Mar Elias Monastery

Mar Elias Monastery (Hebrew: מנזר מאר אליאס) is a Greek Orthodox monastery in south Jerusalem, on a hill overlooking Bethlehem and Herodium.

Mar Elias Monastery
Mar Elias Monastery
Religion
AffiliationGreek Orthodox Church
Location
LocationEast Jerusalem
Palestine grid1700/1268
Geographic coordinates31°44′4.92″N 35°12′38.88″E
Mar Elias Monastery



History

According to Christian tradition, Elijah rested here after fleeing the vengeance of Jezebel.[1] It is also said to be the burial place of the Greek Bishop Elias of Bethlehem who died in 1345, and St. Elias, an Egyptian monk who became Patriarch of Jerusalem in 494.[2]

From the hill east of the monastery, in 1956 one or rather several Jordanian soldiers opened fire on a group of Israeli archaeologists visiting the excavation sites across the valley at Ramat Rachel, killing four and injuring 16.[3][4]

After 1967

During the 1967 Six-Day War, the Israel Defense Forces quickly overran Jordanian defences around the monastery on the way to Bethlehem and Hebron.[5] After 1967 the height, known as Elijah Hill, was renamed in Hebrew as Givat ha'Arba'a, Hill of the Four, in honour of the four victims.

Facing the monastery is a stone bench erected by the wife of the painter William Holman Hunt, who painted some of his major works at this spot. The bench is inscribed with biblical verses in Hebrew, Greek, Arabic and English.[6]

Since the 4th century, the monks of Mar Elias have cultivated olives and grapes.[7]

Picture Collections

See also

  • Christianity in Palestine
  • Jacob Pinkerfeld, architect and archaeologist killed in 1956 by fire opened from Elijah's Hill

References

  1. "Mar Elias Monastery and Church". Archived from the original on 2016-01-27. Retrieved 2012-03-22.
  2. Where to go in the Holy Land
  3. Israel Rejects Jordan's Claim Madman Killed 3, Meriden Journal, 24 September 1956
  4. Raphael Israeli, Jerusalem Divided: The Armistice Regime, 1947-1967, p. 82. Routledge 2002, Series: Israeli History, Politics and Society (Book 23), ISBN 978-0714652665
  5. Michael B. Oren: Six days of war: June 1967 and the making of the modern Middle East - Page 247 "The first of several heavy battles had broken out west of Nablus while, south of Jerusalem, Israeli infantry overran the defenses around the Mar Elias monastery. Beyond that lay Bethlehem and Hebron. "
  6. "Mar Elias Monastery and Church". Archived from the original on 2016-01-27. Retrieved 2012-03-22.
  7. Where to Go: Mar Elias

Bibliography

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