Information about Calvary

''"Golgotha" redirects here. For other uses, see Golgotha (disambiguation). For other uses of the term "Calvary" and "Mount Calvary," see Calvary (disambiguation) and Mount Calvary (disambiguation).
Calvary (Golgotha) is the English-language name given to the site, outside of Ancient Jerusalem’s early 1st century walls, of Jesus’ crucifixion. The exact location is handed down from antiquity. Although the significance of the name is lost to modernity, Calvariae Locus in Latin, Κρανιου Τοπος (Kraniou Topos) in Greek, and Gûlgaltâ in Aramaic all denote 'place of [the] skull.' In some Christian and Jewish traditions, the name refers to the location of the skull of Adam.[1] The word "Calvary" comes from "Calvariae" in the Latin Vulgate[2].

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Site of Golgotha, within the Church of the Holy Sepulchre

Calvary in the Bible

Although usage since the sixth century has been to designate Calvary as a mountain,<ref name = "ce" /> the Gospels call it merely a "place." Calvary is mentioned in all four of the accounts of Jesus' crucifixion in the Christian canonical Gospels:

Matthew 27:33
: And when they were come unto a place called Golgotha, that is to say, a place of a skull, (KJV)


Mark 15:22
: And they bring him unto the place Golgotha, which is, being interpreted, The place of a skull. (KJV)
Luke 23:33
: And when they were come to the place, which is called Calvary, there they crucified him, and the malefactors, one on the right hand, and the other on the left. (KJV)


John 19:17
: And he bearing his cross went forth into a place called the place of a skull, which is called in the Hebrew Golgotha: (KJV)

The location of Calvary

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The Holy Sepulchre (1) in the Christian Quarter of Jerusalem.
Roman emperor Constantine the Great built the Church of the Holy Sepulchre on what was thought to be the sepulchre of Jesus in 326335, near Calvary. According to Christian legend, the Tomb of Jesus and the True Cross were discovered at that site by the Empress Helena, mother of Constantine, in 325.

Regarding the location of the church, there has been some question of the legitimacy of its claims as it appears to sit within Jerusalem's Old City Walls. However, although the Church of the Holy Sepulchre is now within Jerusalem's Old City Walls, it was beyond them at the time in question. The Jerusalem city walls were expanded by Herod Agrippa in 41-44 and only then enclosed the site of the future Church of the Holy Sepulchre. Professor Sir Henry Chadwick (Dean Emeritus of Christ Church Oxford University) comments: "Hadrian's builders replanned the old city, incidentally confirming the bringing of Golgotha inside a new town wall" (a fact implicit in a Good Friday sermon 'On the Pascha' by Melito bishop of Sardis about thirty years later). On this site, already venerated by Christians, Hadrian erected a shrine to Aphrodite (Chadwick, H., The Church in ancient Society. From Galilee to Gregory the Great. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2003:21).

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The rock inside the church.
Inside the church is a pile of rock about 7m length x 3m width x 4.80m height[2] that is believed to be what now remains visible of Calvary. During restoration works and excavations inside the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, in the years 1973-1978, it was found that this place, Golgotha, was originally a quarry from which white "Meleke limestone" was struck.[2] Observation suggests that from the city the little hill could have looked like a skull.[4] In 1986, a ring was found of 11.50 cm diameter, struck into the stone, which could have held a wood trunk of up to 2.50 meters height.[5]

The church is accepted as the Tomb of Jesus by most historians and the little rock currently inside the present church as the location of Calvary. In 333 AD, the Pilgrim of Bordeaux wrote, "On the left hand is the "little" hill of Golgotha where the Lord was crucified (Latin original: … est monticulus golgotha, ubi dominus crucifixus est.), pages 593, 594). About a stone's throw from thence is a vault (crypta) wherein his body was laid, and rose again on the third day. There, at present, by the command of the Emperor Constantine, has been built a basilica, that is to say, a church of wondrous beauty." Eyewitness Cyril of Jerusalem, a distinguished theologian of the early Church, speaks of Golgotha in eight separate passages, sometimes as near to the church in which he and his hearers were assembled:[6] "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." [7] And just in such a way the pilgrim Egeria often reported in 383: "… the church, built by Constantine, which is situated in Golgotha …"[8], 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."[9] (See also: Eusebius (338) and Breviarius de Hierosolyma (530)). Professor Dan Bahat, one of Israel's leading archaeologists and a senior lecturer at the Land of Israel Studies at Bar-Ilan University in Tel Aviv, comments in 2007: "Six graves from the first century were found on the area of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. That means, this place laid here outside of the city, without any doubt, and is the possible place for the tomb of Jesus." [10]

Refuted claims of Charles Gordon

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Site of Golgotha according to General Gordon, East Jerusalem near the so-called "Garden Tomb"


After time spent in Palestine in 1882-83, Charles George Gordon suggested Calvary might have been in a different location. It was not then known that the location of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre was actually outside of the city walls at the time of the crucifixion. The Garden Tomb is to the north of the Holy Sepulchre, located outside of the modern Damascus Gate, in a place that was used for burial at least as early as the Byzantine period. The Garden has an earthen cliff that contains two large sunken holes that people say are the eyes of the skull to which "Golgotha" refers.

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. The town Kalvarija in Lithuania memorizes the name of the mountain in far northern Europe.

Notes

1. ^ Mount Calvary, article from the Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume III. New York: Robert Appleton Company (1908)
2. ^ Latin Vulgate, Luke 23:33
3. ^ Michael Hesemann, Die Jesus-Tafel, Freiburg 1999, p. 170, ISBN 3-451-27092-7
4. ^ This little hill still exists. Hesemann, 1999, p.170: "Von der Stadt aus muß er tatsächlich wie eine Schädelkuppe ausgesehen haben," and page 190: a sketch; and page 172: a sketch of the geological findings by C. Katsimbinis, 1976: "der Felsblock ist zu 1/8 unterhalb des Kirchenbodens, verbreitert sich dort auf etwa 6,40 Meter und verläuft weiter in die Tiefe"; and page 192, a sketch by Corbo, 1980: Golgotha is distant 10 meters outside from the southwest corner of the Martyrion-basilica
5. ^ Hesemann, p.172
6. ^ St. Cyril of Jerusalem, page 51, note 313
7. ^ Cyril, Catechetical Lectures, year 347, lecture X, page 160, note 1221
8. ^ Iteneraria Egeriae
9. ^ Letter To The Presbyter Faustus, by Eucherius. "What is reported, about the site of the city Jerusalem and also of Judaea"; Epistola Ad Faustum Presbyterum. "Eucherii, Quae fertur, de situ Hierusolimitanae urbis atque ipsius Iu­daeae." Corpus Scriptorum Eccles. Latinorum XXXIX Itinera Hierosoly­mitana, Saeculi IIII–VIII, P. Geyer, 1898
10. ^ Dan Bahat in German television ZDF, April 11, 2007

External links

Golgotha can refer to:
  • Golgotha, or Calvary, the hill on which Jesus was crucified
  • Golgotha (computer game), an unreleased computer game
  • Golgotha (With Blood Comes Cleansing album), an album by With Blood Comes Cleansing

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Calvary can refer to:
  • Calvary, also known as Golgotha, the hill where Jesus was crucified
  • "Calvary" (Angel episode), an episode of the television series Angel
  • Calvary Comics, a comic book publisher

See also


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Mount Calvary refers to:
  • Calvary, the place of the crucifixion
  • Mount Calvary, Wisconsin
  • Mount Calvary - A Roman Catholic cemetery located in Dubuque, Iowa

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Cavalry (from French cavalerie) were soldiers or warriors who fought mounted on horseback in combat. The designation was not usually extended to any military force that used other animals, such as camels or mules.
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Jerusalem (Hebrew: יְרוּשָׁלַיִם  , Yerushaláyim; Arabic:
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Jesus (8–2 BC/BCE to 29–36 AD/CE),[2] also known as Jesus of Nazareth, is the central figure of Christianity, and is also an important figure in several other religions.
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Latin}}} 
Official status
Official language of: Vatican City
Used for official purposes, but not spoken in everyday speech
Regulated by: Opus Fundatum Latinitas
Roman Catholic Church
Language codes
ISO 639-1: la
ISO 639-2: lat
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Greek}}} 
Writing system: Greek alphabet 
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Official language of:  Greece
 Cyprus
 European Union
recognised as minority language in parts of:
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Regulated by:
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Aramaic}}} 
Writing system: Aramaic abjad, Syriac abjad, Hebrew abjad, Mandaic alphabet with a handfull of inscriptions found in Demotic[2] and Chinese[3] characters.
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Adam (Hebrew: אָדָם‎, Adam, "man"; Arabic: آدم
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The Vulgate is an early 5th century version of the Bible in Latin which is largely the result of the labors of Jerome, who was commissioned by Pope Damasus I in 382 to make a revision of the old Latin
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Crucifixion is an ancient method of execution, where the condemned is tied or nailed to a large wooden cross and left to hang until dead.

This form of execution was widely practiced in Ancient Rome and in neighbouring Mediterranean cultures; similar methods were invented in
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Canonical is an adjective derived from . Canon comes from the Greek word kanon "rule" (perhaps originally from kanna "reed", cognate to cane) is used in various meanings.
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Gospel, from the Old English god-spell "good tidings" is a calque of Greek ευαγγέλιον (
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The Gospel of Matthew is a synoptic gospel in the New Testament, one of four canonical gospels. It narrates an account of the life and ministry of Jesus. It describes his genealogy, his miraculous birth and childhood, his baptism and temptation, his ministry of healing and
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    The Gospel of Mark, anonymous[1] but traditionally ascribed to Mark the Evangelist, is a synoptic gospel of the New Testament. It narrates the life of Jesus from John the Baptist to the Ascension (or to the empty tomb in the shorter recension), but it concentrates
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    The Gospel of Luke is a synoptic Gospel, and the third and longest of the four canonical Gospels of the New Testament. The text narrates the life of Jesus, with particular interest concerning his birth, ministry, death, and resurrection; and it ends with an account of the
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    "John" in the Bible

    Johannine literature
    Gospel of John
    First Epistle of John
    Second Epistle of John
    Third Epistle of John
    Revelation
    Authorship of literature

    Names
    John the Apostle
    Disciple whom Jesus loved
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    Constantine I
    Emperor of the Roman Empire

    Head of Constantine's colossal statue at the Capitoline Museums
    Reign 306 - 312 (hailed as Augustus in the West, officially made Caesar by Galerius with Severus as Augustus, by agreement with Maximian, refused
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    Church of the Holy Sepulchre (Latin Sanctum Sepulchrum), also called the Church of the Resurrection ( (Arabic,كنيسة القيامة Kinīsa al-Qiyāma
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    True Cross is the name for physical remnants traditionally believed to be from the cross upon which Jesus was crucified.[1]

    According to a number of early writers, the Empress Helena, (c.250–c.
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    Flavia Iulia Helena, also known as Saint Helena, Saint Helen, Helena Augusta or Helena of Constantinople (ca. 250 – ca. 330) was consort of (though may have been married to) Constantius Chlorus, and the mother of Emperor Constantine I.
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    State Party  Israel
    Type Cultural
    Criteria ii, iii, vi
    Reference 148
    Region Europe and North America

    Inscription History
    Inscription 1981  (5th Session)


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    Agrippa I also called the Great (10 BC - 44 AD), King of the Jews, was the grandson of Herod the Great, and son of Aristobulus IV and Berenice. His original name was Marcus Julius Agrippa
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    Christ Church may refer to the following churches:

    In the United Kingdom:
    • Christ Church Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England
    • Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford, the cathedral of Oxford, England, and also the chapel of the Oxford University college known as

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    University of Oxford (usually abbreviated as Oxon. for post-nominals, from "Oxoniensis"), located in the city of Oxford, England, is the oldest university in the English-speaking world.
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    Hadrian
    Emperor of the Roman Empire

    Bust of Hadrian
    Reign August 10 117-
    July 10 138
    Full name Publius Aelius Traianus Hadrianus
    Born 24 January 76(76--)
    Rome
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