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  2. Herodium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herodium

    Herod the Great built a palace within the fortress of Herodium. Herod himself commissioned a lavish palace to be built between 23 and 15 BCE atop Herodium for all to see. The palace itself consisted of four towers of seven stories, a bathhouse, courtyards, a Roman theatre, banquet rooms, a large walkway ("the course"), as well as extravagant ...

  3. Herod's Palace (Herodium) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herod's_Palace_(Herodium)

    Palace: Location: Herodium, West Bank, Israel: ... Herod's Palace is an archaeological site within the fortress of Herodium, West Bank, Palestine. Construction

  4. Herodian architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herodian_architecture

    The Palace-fortress; The Lower Herodium complex; Herod's Tomb; The palace-fortress at Masada (37–15 BC) Machaerus, Hasmonean fortress rebuilt by Herod in 30 BC; Antipatris, named by Herod in memory of his father, Antipater; Cypros Palace near Jericho, named by Herod in memory of his mother, Cypros; Alexandrium, a Hasmonean palace which Herod ...

  5. Herod's Palace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herod's_Palace

    Herod's Palace (Herodium), winter palace at Herodium in the Judean desert 12 kilometers south of Jerusalem; Masada, on a small mountain; Caesarea Maritima, on a promontory in the sea; Three winter palaces at Jericho; Machaerus, Hasmonean fortress rebuilt by Herod in 30 BC; Cypros Palace near Jericho, named by Herod in memory of his mother, Cypros

  6. Tomb of Herod - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomb_of_Herod

    Herod's sarcophagus. The tomb of Herod was discovered by Hebrew University professor Ehud Netzer on 8 May 2007 with his team of archeologists, above tunnels and water pools at a flattened site halfway up the hill to the hilltop palace-fortress of Herodium, 12 kilometres (7.5 mi) south of Jerusalem. [1]

  7. Herod's Palace (Jerusalem) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herod's_Palace_(Jerusalem)

    Herod's Palace at Jerusalem was built in the last quarter of the 1st century BC by King Herod the Great of Judea from 37 BC to 4 BC. It was the second most important building in Jerusalem , after the Temple itself, in Herod's day and was situated at the northwestern wall of the Upper City of Jerusalem (the Western Hill abandoned after the ...

  8. Masada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masada

    The fortress contained storehouses, barracks, an armory, a palace, and a series of cisterns (capacity around 40,000 cubic metres) that were refilled by rainwater – with the runoff collected from a single day's rain allegedly able to sustain over 1,000 people for 2 to 3 years. [9] Three narrow, winding paths led from below up to fortified ...

  9. Ehud Netzer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ehud_Netzer

    Enclosed within the artificial hill was a fortress palace, which had previously been the focus of excavations led in 1962-67 by Virgilio Canio Corbo and Stanislao Loffreda from the Studium Biblicum Franciscanum of Jerusalem. Netzer began work on the extensive palace complex at the foot of the hill, which he labeled as "Lower Herodium".