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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Sept. 5, 1868
  • Page 3
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Sept. 5, 1868: Page 3

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    Article PALESTINE EXPLORATION FUND. ← Page 2 of 5
    Article PALESTINE EXPLORATION FUND. Page 2 of 5 →
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Palestine Exploration Fund.

capital supervision exercised . In all its details the working of that lodge is more and more shewn to be a model for all future lodges . In the face of the ivall have been discovered a triple gate and a single gate . These promise rich grounds for

future investigation . Again at the corner of this wall , and at a depth of 85 feet below the surface of the ground , Bro . Warren came upon a small stone built passage running south . This seems to have been without

doubt one of King Solomon ' s aqueducts for carrying away the overflow water . It was explored by Lieut . Warren for about 400 feet , Avhen the badness of the air compelled him to give up the attempt for the time . It is greatly to be

hoped that another visit may lead him to further discoveries in this interesting spot . The result of the excavations at the south wall

may be summed up briefly . It is now quite clear that the wall mentioned by Josephus and in Kings was a gigantic work of masonry , immensely larger and more wonderful than moderns have ever been led to believe . Behind this Avail and

within the sacred area exists a most complicated series of vaults , passages , chambers , and tanks , serving as drainage sewers , passages for the blood of the sacrifices , for overflow water , and for water supply . What riches lie buried in these vaults ,

what secrets will be disclosed , ivhat curious monuments of antiquarian art given back to the light time will show . In the meantime , we may hope for everything , and be grateful for anything . Between Mount Moriah and Mount Zion lay formerly a valley , called the Tyropoeon valley . The portion of this valley has always been a

subject of controversy . It is now finally established . Moreover , there ran in former times a most magnificent causeway from Zion to Moriah . Where the valley makes a sudden and precipitous descent , close to the Haran wall , it was spanned by a

splendid arch , now called Robinson ' s Arch . Exploring this at a depth of fifty feet below the level of the ground , Lieut . Warren has come upon the fallen voussoirs of the arch themselves lying one on the other as they were thrown down , and

covered with the debris of two thousand years . The arch itself must have been upwards of ei ghty feet high , with a span of forty-one feet . Trul y our early brethren were masters indeed . The following extract will show a few of the difficulties that the explorers have to contend with : —

Palestine Exploration Fund.

" Jerusalem is a necessitous place at present ; to-day we can get no meat for love or money ; yesterday no bread at any price , and all the week no charcoal ; camel-drivers fear to come near the walls ; at night you may see mysterious looking

dark bundles lying along the Jaffa road—they are the camel loads which have been brought up hastily and thrown down , the camels being got out of the way as soon as possible for fear of being pressed by the troops . To get mules you must

guarantee their safe return to their stables , or the owners will have nothing to say to you . Baskets for removing earth are not to be had now in Jerusalem , the stores of them at Lydd were gutted by the authorities , and I have been obliged to send a Eellah through the country foraging for some . All this is the effect of the Avar on the

other side of Jordan , combined with a recent attempt at grafting European usages on Arab customs ,- which must fail . " ¦ Under date December 12 th , 1867 , Bro . Warren writes : —

" During the last fortnight I have been occupied in , exploring cisterns and passages in and abont Jerusalem , and it appears to me that the great question of the ancient water-supply is soon likely to draw some attention .

" 1 . About a mile south of the village of Lifta , * on the crest of a hill , is a chasm in the rocks ,, about ivhich there are many traditions , and which we failed to explore in the spring . We went there last Monday , provided with three ladders ^

reaching together 120 feet ., and a dockyard rope 165 feet long . We had three men to assist in lowering us on the rope . The entrance from the top just allows of a man squeezing through , but as you descend , the chasm opens out until at 125

feet it is about 15 feet by 30 inch . At this point is a ledge , and we rested there while we lowered the ladders another 30 feet , to enable us to descend to the bottom , which is at the great depth of 155 feet from the surface . The chasm is exactly

perpendicular , and the bottom is horizontal . Water was dripping quickly from the rocks , but ran out of sight at once . On the floor was a rough stone pillar , and near it the skeleton of an infant ; close to the pillar is a cleft in the rock , very

narrow , into which the water was running . " I cannot help thinking that this cleft is partially artificial . I have not yet ascertained its

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1868-09-05, Page 3” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 4 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_05091868/page/3/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS. Article 1
PALESTINE EXPLORATION FUND. Article 2
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 7
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 9
MASONIC MEMS. Article 10
GRAND LODGE. Article 10
PROVINCIAL. Article 14
INDIA. Article 15
SCOTLAND. Article 16
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 18
Obituary. Article 18
THE LATE BRO. THOMAS POWRIE. Article 20
METROPOLITAN LODGE MEETINGS, ETC., FOR THE WEEK ENDING SEPTEMBER 12th, 1868. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Palestine Exploration Fund.

capital supervision exercised . In all its details the working of that lodge is more and more shewn to be a model for all future lodges . In the face of the ivall have been discovered a triple gate and a single gate . These promise rich grounds for

future investigation . Again at the corner of this wall , and at a depth of 85 feet below the surface of the ground , Bro . Warren came upon a small stone built passage running south . This seems to have been without

doubt one of King Solomon ' s aqueducts for carrying away the overflow water . It was explored by Lieut . Warren for about 400 feet , Avhen the badness of the air compelled him to give up the attempt for the time . It is greatly to be

hoped that another visit may lead him to further discoveries in this interesting spot . The result of the excavations at the south wall

may be summed up briefly . It is now quite clear that the wall mentioned by Josephus and in Kings was a gigantic work of masonry , immensely larger and more wonderful than moderns have ever been led to believe . Behind this Avail and

within the sacred area exists a most complicated series of vaults , passages , chambers , and tanks , serving as drainage sewers , passages for the blood of the sacrifices , for overflow water , and for water supply . What riches lie buried in these vaults ,

what secrets will be disclosed , ivhat curious monuments of antiquarian art given back to the light time will show . In the meantime , we may hope for everything , and be grateful for anything . Between Mount Moriah and Mount Zion lay formerly a valley , called the Tyropoeon valley . The portion of this valley has always been a

subject of controversy . It is now finally established . Moreover , there ran in former times a most magnificent causeway from Zion to Moriah . Where the valley makes a sudden and precipitous descent , close to the Haran wall , it was spanned by a

splendid arch , now called Robinson ' s Arch . Exploring this at a depth of fifty feet below the level of the ground , Lieut . Warren has come upon the fallen voussoirs of the arch themselves lying one on the other as they were thrown down , and

covered with the debris of two thousand years . The arch itself must have been upwards of ei ghty feet high , with a span of forty-one feet . Trul y our early brethren were masters indeed . The following extract will show a few of the difficulties that the explorers have to contend with : —

Palestine Exploration Fund.

" Jerusalem is a necessitous place at present ; to-day we can get no meat for love or money ; yesterday no bread at any price , and all the week no charcoal ; camel-drivers fear to come near the walls ; at night you may see mysterious looking

dark bundles lying along the Jaffa road—they are the camel loads which have been brought up hastily and thrown down , the camels being got out of the way as soon as possible for fear of being pressed by the troops . To get mules you must

guarantee their safe return to their stables , or the owners will have nothing to say to you . Baskets for removing earth are not to be had now in Jerusalem , the stores of them at Lydd were gutted by the authorities , and I have been obliged to send a Eellah through the country foraging for some . All this is the effect of the Avar on the

other side of Jordan , combined with a recent attempt at grafting European usages on Arab customs ,- which must fail . " ¦ Under date December 12 th , 1867 , Bro . Warren writes : —

" During the last fortnight I have been occupied in , exploring cisterns and passages in and abont Jerusalem , and it appears to me that the great question of the ancient water-supply is soon likely to draw some attention .

" 1 . About a mile south of the village of Lifta , * on the crest of a hill , is a chasm in the rocks ,, about ivhich there are many traditions , and which we failed to explore in the spring . We went there last Monday , provided with three ladders ^

reaching together 120 feet ., and a dockyard rope 165 feet long . We had three men to assist in lowering us on the rope . The entrance from the top just allows of a man squeezing through , but as you descend , the chasm opens out until at 125

feet it is about 15 feet by 30 inch . At this point is a ledge , and we rested there while we lowered the ladders another 30 feet , to enable us to descend to the bottom , which is at the great depth of 155 feet from the surface . The chasm is exactly

perpendicular , and the bottom is horizontal . Water was dripping quickly from the rocks , but ran out of sight at once . On the floor was a rough stone pillar , and near it the skeleton of an infant ; close to the pillar is a cleft in the rock , very

narrow , into which the water was running . " I cannot help thinking that this cleft is partially artificial . I have not yet ascertained its

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