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    Jerusalem


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      ALSO BY SIMON SEBAG MONTEFIORE

      NONFICTION

      Young Stalin

      Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar

      Potemkin: Catherine the Great’s Imperial Partner

      FICTION

      Sashenka

      THIS IS A BORZOI BOOK

      PUBLISHED BY ALFRED A. KNOPF

      Copyright © 2011 by Simon Sebag Montefiore

      All rights reserved.

      Published in the United States by Alfred A. Knopf, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, and in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronoto.

      www.aaknopf.com

      Originally published in hardcover in a slightly different form in Great Britain by Weidenfeld & Nicolson, an imprint of the Orion Publishing Group Ltd., an Hachette Livre UK Company.

      Knopf, Borzoi Books, and the colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.

      Some portions of this work were originally published in The Sunday Times Magazine, London.

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Sebag Montefiore, Simon, [date]

      Jerusalem : the biography / by Simon Sebag Montefiore. — 1st U.S. ed.

      p. cm.

      “This Is a Borzoi Book”—T.p. verso.

      Includes bibliographical references and index.

      eISBN: 978-0-307-59448-8

      1. Jerusalem—History. I. Title.

      DS109.9.S37 2011

      956.94’420099—dc23 2011020827

      Jacket image: Jerusalem in Her Grandeur, engraved by Charles Motta, after Henry Courtney Selous. Private collection. The Bridgeman Art Library/Getty Images.

      Jacket design by Darren Haggar

      v3.1

      To my darling daughter

      Lily Bathsheba

      The view of Jerusalem is the history of the world; it is more; it is the history of heaven and earth.

      BENJAMIN DISRAELI, Tancred

      The city has been destroyed, rebuilt, destroyed and rebuilt again. Jerusalem is an old nymphomaniac who squeezes lover after lover to death, before shrugging him off her with a yawn, a black widow who devours her mates while they are still penetrating her.

      AMOS OZ, A Tale of Love and Darkness

      The Land of Israel is the centre of the world; Jerusalem is the centre of the Land; the Holy Temple is the centre of Jerusalem; the Holy of Holies is the centre of the Holy Temple; the Holy Ark is the centre of the Holy of Holies and the Foundation Stone from which the world was established is before the Holy Ark.

      MIDRASH TANHUMA, Kedoshim 10

      The sanctuary of the earth is Syria; the sanctuary of Syria is Palestine; the sanctuary of Palestine is Jerusalem; the sanctuary of Jerusalem is the Mount; the sanctuary of the Mount is the place of worship; the sanctuary of the place of worship is the Dome of the Rock.

      THAUR IBN YAZID, Fadail

      Jerusalem is the most illustrious of cities. Still Jerusalem has some disadvantages. Thus it is reported “Jerusalem is a golden goblet full of scorpions.”

      MUQADDASI, Description of Syria, Including Palestine

      Contents

      Cover

      Other Books by This Author

      Title Page

      Copyright

      Dedication

      Epigraph

      List of Illustrations

      Lists of Family Trees

      Lists of Maps

      Preface

      Notes on Names, Transliterations and Titles

      Prologue

      PART ONE: JUDAISM

      1 The World of David

      2 The Rise of David

      3 The Kingdom and the Temple

      4 The Kings of Judah

      5 The Whore of Babylon

      6 The Persians

      7 The Macedonians

      8 The Maccabees

      9 The Romans Arrive

      10 The Herods

      11 Jesus Christ

      12 The Last of the Herods

      13 Jewish Wars: The Death of Jerusalem

      PART TWO: PAGANISM

      14 Aelia Capitolina

      PART THREE: CHRISTIANITY

      15 The Apogee of Byzantium

      16 Sunset of the Byzantines: Persian Invasion

      PART FOUR: ISLAM

      17 The Arab Conquest

      18 The Umayyads: The Temple Restored

      19 The Abbasids: Distant Masters

      20 The Fatimids: Tolerance and Lunacy

      PART FIVE: CRUSADE

      21 The Slaughter

      22 The Rise of Outremer

      23 The Golden Age of Outremer

      24 Stalemate

      25 The Leper-King

      26 Saladin

      27 The Third Crusade: Saladin and Richard

      28 The Saladin Dynasty

      PART SIX: MAMLUK

      29 Slave to Sultan

      30 Decline of the Mamluks

      PART SEVEN: OTTOMAN

      31 The Magnificence of Suleiman

      32 Mystics and Messiahs

      33 The Families

      PART EIGHT: EMPIRE

      34 Napoleon in the Holy Land

      35 The New Romantics: Chateaubriand and Disraeli

      36 The Albanian Conquest

      37 The Evangelists

      38 The New City

      39 The New Religion

      40 Arab City, Imperial City

      41 Russians

      PART NINE: ZIONISM

      42 The Kaiser

      43 The Oud-Player of Jerusalem

      44 World War

      45 Arab Revolt, Balfour Declaration

      46 The Christmas Present

      47 The Victors and the Spoils

      48 The British Mandate

      49 The Arab Revolt

      50 The Dirty War

      51 Jewish Independence, Arab Catastrophe

      52 Divided

      53 Six Days

      Epilogue

      Illustrations

      Family Trees

      Maps

      Acknowledgements

      Notes

      Bibliography

      Index

      Additional Images

      Illustrations

      SECTION ONE

      ill.1 Aerial view of the Temple Mount (Albatross/Topfoto)

      ill.2 Tel Dan stele, c. 850 BC (Zev Radovan)

      ill.3 Ivory pomegranate, Israel Museum (AKG)

      ill.4 Section of Hezekiah’s wall (AKG)

      ill.5 The Siloam inscription, c. 700 BC, Istanbul Archaeological Museum (AKG)

      ill.6 Detail of relief from the palace of Sennacherib in Nineveh (AKG)

      ill.7 Detail of relief from the Treasury of the Palace of Persepolis (Bridgeman Art Library)

      ill.7 Coin discovered near Jericho, c. 333 BC (Zev Radovan)

      ill.8 Silver tetradrachm of Ptolemy I Soter, c. 300 BC, Israel Museum (AKG)

      ill.8 Silver tetradrachm of Antiochus IV Epiphanes, c. 175 BC, Israel Museum (AKG)

      ill.9 Judah the Maccabee (author’s collection)

      ill.10 Silver denarius of Mark Antony and of Cleopatra VII (The Trustees of the British Museum)

      ill.11 Reconstruction of the Second Temple, Israel Museum (AKG)

      ill.12 Ossuary of “Simon the builder of the Sanctuary” (AKG)

      ill.12 Greek inscription from the Temple, c. 50 BC, Istanbul Archaeological Museum (AKG)

      ill.13 South-eastern corner of Herodian wall encircling the Temple Mount (Zev Radovan)

      ill.14 The Crucifixion, Hubert van Eyck, Ca’ d’Oro, Venice (Bridgeman Art Library)

      ill.15 Coin of Herod Antipas, c. AD 4–39, Israel Museum (AKG)

      ill.16 Coin of Herod Agrippa I, c. AD 43–39, Israel Museum (AKG)

      ill.17a Head of Titus, first century AD, Louvre Museum, Paris (Bridgeman Art Library)

      ill.17b Skeletal arm of young woman, AD 67 (Zev Radovan)

      ill.17b Rocks at t
    he foot of the Wall, Jerusalem (author’s photograph)

      ill.17c Detail from the Arch of Titus, Rome (AKG)

      ill.17c Coin minted to commemorate victory over Judaea, AD 81 (Zev Radovan)

      ill.18 Bronze bust of Hadrian, c. 135, Israel Museum (Bridgeman Art Library)

      ill.19 Silver coin issued by Simon bar Kochba, c. 132–5, Israel Museum (AKG)

      ill.20 Fourth-century pilgrim graffiti, Church of the Holy Sepulchre (AKG)

      ill.21 Colossal head of Constantine the Great, Palazzo dei Conservatori, Rome (AKG)

      SECTION TWO

      ill.22 Marble statue of Julian the Apostate, 362, Louvre Museum, Paris (AKG)

      ill.23 Justinian I and his retinue, c. 550, San Vitale, Ravenna (Bridgeman Art Library)

      ill.23 Theodora and her retinue, c. 550, San Vitale, Ravenna (Bridgeman Art Library)

      ill.24 Mosaic map of Palestine, Madaba (AKG)

      ill.25 The Golden Gate (author’s photograph)

      ill.26 Ascension of Muhammad, from a manuscript of Nizami’s poem “Khamza,” 1539–43, British Library (AKG)

      ill.27 Umayyad dynasty gold dinar showing Abd al-Malik (The Trustees of the British Museum)

      ill.28 The Dome of the Rock (AKG)

      ill.29 Interior of the Dome of the Rock (Garo Nalbandian)

      ill.30 The looting of Jerusalem in 1099, illuminated miniature from a universal chronicle, Jean de Courcy, Bibliotéque Nationale, Paris (Bridgeman Art Library)

      ill.31 Baldwin I crosses the Jordan, illumination from Roman de Godefroi de Bouillon, Bibliotéque Nationale, Paris (AKG)

      ill.32 Medieval map of Jerusalem from Robert the Monk’s Chronicle of the Crusades (Corbis)

      ill.33 Melisende marrying Fulk of Anjou from the Histoire de la conquete de Jerusalem by William of Tyre, Bibliotéque Nationale, Paris (Bridgeman Art Library)

      ill.34 Melisende’s Psalter, c. 1131–43, British Library (AKG)

      ill.35 Baldwin IV and William of Tyre, illumination from Histoire de Outremer by William of Tyre, British Library (AKG)

      ill.36 Portrait of Saladin, British Library (Bridgeman Art Library)

      ill.37 Frederick II entering Jerusalem, 1227, Vatican Library (AKG)

      ill.38 The Dome of Ascension (AKG)

      ill.38 Entrance to the Market of the Cotton Merchants (author’s collection)

      ill.38 Qaitbay fountain (AKG)

      ill.39 Suleiman I, portrait attributed to school of Titian, c. 1530, Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna (AKG)

      ill.40 Fountain of the Gate of the Chain (AKG)

      ill.40 Detail from the exterior mosaics of the Dome of the Rock (Corbis)

      ill.41 Engraving of Sabbatai Zevi (AKG)

      SECTION THREE

      ill.42 Ibrahim Pasha, Charles-Philippe Larivière, Museum of French History at the Palace of Versailles (RMN)

      ill.43 Greek Church of the Holy Sepulchre, David Roberts, 1839 (AKG)

      ill.44 Sir Moses Montefiore (author’s collection)

      ill.44 Montefiore windmill and cottages (Mishkenot Sha’ananim)

      ill.45 Photograph of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, Patriarch Yessayi, 1861 (Armenian Partriarchate)

      ill.46 A group of Yemenite Jews (American Colony)

      ill.46 A group of Ashkenazi Jews, 1885, Hulton Archive (Getty)

      ill.47 Crowd of Russian pilgrims at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre (American Colony)

      ill.47 King David Street, Granger Collection (Topfoto)

      ill.48 Theodor Herzl and his family, Hulton Archive (Getty)

      ill.48 Kaiser Wilhelm II in Jerusalem, 1889, Hulton Archive (Getty)

      ill.49 The kaiser at the Tomb of Kings (American Colony)

      ill.50 Bertha Spafford and other members of the American Colony with Bedouin friends, 1902 (American Colony)

      ill.51 Hussein Selim al-Husseini (American Colony)

      ill.52 Montagu Parker (Morley family archives)

      ill.53 Wasif Jawhariyyeh (Institute for Palestine Studies)

      ill.54 Jemal Pasha, 1915 (American Colony)

      ill.54 Turkish executions in Jerusalem (Mary Evans Picture Library)

      ill.55 Chaim Weizmann, 1918

      ill.55 David Lloyd George and Winston Churchill, 1910 (Getty)

      ill.55 T. E. Lawrence on the governor’s balcony, 1920 (Getty)

      ill.56 The mayor of Jerusalem surrenders the city, 1917 (Getty)

      ill.57 Fourth of July reception at the American Colony (American Colony)

      ill.58 Winston Churchill, T. E. Lawrence and Amir Abdullah in the gardens of Government House, 1921, Matson Photograph Collection (Library of Congress, Washington, DC)

      ill.59 Investiture by the Duke of Connaught in Barracks Square (American Colony)

      ill.60 Group outside Government House, 1924 (Israel State Archive)

      SECTION FOUR

      ill.61 King Hussein and Musa Kazem al Husseini in Jerusalem, 1923 (Library of Congress, Washington, DC)

      ill.62 King Faisal and Amir Abdullah surrounded by students, 1931, Matson Photograph Collection (Library of Congress, Washington, DC)

      ill.63 David Ben-Gurion, 1924 (Mary Evans Picture Library)

      ill.63 Mufti Amin al-Husseini at the Nabi Musa festival, 1937 (Keystone Press, France)

      ill.64 Holy Fire ceremony, 1941, Matson Photograph Collection (Library of Congress, Washington, DC)

      ill.65 Prayers at the Western Wall, 1944 (Central Zionist Archives)

      ill.66 Asmahan (Getty)

      ill.67 Mufti Amin al-Husseini meets Adolf Hitler, 1941 (AKG)

      ill.67 Abd al-Kadir al-Husseini, 1940s (Associated Press)

      ill.68 Abd al-Kadir al-Husseini’s funeral procession, 1948 (Government Press Office, State of Israel)

      ill.69 Bombing of the King David Hotel (author’s collection)

      ill.69 Katy Antonius (Palestinian Academic Society for the Study of International Affairs)

      ill.69a Jerusalem in smoke during the Arab–Israeli War, 28 May 1948 (Mary Evans Picture Library)

      ill.70 Arab soldiers escorting a Jewish prisoner, 1 June 1948, Time and Life Pictures (Getty)

      ill.70 Jewish girl fleeing from burning buildings, 28 May 1948, Time and Life Pictures (Getty)

      ill.71 Arab troops behind sandbag barricades, 1 June 1948 (AKG)

      ill.72a King Abdullah with crowds in Jerusalem, 1 July 1948 (Getty)

      ill.72b The scene in al-Aqsa mosque after King Abdullah’s assassination, 20 July 1951 (Associated Press)

      ill.72c King Hussein of Jordan, 29 July 1967 (Associated Press)

      ill.73a Yitzhak Rabin and Moshe Dayan during an Israeli cabinet meeting, 1967 (Micha Bar Am/Magnum Photos)

      ill.73b Israeli paratroopers and tanks advancing to Lions’ Gate, 7 June 1967 (Avner Offer)

      ill.74 Israeli soldiers praying at the Western Wall, 7 June 1967 (Cornell Capa/Magnum Photos)

      ill.74 The sheikh in charge of the mosques on the Temple Mount, 7 June 1967 (Micha Bar Am/Magnum Photos)

      ill.74 Israeli troops making their way towards al-Aqsa (Micha Bar Am/Magnum Photos)

      ill.74 Israeli paratroopers at the Dome of the Rock (Avner Offer)

      Family Trees

      The Maccabees: Kings and High Priests, 160–37 BC

      The Herods, 37 BC–AD 100

      The Prophet Muhammad and the Islamic Caliphs and Dynasties

      Crusader Kings of Jerusalem, 1099–1291

      The Hashemite (Sherifian) Dynasty, 1916–

      Maps

      The Kingdom of David and Solomon, and the Kingdoms of Israel and Judah, 1000–586 BC

      The Empires, 586 BC–AD 1683

      Jerusalem in the First Century AD and Jesus’ Passion

      The Crusader Kingdoms, 1098–1489

      Mamluk and Ottoman Jerusalem, 1260–1917

      The Sykes-Picot Plan, 1916

      Sherif Hussein’s Imperial Dream, 1916

      UN Plan, 1947

      Israel Since 1948

      Jerusalem: The Old City

      Jerusalem in the Early Twentieth Century

      Preface

      The h
    istory of Jerusalem is the history of the world, but it is also the chronicle of an often penurious provincial town amid the Judaean hills. Jerusalem was once regarded as the centre of the world and today that is more true than ever: the city is the focus of the struggle between the Abrahamic religions, the shrine for increasingly popular Christian, Jewish and Islamic fundamentalism, the strategic battlefield of clashing civilizations, the front line between atheism and faith, the cynosure of secular fascination, the object of giddy conspiracism and internet myth-making, and the illuminated stage for the cameras of the world in the age of twenty-four-hour news. religious, political and media interest feed on each other to make Jerusalem more intensely scrutinized today than ever before.

      Jerusalem is the Holy City, yet it has always been a den of superstition, charlatanism and bigotry; the desire and prize of empires, yet of no strategic value; the cosmopolitan home of many sects, each of which believes the city belongs to them alone; a city of many names—yet each tradition is so sectarian it excludes any other. This is a place of such delicacy that it is described in Jewish sacred literature in the feminine—always a sensual, living woman, always a beauty, but sometimes a shameless harlot, sometimes a wounded princess whose lovers have forsaken her. Jerusalem is the house of the one God, the capital of two peoples, the temple of three religions and she is the only city to exist twice—in heaven and on earth: the peerless grace of the terrestrial is as nothing to the glories of the celestial. The very fact that Jerusalem is both terrestrial and celestial means that the city can exist anywhere: new Jerusalems have been founded all over the world and everyone has their own vision of Jerusalem. Prophets and patriarchs, Abraham, David, Jesus and Muhammad are said to have trodden these stones. The Abrahamic religions were born there and the world will also end there on the Day of Judgement. Jerusalem, sacred to the Peoples of the Book, is the city of the Book: the Bible is, in many ways, Jerusalem’s own chronicle and its readers, from the Jews and early Christians via the Muslim conquerors and the Crusaders to today’s American evangelists, have repeatedly altered her history to fulfil biblical prophecy.

      When the Bible was translated into Greek then Latin and English, it became the universal book and it made Jerusalem the universal city. Every great king became a David, every special people were the new Israelites and every noble civilization a new Jerusalem, the city that belongs to no one and exists for everyone in their imagination. And this is the city’s tragedy as well as her magic: every dreamer of Jerusalem, every visitor in all ages from Jesus’ Apostles to Saladin’s soldiers, from Victorian pilgrims to today’s tourists and journalists, arrives with a vision of the authentic Jerusalem and then is bitterly disappointed by what they find, an ever-changing city that has thrived and shrunk, been rebuilt and destroyed many times. But since this is Jerusalem, property of all, only their image is the right one; the tainted, synthetic reality must be changed; everyone has the right to impose their “Jerusalem” on Jerusalem—and, with sword and fire, they often have.

     


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