Machpelah in Easton's Bible Dictionary
portion; double cave, the cave which Abraham bought,
together
with the field in which it stood, from Ephron the
Hittite, for a
family burying-place (Gen. 23). It is one of those
Bible
localities about the identification of which there
can be no
doubt. It was on the slope of a hill on the east of
Hebron,
"before Mamre." Here were laid the bodies of Abraham
and Sarah,
Isaac and Rebekah, Jacob and Leah (Gen. 23:19; 25:9;
49:31;
50:13). Over the cave an ancient Christian church
was erected,
probably in the time of Justinian, the Roman
emperor. This
church has been converted into a Mohammedan mosque.
The whole is
surrounded by the el-Haram i.e., "the sacred
enclosure," about
200 feet long, 115 broad, and of an average height
of about 50.
This building, from the immense size of some of its
stones, and
the manner in which they are fitted together, is
supposed by
some to have been erected in the days of David or of
Solomon,
while others ascribe it to the time of Herod. It is
looked upon
as the most ancient and finest relic of Jewish
architecture.
On the floor of the mosque are erected six large
cenotaphs as
monuments to the dead who are buried in the cave
beneath.
Between the cenotaphs of Isaac and Rebekah there is
a circular
opening in the floor into the cavern below, the cave
of
Machpelah. Here it may be that the body of Jacob,
which was
embalmed in Egypt, is still preserved (much older
embalmed
bodies have recently been found in the cave of Deir
el-Bahari in
Egypt, see PHARAOH -T0002923), though those of the
others there
buried may have long ago mouldered into dust. The
interior of
the mosque was visited by the Prince of Wales in
1862 by a
special favour of the Mohammedan authorities. An
interesting
account of this visit is given in Dean Stanley's
Lectures on the
Jewish Church. It was also visited in 1866 by the
Marquis of
Bute, and in 1869 by the late Emperor (Frederick) of
Germany,
then the Crown Prince of Prussia. In 1881 it was
visited by the
two sons of the Prince of Wales, accompanied by Sir
C. Wilson
and others. (See Israel Quarterly Statement,
October 1882).
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