David's Tower
David's Tower is one of the oldest buildings you will see, above
ground, in The Old City of Jerusalem.
The Jewish historian Josephus Flavius gave it that name nearly
2000 years ago probably because he thought that King David's original palace had stood there, nearly a thousand years earlier,
although he plainly declares that the builder was Herod the Great, the Nabetean king whom the Romans placed to rule over the
Jews in about 40 BCE.
He is also purported to be the builder of the Temple of which
the Wailing Wall and the other outer perimeter walls which remain to this day as evidence of his enormous building operations.
Today the City of Jerusalem houses an excellent museum in this
ancient tower depicting the history of Jerusalem from the days of father Abraham's meeting here with Melchizedek about
2500 years BCE to the days of the British Mandate of 1917 - 1948.
The building as seen from the outside is another example of another
great builder of beautiful buildings, Suleiman the Magnificent in 1538. He was being true to his namesake, KIng Solomon, another
great builder.
The Tower of David was a very scary place for the poor Jews of
the Old City during many centuries of Moslem rule from the days of Saladin who conquered Jerusalem from the Crusaders to the
days of the British Mandate of 1917 because the city's Moslem government and court sat in judgement where the Jews had less
standing than the governor's ass or dog. Jews were thrown into prison there at the slightes pretext.
Here's a good site for David's Tower http://www.towerofdavid.org.il/English/Night_Spectacular