The Dome of the Rock
in Jerusalem
where three religions converge
may peace prevail soon
The Dome of the Rock (Arabic: قبة الصخرة, romanized: Qubbat aṣ-Ṣakhra) is an Islamic shrine at the center of the Al-Aqsa mosque compound on the Temple Mount in the Old City of Jerusalem. It is the world's oldest surviving work of Islamic architecture, the earliest archaeologically attested religious structure to be built by a Muslim ruler and its inscriptions contain the earliest epigraphic proclamations of Islam and of the Islamic prophet Muhammad.[1][2]
Its initial construction was undertaken by the Umayyad Caliphate on the orders of Abd al-Malik during the Second Fitna in 691–692 CE, and it has since been situated on top of the site of the Second Jewish Temple (built in c. 516 BCE to replace the destroyed Solomon's Temple and rebuilt by Herod the Great), which was destroyed by the Romans in 70 CE. The original dome collapsed in 1015 and was rebuilt in 1022–23.[3]
additional information from Kaybee:
There is a ladder propped against a wall in the courtyard - it has been there for many, many years because nobody knows which of the three religions that look after the place was responsible for it so will not remove it so as not to offend any of them.
- 11
- 0
- Apple iPhone 12 Pro Max
- 1/175
- f/1.6
- 5mm
- 32
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