Either of two temples that were at the centre of worship and national identity in ancient Israel. When
David captured Jerusalem, he moved the
Ark of the Covenant there. As the site for a temple, he selected Mount Moriah, or the Temple Mount, where it was believed that
Abraham had built his altar to sacrifice Isaac. The First Temple was constructed under David's son
Solomon and was completed in 957
BC. It contained three rooms: a vestibule, the main room for religious services, and the
Holy of Holies. From the time of
Josiah, it was designated as the only place for sacrifice in
Judah. It was destroyed during the Babylonian conquest in 586
BC. When the Jews returned from exile in 538, they built the Second Temple (finished 515). Its desecration by
Antiochus IV in 167
BC set off the
Maccabees' revolt, after which it was cleansed and rededicated. In 54
BC Marcus Licinius Crassus plundered the Temple. It was rebuilt and enlarged by
Herod the Great; construction lasted 46 years. The Jewish rebellion in
AD 66 led to its destruction by Roman legions in
AD 70. All that remains is part of the
Western Wall, a site of pilgrimage. The Temple Mount is now occupied by a Muslim mosque, Al-Aq
sa, and the
Dome of the Rock.
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