The capital city of the ancient land of Israel is situated 2,500
feet above sea level, high along a strategic ridge of hills. In
the ten centuries B.C., Jerusalem would become a buffer state between
the warring factions of Assyria and Egypt, and later would be influenced
by the Macedonian culture of Alexander the Great. By 173 B.C.,
Jerusalem would look like a Greek city, complete with gymnasiums.
When the Romans took over, they erected elaborate buildings and
water systems to accommodate them. In 73 A.D., they destroyed it
all, and Jerusalem lay in ruins.
From the city's inception, its lifeline of water depended solely
on hidden wells and underground cisterns. Fed by underground streams,
the Gihon Spring on Jerusalem's eastern slope was the ancient city's
only source of water at that end. Depending on die season, die
spring could supply water to the city once or of time. The Gihon
also irrigated the surrounding fields and gardens through several
open canals along what is known as the Kidron riverbed.
From the city's earliest settlements even prior to 1200 B.C. water
tunnels from the cit,v tapped into the connection located just
outside the city walls. As in other cultures, access to the water
supply had to be insured against enemy invaders who conceivably
could cut off the supply above ground.
About the late 8th Century B.C., King Hezekiel of Judah authorized
the excavation of a new tunnel even further away to access water
to the city, store the supply in an underground pool, and hide
the entrance of the spring. In his attempt to thwart a possible
Assyrian siege of the city, the tunnel would become one of the
earliest examples of daring engineering feats.
It would take two teams of workers six to seven months to literally
inch their way through 765 feet of solid rock. Each team chipped
the way to the center from opposite sides of the hill, extending
an aqueduct south of Bethlehem to Jerusalem. Evidently guided only
by water fissure, they laboriously dug out a tunnel about one yard
in width, and one to three yards in height. One man would methodically
and tediously hack and chip away, the others behind him passing
the broken stones out in baskets. Chiseled in the rock at the point
where the two teams met, archaeologists have found a Hebrew inscription
recounting "the day of the tunnel" in which "the stone cutters
made their way towards one another ax-blow by ax-blow." The tunnel
diverted the exposed spring of Gihon to a concealed point outside
Jerusalem's western wall.
The modern walkway of wooden planks leads down to the Megiddo
water system, probably dating back to the middle 12th Century
B.C.
For centuries Jerusalem was sparsely inhabited. It began to grow
under the Biblical King David who made the city his capital. By
the time his son Solomon was anointed king in 956 B.C., Jerusalem
had become a city of crowded, narrow streets, with spacious quarters
for the royal palaces and related court retinue.
The royal garrisons of King Solomon, however, were quartered on
the site of Megiddo (located some 22 miles southeast of present-day
Haifa), on the plain of Armageddon. Megiddo even then was an ancient
fortress town, dating back at least to the lath Century B.C. The
royal stables reportedly were outfitted with feeding troughs for
the 492 horses of the king's warrior corps.
The early inhabitants initially tried to sink a well shaft within
the city walls, straight down to the water's source, but couldn't.
This was still the Bronze Age and their primitive tools were no
match for the hardness of the rock. Instead, they had to dig vertically
and horizontally, first eking out a dark, angular tunnel. The tunnel
descended by a treacherous flight of stone steps hewn from the
rock; in essence a spiral staircase around a 43-foot shaft, down
and around to a huge natural cave outside the wa1ls of the city.
At the far end of the 75 ft. long x 25 ft.high x 15 ft. wide cave,
the diggers finally tapped the spring whose water still bubbles
to this day.
Sanitary laws: The ancient Hebrews were among
the earliest peoples to incorporate cleanliness and hygiene into
their religious observance and everyday life. Some attribute Moses'
upbringing in an Egyptian royal household for his emphasis oil
the purifying.htmlects of water. Washing, bathing and cleanliness
played a prominent role in the religious rites of the Jews, and
indirectly afforded the people a greater measure of health than
enjoyed by most ancient societies.
The earliest recorded sanitary laws concerning disposal of human
waste also are attributed to Moses and his teachings in the Old
Testament. Circa 1500 B.C, his people were instructed to dispose
of their waste away from the camp, and to use a spade to turn the
remains under the earth or sand. Of course, in crowded cities,
more ingenuity is required.
Jerusalem's water supply and drainage developed in stages from
the ancient days, even prior to the reign of King David in 1055
B.C. Drains were built for removing sewage from homes and streets,
while excess waste and refuse were carted out through the appropriately-named "Dung
Gate" of the city.
Because the temples required their own "pure water" arrangements,
there were two separate drain and waste water systems in the city.
This was certainly an extra expense, but the early plumbers developed
a conservation system for its reuse. Sink water was channeled into
ponds or large cesspools or directed into a settling basin. Here
the waste materials would be held in suspension and subsequently
used as manure for the fields and crop lands. Any surplus water
was eventually used in the cultivation of gardens.
More elaborate sewer systems were found in smaller towns of the
region. They consisted of a trunk line and auxiliary drains underneath
the houses.
In the courtyard of Solomon's Temple stood what the Old Testament
calls a "molten sea," said to have held 2,000 baths. It was used
by the celebrants to wash their hands and feet before entering
the sanctuary. According to one source, the "sea" or laver was
a replica of the apse, the layer that Babylonian priests
used in their temple rites, except the Babylonian layer was chiseled
out of stone.
This "molten sea" was a seven-foot high basin of bronze or brass,
15 feet in diameter and 3 inches thick. It rested on the backs
of 12 cast-iron oxen which stood in four groups of three. Biblical
scholars calculate the weight of the "sea" alone at 33 tons,
an astounding figure which can never really be proven. The layer
was situated close to the temple's "Water Gate" with a convenient
water conduit on the outside of the complex.
When 300 years later the Babylonian king Nebuchadnezzar ordered
Jerusalem burned and its people deported to Babylonia, the temple
was destroyed. Its treasures, including the lavers, were melted
down or carted away as tribute.
Herodian Era: In 38 B.C., Solomon's Temple was
rebuilt again, this time by Herod, Rome's proclaimed king of Judea.
He kept faithful to the original plans, including ritual baths
and layers and an extended courtyard.
Herod left his mark on other areas of the land, more notably on
Masada, a 1,300 foot high butte overlooking the peat Sea. It is
here that archaeologists have uncovered and partially restored
his living quarters and administrative palaces. Herod incorporated
the latest of Roman plumbing know-how in his citadel-for Masada
is an isolated fortress of rock sitting in the middle of a desert.
Bringing water to the barren area was a stunning feat by Herod
and his engineers. The water system originated in two small wadis or
gullies located some distance away. Typical in a desert, the wadis
quickly flooded with water from sudden, unpredictable down bursts.
To hold the waters until ready for release, the Romans constructed
dams in two places. On demand, they allowed the water to flow by
gravity through an aqueduct and channels directed to the site.
Herod built another set of cisterns at the top of the citadel
and connected them to conduits to catch rain. But the water supply
was a pittance for his two big palaces and five smaller ones on
the rock. Since a ruler such as Herod would not be denied the same
comforts he enjoyed in Jerusalem and his other palaces around the
land, he ordered a human conduit to bring up water from the cisterns
far below. Some estimate a work force of hundreds, maybe thousands,
of slaves and beasts of burden bearing jars of water for the royal
pleasures. Heron designed Masada's northern palace in three tiers.
In Roman fashion, it featured a bathhouse with four rooms: a hot
room (caldanium), cold room (frigidarium) and
its small cold water pool, a larger tepid room (tepidarium) and
the entrance (apotyterium) which included dressing rooms.
The walls were decorated with frescoes simulating marble or alabaster
walls. The entrance floors were mosaic, later to be replaced with
triangular tiles. A smaller villa featured a swimming pool too.
The caldarium was the largest room, containing below
a steam room whose floor rested upon 200 tiny columns of brick.
Perforated clay pipe within the walls carried the forced hot air
generated by an adjacent furnace. The design reportedly resembles
the Roman bathhouses found at Pompeii and Herculaneum.
After Herod died, Masada was all but deserted and in disrepair.
In 70 A.D. the fortress became a refuge again, this time for a
band of Jewish Zealots fleeing the Roman soldiers. Girding themselves
for a long siege, they settled on the opposite side of Herod's
rundown villas. In addition to carving out living quarters and
storehouses, they built three pools for the ritual baths.
In accordance with Jewish precepts, the mikveh allowed
only rainwater and used no metal piping in the construction.
The Roman siege lasted almost three years, the Zealots' water
supply still provided by Herod's cisterns. In 73 A.D. the 960 defenders
committed suicide rather than submit to the final assault of almost
15,000 Roman soldiers.