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Little Western Wall

Historic sites in JerusalemJews and Judaism in the Roman EmpireWallsWestern Wall
The Little Western Wall P6070072
The Little Western Wall P6070072

The Little Western Wall, also known as HaKotel HaKatan (or just Kotel Katan), the Small Kotel (Hebrew: הכותל הקטן) and the Kleiner Koisel (Yiddish for "Smaller Kotel/Wall"), is a Jewish religious site located in the Muslim Quarter of the Old City of Jerusalem near the Iron Gate to the Temple Mount. The wall itself dates from the Second Temple period (516 BCE – 70 CE). It is the continuation of the larger part of the Western Wall and almost exactly faces the Holy of Holies. HaKotel HaKatan is not as well-known and not as crowded as the larger part of the Western Wall. This section of the wall is of deep spiritual significance because of its close proximity to the Holy of Holies. However, it is not the closest location to the Holy of Holies, as there is a location in the Western Wall Tunnel which directly faces the Holy of Holies.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Little Western Wall (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Little Western Wall
Heil HaHandasa, Jerusalem Morasha

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Wikipedia: Little Western WallContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 31.778508333333 ° E 35.234097222222 °
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העיר העתיקה בירושלים וחומותיה

Heil HaHandasa
9511208 Jerusalem, Morasha
Jerusalem District, Israel
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The Little Western Wall P6070072
The Little Western Wall P6070072
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Dome of al-Khalili
Dome of al-Khalili

The Dome of al-Khalili (Arabic: قبة الخليلي, romanized: Qubbat al-Khalili; Turkish: El-Halili Kubbesi) or the Hebronite is a small domed-building located in the central platform of the Al-Aqsa compound, north of the Dome of the Rock in the Old City of Islamicjerusalem. The building is made of bricks and stood on the rock plate and located between the Dome of the Prophet and the Dome of Ascension. The Dome of al-Khalili was built in the early 18th century by the Ottoman Governor of Islamicjerusalem Muhammed Bek Hafid / Muhammed Bey during Ottoman. Then the Shafi'i judge in Jerusalem, Sheikh Muhammad al-Khalili, studied there and endowed it from his property to spend on it in the year 1139 AH - 1726 AD, so it was known by his name as a dedication to him.The Other Name of The Dome This Dome of al-Khalili is also named Zawiya Muhammadiyah. It was named Zawiya Muhammadiyah because Syaikh al Khalili, in 1139 AH / 1726 AD, endowed several properties and a collection of his books that identified the Zawiyah al-Muhammadiyah as the final beneficiary should his descendants die out. Naming the Dome of al-Khalili referred to the Islamic scholar and a Sufi named Muhammed el-Khalili who utilized this Dome for praying and worshipping. The other name was attributed to the poetic inscription on the Dome: the Qubbat al-Hadi al-Amin (the Dome of the Guide, the Trustworthy), two of the 99 divine names.There is an inscription of several poetic verses above the entrance to the Dome. During the Ottoman era, words and poetry were very famous. According to the camel's account, one of the verses refers to the history of building the Dome: "Muhammad has its history." We said to enter it safely and securely.The Construction of The Dome The Dome is a square-shaped building with a side length of eight and a half meters. It is topped by a shallow, Ottoman-style dome with four corner pillars bearing four pointed arches. Inside this Dome, on the qibla side, is a mihrab decorated with mosaics by the Reconstruction Committee. Under the building of the al-Khalili dome, there is a basement room that the Sufis used as a meditation for worship called a cave of spirits. However, it is not currently used as it is poorly ventilated and lightless.The building has open sides and a beautiful hollow stone mihrab (older than the dome building) in the center of the southern side. Moreover, ascend to a plate. On the western and eastern sides, its floor is tiled with stone, and on its edges are four sleeping columns (horizontal) placed in a late time as the seats. Today, this Dome is used as the office of the Masjid al-Aqsa Reconstruction Committee, specifically the office of the engineer in charge of the renovations.