been able to work as a tour guide as from Feb 2020
Should you wish to support me and my videos please subscribe to my channel and let me guide you through the Holy Land via my videos. In this way, I will be able to continue to do my work of uploading to YouTube. Upon your request and in return I am very much happy to pray for you at the Western Wall and/or light a candle in your name at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre or anywhere else in the Holy Land of Israel.

Should you have a personal request I will be more than happy to respond and even film it in a personal video.
Donations:
Kindly share this site with your other friends/family that are interested in the rich and sacred history of Israel.

Thank you so much
Your tour guide
Zahi Shaked





Israeli archaeologists have concluded that a stepped-stone street once used by Jewish pilgrims to reach the Temple in Jerusalem was built by Pontius Pilate, the Roman governor of Judea best known for washing his hands of Jesus’ fate.

Assuming he really was behind the street’s construction, that suggests the historical Pilate was a more complex personality than the corrupt and ruthless figure that Jewish and Christian writers describe, the researchers say. It also sheds new light on the origins of this impressive walkway, which is now one of the highlights of a controversial archaeological park in East Jerusalem.

The research published Tuesday in the peer-reviewed publication Tel Aviv: Journal of the Institute of Archaeology of Tel Aviv University analyzed coins that were found beneath and above the ancient thoroughfare. The monumental street, paved with massive stone slabs, climbs to the southern side of the Temple Mount from the pool of Siloam, running through what today is known as the City of David, the most ancient part of Jerusalem.

In the early Roman period, up until the destruction of Jerusalem and the Second Temple in 70 C.E., it was a bustling avenue 600 meters long and approximately 8 meters wide, lined with shops, taverns and monumental features, such as a podium for public speeches.

Sections of the street have been undergoing excavation since the late 19th century. Archaeologists had previously associated its construction with different rulers, from Herod the Great, who reigned over Judea from 37 to 4 B.C.E., to one of his successors.

However, the more than 100 coins identified beneath the street’s paving now prove that the project must have been completed between the years 31 and 40 C.E., a period mostly covered by the rule of the infamous Pilate, explains Nashon Szanton, an archaeologist with the Israel Antiquities Authority and a Ph.D. student at Tel Aviv University who is the paper’s lead author.

Just like today, coins in antiquity tended to frequently drop from people’s pockets, and could end up sealed under structures that were built subsequently.

“Dating using coins is very exact,” says Dr. Donald T. Ariel, an archaeologist and coin expert with the Israel Antiquities Authority, and one of the co-authors of the article. Some coins show the year in which they were minted. If a coin found beneath a street is dated 30 C.E. then the street had to be built that same year or any time after 30 C.E., he says.

Following multiple probes beneath the paving stones by Szanton and colleagues, as well as by archaeologists in previous digging campaigns, the most recent coins found were dated to 30 or 31 C.E., during the reign of the Emperor Tiberius.

This means that the walkway, previously also dubbed by researchers the “Herodian street,” had nothing to do with Herod or his immediate successors, the new study concludes. It was most likely built after Rome took direct control of Judea, and specifically during Pilate’s tenure, which traditionally is set between 26 and 37 C.E. – though some researchers believe it was even longer.

Some archaeologists have argued that the coins minted under Pilate could have been lost in the area that was later covered by the street long after they first entered circulation, meaning the street could have been built decades later, perhaps even just shortly before the start of the Jewish revolt in 66 C.E. that led to the destruction of the city.

Not so, because then we should also find coins minted in those later periods, Szanton and colleagues counter.
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BUILDING TEMPLE MOUNT @ Jerusalem, Israel || David Wijayanto

BUILDING TEMPLE MOUNT @ Jerusalem, Israel || David Wijayanto

#building #templemount #jerusalem #israel #DavidWijayanto #holyland #pilgrimage #DW #video


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GBU Always

Discovery on Jerusalem Pilgrimage Road Proves It Was Built by the Man Who Crucified Jesus

The Roman governor who was responsible for condemning Jesus to death also ordered the construction of a street for pilgrims to follow to the Jewish Temple more than 2,000 years ago.

Historians previously thought it was the Roman-appointed King Herod the Great who approved most of the large construction projects that remade ancient Jerusalem into a major pilgrimage and tourist center.

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Jerusalem Templemound Footage - amosrafaeli

Footage of the Templemount

Eco Tours in Israel: Dome of the spirits video

Eco Tours in Israel: with your personal tour guide, Dani Margolis

Dome of the Rock | দ্য ডোম অফ দ্য রক | আল আকসা মসজিদ

masjid al aqsa
masjid aqsa
masjid al aqsa vlog
inside al aqsa mosque
al aqsa mosque
al aqsa
masjid al aqsa tour

দ্য ডোম অফ দ্য রক (আরবি: قبة الصخرة রোমানাইজড: কুব্বাত আশ-আখরা) হল জেরুজালেমের পুরাতন শহরের টেম্পল মাউন্টে অবস্থিত একটি ইসলামিক উপাসনালয় এটি মুসলমানদের কাছে আল-হারাম আল-শরীফ নামেও পরিচিত। আল-আকসা কম্পাউন্ড। ৬৯১-৬৯২ খ্রিস্টাব্দে দ্বিতীয় ফিতনার সময় আবদ আল-মালিকের নির্দেশে উমাইয়া খিলাফতের প্রাথমিক নির্মাণকাজ করা হয়েছিল এবং তখন থেকে এটি দ্বিতীয় ইহুদি মন্দিরের (সি.-৫১৬ খ্রিস্টপূর্বাব্দে নির্মিত) স্থানের শীর্ষে অবস্থিত। ধ্বংস হওয়া সলোমনের মন্দির প্রতিস্থাপন করার জন্য)যা 70 সিইতে রোমানরা ধ্বংস করেছিল। মূল গম্বুজটি 1015 সালে ভেঙে পড়ে এবং 1022-23 সালে পুনর্নির্মিত হয়। দ্য ডোম অফ দ্য রক হল বিশ্বের প্রাচীনতম টিকে থাকা ইসলামী স্থাপত্যের কাজ।[1][2]

এটির স্থাপত্য এবং মোজাইকগুলি কাছাকাছি বাইজেন্টাইন গির্জা এবং প্রাসাদগুলির অনুকরণে তৈরি করা হয়েছিল[3] যদিও উসমানীয় আমলে এবং আধুনিক যুগে এর বাইরের চেহারা উল্লেখযোগ্যভাবে পরিবর্তিত হয়েছিলবিশেষত সোনার ধাতুপট্টাবৃত ছাদ সংযোজনের সাথে1959-61 সালে এবং আবার 1993 সালে। কাঠামোর অষ্টভুজাকার পরিকল্পনাটি বাইজেন্টাইন যুগের চার্চ অফ দ্য সিট অফ মেরির দ্বারা প্রভাবিত হতে পারে (গ্রীক ভাষায় কাথিসমা এবং আরবীতে আল-কাদিসমু নামেও পরিচিত) যা রাস্তার উপর 451 থেকে 458 সালের মধ্যে নির্মিত হয়েছিল। জেরুজালেম এবং বেথলেহেমের মধ্যে।
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