Centre of Jewish national worship in Jerusalem, in both ancient and modern times, sited on Mount Moriah (or Temple Mount), one of the hills of Mount Zion. The
Wailing Wall is the surviving part of the western wall of the enclosure of Herod's Temple. Since the destruction of the Temple in
AD 70, Jews have gone there to pray and to mourn their dispersion and the loss of their homeland.
Three temples have occupied the site:
Solomon's Temple, built about 950
BC, which was destroyed by the Babylonian king Nebuchadnezzar in 586
BC;
Zerubbabel's Temple, built after the return of the Jews from Babylonian Captivity in 536
BC; and
Herod's Temple, which was destroyed by the Romans.
The site of the Temple now lies within a Muslim sacred enclosure known as Haram al-Sharif, containing the al-Aqsa mosque and the
Dome of the Rock, built over an ancient rock altar (a great outcrop of rock) that was part of Solomon's Temple. Under Jordanian rule Jews had no access to the site, but the Israelis regained this part of the city in the 1967 war.
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