Khirbet el-Mird in Wikipedia
Hyrcania (Greek: Ὑρκανία; Arabic: Khirbet el-Mird) was an
ancient fortress in the Judean Desert of the West Bank.
Upper part of the fortress
Water reservoir
Herodian-period mosaic floor
The site is located on an isolated hill about 200 m above
the Hyrcania valley, on its western edge. It is about 5 km
west of Qumran, and 16 km east of Jerusalem. The site has
not yet been thoroughly excavated. Current knowledge about
the ruins of the site is based on a limited number of test
pits.
Hyrcania was apparently built by Alexander Jannaeus or his
father John Hyrcanus in the first or second century BC. The
first mention of the fortress is during the reign of Salome
Alexandra, the wife of Jannaeus, circa 75 BC: Flavius
Josephus relates that, along with Machaerus and Alexandrion,
Hyrcania was one of three fortresses that the queen did not
give up when she handed control of her strongholds to the
Pharisee party.[1]
The fortress is mentioned again in 57 BC when Alexander of
Judaea, son of Aristobulus II, fled from the Roman governor
of Syria, Aulus Gabinius, who had come to suppress the
revolt Alexander had stirred up against Hyrcanus II.
Alexander made to re-fortify Hyrcania, but eventually
surrendered to Gabinius. The fortress was then razed.[2] The
Greek geographer Strabo also notes the destruction, along
with that of Alexandrium and Machaerus, the "haunts of the
robbers and the treasure-holds of the tyrants", at the
direction of Gabinius's superior, the Roman general Pompey.
[3]
Hyrcania is next reported in 33–32 BC being used in an
uprising against Herod the Great led by the sister of
Herod's executed former rival Antigonus.[4] The fortress was
retaken, and extended;[5] it became notorious as a place
where Herod imprisoned and killed his enemies,[6] ultimately
including his own son and heir Antipater.[7]
In later times St Sabbas the Sanctified founded a residence
(cenobium) for hermits on the site in 492 AD, called the
Castellion, part of the satellite community or lavra
associated with the monastery at Mar Saba 4 km to the south-
east. Hermits remained until the fourteenth century, with a
brief attempt made to re-establish the community between
1923 and 1939.[8]
Some have identified the Hyrcania valley below the fortress
with the Biblical valley of Achor, which is identified in
the Copper Scroll of the Dead Sea Scrolls as the site of a
great treasure. This has led to interest by treasure hunters
in the area, despite it being subject to live-fire exercises
by the Israeli army.[9] Two ancient stepped tunnels cut down
into the rock for a distance of 50 metres nearby have been
cleared of debris and sand in an investigation led by Oren
Gutfeld of Hebrew University, but yielded only a Hasmonean-
period clay pot and a skeleton.[
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