Pool of Siloam in Easton's Bible Dictionary
sent or sending. Here a notable miracle was wrought by our
Lord
in giving sight to the blind (John 9:7-11). It has
been
identified with the Birket Silwan in the lower
Tyropoeon valley,
to the south-east of the hill of Zion.
The water which flows into this pool intermittingly
by a
subterranean channel springs from the "Fountain of
the Virgin"
(q.v.). The length of this channel, which has
several windings,
is 1,750 feet, though the direct distance is only
1,100 feet.
The pool is 53 feet in length from north to south,
18 feet wide,
and 19 deep. The water passes from it by a channel
cut in the
rock into the gardens below. (See EN-ROGEL
-T0001214.)
Many years ago (1880) a youth, while wading up the
conduit by
which the water enters the pool, accidentally
discovered an
inscription cut in the rock, on the eastern side,
about 19 feet
from the pool. This is the oldest extant Hebrew
record of the
kind. It has with great care been deciphered by
scholars, and
has been found to be an account of the manner in
which the
tunnel was constructed. Its whole length is said to
be "twelve
hundred cubits;" and the inscription further notes
that the
workmen, like the excavators of the Mont Cenis
Tunnel, excavated
from both ends, meeting in the middle.
Some have argued that the inscription was cut in the
time of
Solomon; others, with more probability, refer it to
the reign of
Hezekiah. A more ancient tunnel was discovered in
1889 some 20
feet below the ground. It is of smaller dimensions,
but more
direct in its course. It is to this tunnel that
Isaiah (8:6)
probably refers.
The Siloam inscription above referred to was
surreptitiously
cut from the wall of the tunnel in 1891 and broken
into
fragments. These were, however, recovered by the
efforts of the
British Consul at Jerusalem, and have been restored
to their
original place.
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