The Garden Tomb
The entrance to the Garden Tomb | |
| Location | Jerusalem |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 31°47′1.87″N 35°13′47.92″E / 31.7838528°N 35.2299778°E |
| Type | Rock-cut tomb |
| History | |
| Founded | 8th–7th century BC (disputed) |
| Periods | Iron Age II |
| Cultures | Kingdom of Judah |
| Site notes | |
| Ownership | Garden Tomb (Jerusalem) Association |
| Public access | Yes |
| Website | gardentomb |
The Garden Tomb (Arabic: بستان قبر المسيح, romanized: Bustān Qabr al-Masīḥ, lit. 'the Garden of the Tomb of Christ'; Hebrew: גן הקבר, romanized: Gan ha-Kéver, lit. 'the Tomb's Garden') is an ancient rock-cut tomb in Jerusalem that functions as a site of Christian pilgrimage attracting hundreds of thousands of annual visitors, especially Evangelicals and other Protestants, as some Protestant Christians consider it to be the empty tomb where Jesus of Nazareth resurrected. This is in contrast to an older tradition that locates the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus at a site roughly 600 metres (0.37 mi) to the south that is now occupied by the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.
The Garden Tomb and its surrounding gardens are adjacent to a rocky outcrop known as Skull Hill (Arabic: تلة الجمجمة, romanized: Tallat al-Jumjumah; Hebrew: גבעת הגולגולת, romanized: Giv'át ha-Gulgólet). In the mid-nineteenth century, some Christian scholars proposed that Skull Hill is Golgotha, where the Romans crucified Jesus. A couple decades later, in 1867, the Garden Tomb was discovered and later proposed to be the tomb of Jesus.
More recently, the Israeli archaeologist Gabriel Barkay points out that the tomb does not contain any features indicative of the 1st century AD, when Jesus was buried, and argues that the tomb was likely created in the 8th–7th centuries BC. The Italian archeologist Riccardo Lufrani argues instead that it should be dated to the Hellenistic era, the 4th–2nd centuries BC. The re-use of old tombs was not an uncommon practice in ancient times, but this would seem to contradict the biblical text that speaks of a newly hewn tomb which Joseph of Arimathea made for himself (Matthew 27:57–60, John 19:41).
The organization that owns and maintains the Garden Tomb is a non-denominational charitable trust based in the United Kingdom named The Garden Tomb (Jerusalem) Association, a member of the Evangelical Alliance of Israel and the World Evangelical Alliance. The association refrains from claiming that the Garden Tomb is the authentic tomb of Jesus, and instead emphasizes the site's utility as a visual aid for the gospel accounts and its function as a place of Christian worship. The site draws hundreds of thousands of annual visitors, especially Evangelicals and other Protestants.