When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Temple in Jerusalem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temple_in_Jerusalem

    The Temple Mount, along with the entire Old City of Jerusalem, was captured from Jordan by Israel in 1967 during the Six-Day War, allowing Jews once again to visit the holy site. [ 55 ] [ better source needed ] [ 56 ] Jordan had occupied East Jerusalem and the Temple Mount immediately following Israel's declaration of independence on May 14, 1948.

  3. Third Temple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Third_Temple

    Among some groups of devout Jews, anticipation of a future project to build the Third Temple at the Temple Mount in the Old City of Jerusalem has been espoused as an ideological motive in Israel. [1] Building the Third Temple has been contested by Muslims due to the existence of the Dome of the Rock, [1] which was built by the Umayyad Caliphate ...

  4. Temple Institute - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temple_Institute

    The Temple Institute, known in Hebrew as Machon HaMikdash (Hebrew: מכון המקדש), is an organization in Israel focusing on establishing the Third Temple.Its long-term aims are to build the third Temple in Jerusalem on the Temple Mount—the site occupied by the Dome of the Rock—and to reinstate korbanot and the other rites described in the Hebrew Bible and Jewish legal literature.

  5. Second Temple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_Temple

    Herod's Temple was one of the larger construction projects of the 1st century BCE. [33] Josephus records that Herod was interested in perpetuating his name through building projects, that his construction programs were extensive and paid for by heavy taxes, but that his masterpiece was the Temple of Jerusalem. [33]

  6. Solomon's Temple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solomon's_Temple

    Solomon's Temple, also known as the First Temple (Hebrew: בַּיִת רִאשׁוֹן ‎, romanized: Bayyit Rīšōn, lit. 'First Temple'), was a biblical Temple in Jerusalem believed to have existed between the 10th and 6th centuries BCE.

  7. Temple Mount - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temple_Mount

    The Temple Mount (Hebrew: הַר הַבַּיִת, romanized: Har haBayīt, lit. 'Temple Mount'), also known as the Noble Sanctuary (Arabic: الحرم الشريف, 'Haram al-Sharif'), and sometimes as Jerusalem's holy esplanade, [2] [3] is a hill in the Old City of Jerusalem that has been venerated as a holy site for thousands of years, including in Judaism, Christianity and Islam.

  8. Temple denial - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temple_Denial

    Reconstruction of the Second Temple in the Holyland Model of Jerusalem. Temple denial is the claim that the successive Temples in Jerusalem either did not exist or they did exist but were not constructed on the site of the Temple Mount, a claim which has been advanced by Islamic political leaders, religious figures, intellectuals, and authors.

  9. Archaeological remnants of the Jerusalem Temple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archaeological_remnants_of...

    The term First Temple is customarily used to describe the Temple of the pre-exilic period, which is thought to have been destroyed by the Babylonian conquest. It is described in the Bible as having been built by King Solomon and is understood to have been constructed with its Holy of Holies centered on a stone hilltop now known as the Foundation Stone which had been a traditional focus of ...