The Jerusalem Post

Hi-tech imaging sheds light on etched Holy Sepulchre wall crosses

- • By RINAT HARASH

Crosses etched in mysterious abundance across the walls of Christiani­ty’s most sacred church were long assumed to be graffiti, but they may be the work of medieval masons paid to carve them by pilgrims, research suggests.

Revered in Christian tradition as the site of Jesus’s crucifixio­n and burial, Jerusalem’s Church of the Holy Sepulchre usually bustles with worshipers and clergy. That has made study of the sacred markings difficult.

But renovation­s in 2018 at one of its chapels featuring thousands of the closebunch­ed and hand-engraved crosses gave the Antiquitie­s Authority (IAA) and Hadassah Academic College in Jerusalem an opportunit­y for research.

In coordinati­on with the Armenian Orthodox Church, which controls the chapel, the scholars used digital cameras and three-dimensiona­l imaging to map out, compare and date the crosses.

“This unique phenomenon always baffled us: Is it graffiti of the pilgrims or, rather, something else?” asked Amit

Re’em, Jerusalem regional archaeolog­ist for the IAA.

“We saw that all of them [the crosses] have the same depth and even the marking of the mason,” he said, provisiona­lly dating them to the 15th century.

“Maybe two or three hand artists made these crosses,” Re’em said. ”So it’s not graffiti; it’s something more organized.”

He suggested an intercesso­ry purpose.

“Let’s say that you are an Armenian pilgrim, so you pay something to the priest, you pay something to this special artist, and he carved for you, for the benefit of your soul and your relatives’ souls,... a special cross in the most sacred place for Christiani­ty on earth,” Re’em explained.

Father Samuel Aghoyan, the Armenian superior at the Holy Sepulchre, saw benefits to the church from the research, especially as it struggles to emerge from COVID-19 lockdowns and prepares for Easter.

“Now there are no pilgrims here, [but] still their spirit is here, we know, I believe in that,” he said. (Reuters)

 ?? (Ronen Zvulun/Reuters) ?? CROSSES ETCHED into the ancient stone wall of the Saint Helena chapel are seen inside the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.
(Ronen Zvulun/Reuters) CROSSES ETCHED into the ancient stone wall of the Saint Helena chapel are seen inside the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.

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