Hezekiah's Tunnel in Wikipedia
Hezekiah's Tunnel, or the Siloam Tunnel is a tunnel that was
dug underneath the City of David in Jerusalem before 701 BC
during the reign of Hezekiah. The tunnel is mentioned in 2
Kings 20:20 in the Bible. The Bible also tells us that king
Hezekiah prepared Jerusalem to an impending siege by the
Assyrians, by "blocking the source of the waters of the
upper Gihon, and leading them straight down on the west to
the City of David" (II Book of Chronicles chapter 32). The
tunnel has been securely dated both by the written
inscription found on its wall (Siloam Inscription), and by
dating organic matter contained in the original plastering.
[1] It is one of the few intact, 8th century BC structures
in the world that the public can not only visit, but enter
and walk through.
The tunnel, leading from the Gihon Spring to the Pool of
Siloam,[2][3][4] was designed to act as an aqueduct to
provide Jerusalem with water during an impending siege by
the Assyrians, led by Sennacherib. The curving tunnel is 533
m long, and by using a 30 cm (0.6%) gradient altitude
difference between each end, conveyed water along its length
from the spring to the pool.
According to the Siloam inscription, the tunnel was
excavated by two teams, one starting at each end of the
tunnel and then meeting in the middle. The inscription is
partly unreadable at present, and may originally have
conveyed more information than this. It is clear from the
tunnel itself that several directional errors were made
during its construction[5]. Recent scholarship has
discredited the idea that the tunnel may have been formed by
substantially widening a pre-existing natural karst.[6]
The difficult feat of making two teams digging from opposite
ends meet far underground is now understood to have been
accomplished by directing the two teams from above using
sounds generated by hammering on the solid karst through
which the tunnelers were digging.
Function and origin
The ancient city of Jerusalem, being on a mountain, is
naturally defensible from almost all sides, but suffers from
the drawback that its major source of fresh water, the Gihon
spring, is on the side of the cliff overlooking the Kidron
Valley. This presents a major military weakness as the city
walls, if high enough to be defensible, must necessarily
leave the Gihon spring outside, thus leaving the city
without a fresh water supply in case of siege.
The Bible says that King Hezekiah (c. 8th century BC),
fearful that the Assyrians would lay siege to the city,
blocked the spring's water outside the city and diverted it
through a channel into the then Pool of Siloam[8]. However,
it is now known (as of 1997) that the earlier Warren's shaft
system had already heavily fortified the Gihon Spring[9];
Warren's shaft is not an aqueduct, and requires those
desiring water to travel up and down it themselves - an
arrangement that Hezekiah seemingly must have considered
inadequate.
In 1899, an ancient channel, also leading from the Gihon
Spring to the Siloam Pool area, but by a more direct route,
was found. This channel is now known as the Middle Bronze
Age channel, on account of its estimated age. Ronny Reich
determined that it was constructed around 1800 BC (in the
Middle Bronze Age), and thus that the spring's water had
already been diverted many centuries before Hezekiah. As
originally constructed, it is understood as a 20 feet deep
ditch in the ground, covered over by large rock slabs (which
were then hidden in the foliage). It is narrower than the
tunnel, but can still be walked by a human for most of its
length. In addition to the (3 ft high) exit near the Siloam
pool, the channel has several small outlets that watered the
gardens facing the Kidron Valley[10]. Hezekiah's tunnel was
constructed to replace this channel, since a besieging army
could fairly easily have discovered and destroyed the Middle
Bronze Age Channel.
Hezekiah's tunnel, discovered in 1838 by the American
biblical scholar Edward Robinson, can be walked through
today from end to end.
The Bible verses relating to Hezekiah's tunnel are these:
"And the rest of the acts of Hezekiah, and all his might,
and how he made a pool, and a conduit, and brought water
into the city, are they not written in the book of the
chronicles of the kings of Judah?" 2 Kings 20:20
"And when Hezekiah saw that Sennacherib was come, and that
he was purposed to fight against Jerusalem, He took counsel
with his princes and his mighty men to stop the waters of
the fountains which were without the city: and they did help
him. So there was gathered much people together, who stopped
all the fountains, and the brook that ran through the midst
of the land, saying, Why should the kings of Assyria come,
and find much water?" 2 Chronicles 32:2-4
"This same Hezekiah also stopped the upper watercourse of
Gihon, and brought it straight down to the west side of the
city of David. And Hezekiah prospered in all his works." 2
Chronicles 32:30
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