The Holy Temple was destroyed by the Romans in the year 70 CE.
The early rabbis were Pharisees, one of two main parties in first century Judaism. Where their opponents, the Saducees, emphasized the sacrificial rituals of the Temple, Phariseeic Judaism was centered on local synagogues. Where the Saducees focused on the obligations of people to tithe and bring sacrifices, Pharisees emphasized personal piety, ethics, prayer and learning. When the Temple was destroyed and the sacrificial rituals ended, Phariseeic Judaism provided a foundation for the continuation of the Jewish tradition.
The Jewish sacrificial system started with the building of the Tabernacle. It ended twice, first with the destruction of the first Temple to resume after the second Temple was built, then again after the second Temple was destroyed. The Torah specifies that when there isn't a Temple standing, prayer replaces sacrifice.
Temple of the Dog ended in 1992.
A.C. Temple ended in 1991.
Divinity Destroyed ended in 2009.
A:The Gospel of Mark was written approximately 70 CE, when the First Roman-Jewish War had just ended. The Jews were not only a defeated people, but they had just endured a bloody civil war within the walls of Jerusalem, even as the Romans beseiged from without. Thousands were taken away in slavery, and the Temple was destroyed. Without a Temple, the Sadducees lost their power base and faded from history. Judaism was rudderless and Rabbinic Judaism was emerging out of Phariseeism, to pick up the pieces. Mark's Gospel was probably not written in this maelstrom, but its author was aware of events.
The Cooper Temple Clause ended in 2007.
Tennessee Temple Academy ended in 2011.
Walter Giardino Temple ended in 2000.
Stone Temple Pilots ended in 2003.
Legends of the Hidden Temple ended in 1995.
Temple Bar - magazine - ended in 1906.