- "Golgotha" redirects here. For other uses, see
Golgotha . For
other uses of the term "Calvary" and "Mount Calvary," see Calvary and Mount Calvary .
Calvary or
Golgotha ( ) are the English language/Western
Christian names given to the site, outside of ancient Jerusalem
’s early 1st century walls, ascribed to the crucifixion of Jesus. The name
Golgotha is the Greek transcription given by the
New Testament, of an
Aramaic name, which has traditionally been
presumed to be
Gûlgaltâ (but see below for an alternative); the
Bible glosses it as
place of
[the] skull -
Κρανίου Τόπος (
Kraniou Topos)
in
Greek, and
Calvariae
Locus in
Latin, from which we get
Calvary.
Biblical references and etymology
Although usage since the sixth century has been to refer to the
location as a mountain, and as a small hill since 333, the Gospels
describe it merely as
a place. When the
King James Version was written, the
translators used an anglicised version -
Calvary - of the
Latin gloss from the
Vulgate (
Calvariae), to refer to Golgotha
in the
Gospel of Luke, rather than
translate it; subsequent uses of
Calvary stem from this
single translation decision. The location itself is mentioned in
all four
canonical Gospels:
- Mark
- : And they brought him to the place called Gol'gotha (which
means the place of a skull)
- Matthew
- : And when they came to a place called Gol'gotha (which
means the place of a skull)
- Luke
- : And when they came to the place which is called The
Skull, there they crucified him, and the criminals, one on the
right and one on the left
- John
- : So they took Jesus, and he went out, bearing his own
cross, to the place called the place of a skull, which is called in
Hebrew Gol'gotha
A number of alternative explanations have been given for the name:
- The biblical gloss is erroneous and the Aramaic name is
actually Gol Go'atha, meaning mount of
execution, possibly the same location as the Goatha
mentioned in a Book of Jeremiah
passage describing the geography of Jerusalem
- The location was a place of public execution, and the name
refers to abandoned skulls that would be found there
- The location was near a cemetery, and the name refers to the
bones buried there. In some Christian and Jewish traditions, the
name refers to the location of the skull of Adam.
- The location's landscape resembled the shape of a skull, and
gained its name for that reason.
Traditional location
The traditional location of Golgotha derives from its
identification by
Helena,
the mother of
Constantine I, in 325.
A few
yards nearby, Helena also identified the location of the Tomb of Jesus and claimed to have discovered
the True Cross; her son, Constantine,
then built the Church of the Holy Sepulchre
around the whole site. In 333, the
Pilgrim of Bordeaux, entering from
the east described the result:
The temple to Aphrodite

Jerusalem after being rebuilt by
Hadrian.
Two main east-west roads were built rather than the typical
one, due to the awkward location of the Temple Mount, blocking the
central east-west route
Prior to Helena's identification, the site had been a temple to
Aphrodite. Constantine's construction took
over most of the site of the earlier temple enclosure, and the
Rotunda and
cloister (which was
replaced after the 12th century by the present
Catholicon
and
Calvary chapel) roughly overlap with the temple
building itself; the
basilica church which
Constantine built over the remainder of the enclosure was destroyed
at the turn of the 11th century, and has not been replaced.
Christian tradition justifies this re-use by claiming that the
location had originally been a Christian place of veneration, but
that Hadrian had deliberately buried these Christian sites and
built his own temple on top, on account of his alleged hatred for
Christianity. There is certainly evidence that just 30 years after
Hadrian's temple had been built, Christians associated it with the
site of
Golgotha;
Melito of
Sardis, a late 2nd century bishop in the region, described the
location as
in the middle of the street, in the middle of the
city, which matches the position of Hadrian's temple within
the late 2nd century city.
However,
Hadrian's temple had actually been located there simply because it
was the junction of the main north-south road
(which is now the Suq Khan-ez-Zeit, etc.) with one of the two
main east-west roads (which is now
the Via
Dolorosa
), and
directly adjacent to the forum (which
is now the location of the (smaller) Muristan
); the forum
itself had been placed, as is traditional in Roman towns, at the
junction of the main north-south road with the (other) main
east-west road (which is now El-Bazar/David Street).
The temple
and forum together took up the entire space between the two main
east-west roads (a few above-ground remains of the east end of the
temple precinct still survive in the Russian
Mission in
Exile).
Outside the wall?
The Bible
describes Golgotha as being outside the city wall, but the
traditionally identified location is in the heart of Hadrian's
city, well within the Old City walls
; there has therefore been some questioning of the
legitimacy of the traditional identification on these
grounds. Christian tradition has responded by claiming that
the city had been much narrower in Jesus' time, with the site then
having been outside the walls; since
Herod
Agrippa (41–44) is recorded by history as extending the city to
the north (beyond the present northern walls), the required
repositioning of the western wall is traditionally attributed to
him as well.
In 2003, Professor Sir Henry Chadwick (former
Dean of Christ Church,
Oxford
) argued that when Hadrian's builders replanned the
old city, they incidentally confirm[ed] the bringing of
Golgotha inside a new town wall

If the western city wall was
originally to the east of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, then
the western hill, on which it is sited, would have been
advantageous to an enemy
However, a
wall would imply the existence of a defensive ditch outside it, so
an earlier wall couldn't be immediately adjacent to the
Golgotha site, which combined the presence of the Temple Mount
would make the city inside the wall quite thin;
essentially for the traditional site to have been outside the wall,
the city would have had to be limited to the lower parts of the
Tyropoeon
Valley
, rather than including the defensively advantageous
western hill. Since these geographic considerations imply
that not including the hill within the walls would be willfully
making the city prone to attack from it, some scholars, including
the late 19th century surveyors of the
Palestine Exploration Fund,
consider it unlikely that a wall would ever have been built which
would cut the hill off from the city in the valley; archaeological
evidence for the existence an earlier city wall in such a location
has never been found.
In
2007 Dan Bahat, the
former City Archaeologist of Jerusalem and Professor of Land of
Israel Studies at Bar-Ilan University
, stated that Six graves from the first century
were found on the area of the Church of the Holy
Sepulchre. That means, this place [was] outside
of the city, without any doubt, ...., the dating of the tombs
is based on the fact that they are in the
kokh style, which was common in first century;
however, the
kokh style of tomb was also common in the
second and third centuries BC.
The rockface

The Rock of Golgotha inside the Church
of the Holy Sepulchre.
During 1973–1978 restoration works, and excavations, inside the
Church of the Holy Sepulchre, and under the nearby Muristan, it was
found that the area was originally a quarry, from which white
Meleke
limestone was struck; surviving
parts of the quarry, to the north-east of the chapel of St. Helena,
are now accessible from within the chapel (by permission). Inside
the church is a rock, about 7 m long by 3 m wide by
4.8 m high, that is traditionally believed to be all that now
remains visible of
Golgotha; the design of the church
means that the
Calvary Chapel contains the upper foot or
so of the rock, while the remainder is in the chapel beneath it
(known as the
tomb of Adam).
Virgilio Corbo, a
Franciscan priest and archaeologist, present at
the excavations, suggested that from the city the little hill
(which still exists) could have looked like a skull.
During a 1986 repair to the floor of the
Calvary Chapel,
by the art historian George Lavas and architect Theo Mitropoulos, a
round slot of 11.5 cm diameter was discovered in the rock,
partly open on one side (Lavas attributes the open side to
accidental damage during his repairs); although the dating of the
slot is uncertain, and could date to Hadrian's temple of Aphrodite,
Lavas suggested that it could have been the site of the
crucifixion, as it would be strong enough to hold in place a wooden
trunk of up to 2.5 m height (among other things). The same
restoration work also revealed a crack running across the surface
of the rock, which continues down to the
Chapel of Adam;
the crack is thought by archaeologists to have been a result of the
quarry workmen encountering a flaw in the rock.

Profile based on attempted
reconstruction by a German documentary .
Based on the late 20th century excavations of the site, there have
been a number of attempted reconstructions of the profile of the
cliff face; these often attempt to show the site as it would have
appeared to Constantine. However, as the ground level in Roman
times was about 4-5 feet lower, and the site housed Hadrian's
temple to Aphrodite, much of the surrounding rocky slope must have
been removed long before Constantine built the church on the site.
The height of the
Golgotha rock itself would have caused
it to jut through the platform level of the Aphrodite temple, where
it would be clearly visible; the reason for Hadrian not cutting the
rock down is uncertain, but Virgilio Corbo suggested that a statue,
probably of Aphrodite, was placed on it, a suggestion also made by
Jerome. Some archaeologists have been
suggested that prior to Hadrian's use, the rock outcrop had been a
nefesh - a Jewish funeral monument, equivalent to the
stele
Pilgrimages to Constantine's Church
Cyril of Jerusalem, a
distinguished theologian of the early Church, and eyewitness to the
early days of Constantine's edifice, speaks of Golgotha in eight
separate passages, sometimes as near to the church in which he and
his listeners were assembled: "Golgotha, the holy hill standing
above us here, bears witness to our sight: the Holy Sepulchre bears
witness, and the stone which lies there to this day." Of course,
one would not expect Cyril to contradict the emperor's mother, so
his testimony is not final. And just in such a way the
pilgrim Egeria often reported in 383: "…
the church, built by Constantine, which is situated in Golgotha …",
and also bishop
Eucherius of Lyon
wrote to the island presbyter Faustus in 440: "Golgotha is in the
middle between the Anastasis and the Martyrium, the place of the
Lord's passion, in which still appears that rock which once endured
the very cross on which the Lord was." (See also:
Eusebius (338) and Breviarius de
Hierosolyma (530)).
Alternative location(s)
Although the Church of the Holy Sepulchre is regarded as location
of the tomb of Jesus and of
Golgotha by some prominent
historians others find it incompatible with the facts. Additionally
many
Protestants have often opposed the
traditional location simply because it has previously received
support from
Catholic, and is sited
within an environment running counter to
low
church ideals.
After time spent in Palestine in 1882–83,
Charles George Gordon (
General
Gordon) found a location outside the old city walls, which he
suggested to have been the real location of
Golgotha.
The
location, subsequently known as the Garden Tomb
, has an earthen cliff which contains two large
sunken holes, which Gordon regarded as resembling the eyes of a
skull ; he believed that the alleged skull-like appearance would
have caused the location to be known as
Golgotha.
The
Garden Tomb contains several ancient burial places,
although pottery and archaeological findings in the area have been
dated to the seventh century BC, so the site would have been
abandoned by the first century.
Eusebius
comments that
Golgotha was in his day (the 4th century)
pointed out
north of Mount Zion. Although the hill
currently referred to as
Mount Zion is indeed south of the
traditional site for
Golgotha, it has only had that name
since the Middle Ages, and previously
Mount Zion referred
to the Temple Mount itself.
However, the Garden tomb is north north east of the
traditional location, beyond the modern Damascus Gate
, and it is north north west from the
Temple Mount.
Other uses of the name
- The name Calvary often refers to sculptures or
pictures representing the scene of the crucifixion of Jesus, or a small wayside
shrine incorporating such a picture. It also
can be used to describe larger, more monument-like constructions,
essentially artificial hills often built by devotees.
- Churches in various Christian denominations have been named
Calvary. The name is also sometimes given to cemeteries, especially
those associated with the Roman
Catholic Church.
- Two Catholic religious orders have been dedicated to Mount
Calvary. Several places worldwide have been named
after it; including the town Kalvarija in
Lithuania
and towns Góra Kalwaria
and Kalwaria Zebrzydowska
in Poland.
- In
the 18th and early 19th centuries at Oxford
and Cambridge universities
the rooms of the heads of colleges and halls were
nicknamed golgotha. Apart from the obvious pun on
the place of skulls (i.e. heads), this was also due to the
punishments that students received in these rooms.
See also
Notes
External links