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crusader hospital restored


Part of an Enormous 1,000 Year Old Hospital Building (August 2013)



The Israel Antiquities Authority conducted an excavation in the impressive Crusader building, which stands 6 meters high, prior to the construction of a restaurant by the Grand Bazaar Company
Photograph credit: Yoli Shwartz, courtesy of the Israel Antiquities Authority.



















Part of an enormous structure dating to the Crusader period (1099–1291 CE), which was a busy hospital, has currently been revealed to the public following excavations and research by the Israel Antiquities Authority there in cooperation with the Grand Bazaar Company of East Jerusalem. The building, owned by the Waqf, is situated in the heart of the Christian Quarter in the Old City of Jerusalem, in a region known as “Muristan” (a corruption of the Persian word for hospital), near David Street, the main road in the Old City.

Until a decade or so ago the building served as a bustling and crowded fruit and vegetable market. Since then it stood there desolate. In the wake of the Grand Bazaar Company’s intention to renovate the market as a restaurant, the Israel Antiquities Authority conducted archaeological soundings there.

The structure, only a small part of which was exposed in the excavation, seems to extend across an area of fifteen dunams! Its construction is characterized by massive pillars and ribbed vaults and it stands more than six meters high. The image we have is that of a great hall composed of pillars, rooms and smaller halls. 

see the url for the rest of the article

http://www.antiquities.org.il/article_Item_eng.asp?sec_id=25&subj_id=240&id=2016&module_id=#as

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