(Photo: Yaniv Berman, courtesy of the Israel Antiquities Authority)

(Photo: Yaniv Berman, courtesy of the Israel Antiquities Authority)

By Amanda Borschel-Dan - October 16, 2017 

Originally appeared here in the Times of Israel 

Archaeologists are one step closer to solving the riddle of what took place in Jerusalem following the destruction of the city by Romans in 70 CE.

Israel Antiquity Authority archaeologists announced Monday that for the past two years they have been excavating and exposing a massive eight-meter deep section of Jerusalem’s Western Wall, unseen for 1,700 years.

And in the course of their work, which has been quietly proceeding directly beneath Wilson’s Arch — the area immediately adjacent to the men’s section of the Western Wall — they unexpectedly discovered a small Roman theater. The dig has not encroached under the Temple Mount. Read More

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