Warren's Shaft in Wikipedia
Warren's Shaft is an archaeological feature in Jerusalem
discovered in 1867 by British engineer Sir Charles Warren
(1840-1927). It runs from within the old city to a spot near
the Gihon Spring, and after its 19th century discovery was
thought to have been the centrepiece of the city's early
water supply system, since it would have enabled the city's
occupants to safely reach fresh water (which was otherwise
unavailable within the city) even if the city itself was
besieged. The narrow and tall shaft was demonstrated to be
traversable when a member of Warren's excavation climbed
from top to base. Since in the Books of Samuel it states
that David conquered Jerusalem from its prior inhabitants
due to Joab sneaking up a similar water shaft and launching
a surprise attack on the city from inside, it was long
thought that Warren's shaft was the shaft in question (with
Hezekiah's tunnel having too late a date, and there being no
other known candidates).
The shaft is composed of four sections in sequence:
a stepped tunnel [1]
horizontal but curved tunnel [2]
a 14 metre high vertical shaft [3]
a feeding tunnel
According to a number of archaeologists, the shaft is simply
a widening of a natural fissure in the rock. The 14 metre
high shaft, which has a pool of water at the base, is now
not actually thought to have been part of the system. In
1998, while a visitor centre was being constructed, builders
discovered that there was an additional passageway, about 2
metres higher and starting from the horizontal curved
tunnel, that skirted the 14 metre vertical shaft, and
continued to a pool much nearer the Gihon spring. The 14
metre shaft is too narrow, and the pool at its base too
shallow, to have been functional, and archaeologists now
believe that it is merely a natural fissure that the
original excavators happened to breach during their dig
towards the other pool. The higher passageway was not
originally higher - at some point Warren's shaft was lowered
(cutting into a geologically distinct type of rock), and ran
into the 14 meter vertical shaft.
The pool reached by the higher passage was protected by a
large tower, which was also discovered by the visitor centre
builders, and is located outside the former city. The pool
connects to the Gihon spring via a narrow channel, and the
Gihon was itself protected by a large tower (also recently
discovered). The pool itself may have been protected by a
second tower, but this is uncertain as excavation of the
southern side of the pool has not yet been carried out,
since it lies under a current residential area.
Ceramics found in the tunnels by these more recent
archaeological excavations firmly date the Warren's shaft
system, and the tower defences, to at least the 18th century
BC. This expressly places it in the time when Canaanites
controlled Jerusalem, and this, together with the guard
towers, expressly rules out the possibility of anyone
sneaking into the city in David's time via the shaft: the
shaft's exit was heavily fortified, as was the Gihon spring.
In essence, conquering the city would have been more a case
of capturing the guard towers and holding the city to ransom
over its water[1]. The Septuagint differs from the masoretic
text: rather than all who wish to attack the Jebusites must
strike at them through the water shaft, it reads all who
wish to attack the Jebusites must strike at them with their
dagger.
Read More about Warren's Shaft in Wikipedia