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  1. Gallery Label Frederic Edwin Church's monumental Jerusalem from the Mount of Olives shows the Holy City embedded in a panoramic landscape under an expansive, cloud-filled sky. The Dome of the Rock sits near the center of the composition, while travelers in the foreground invite actual viewers of the painting to wonder at the scene.

  2. Atop the Mount of Olives opposite Jerusalem are the rival Church of the Ascension and the Chapel of the Ascension, both claiming to be the spot from where Jesus ascended to heaven. The rivalry includes the number of translations of their names; above is the Chapel of the Ascension's self-introduction in seven languages.

  3. Dec 25, 2020 · The Dome of the Rock and Jerusalem's Old City, seen from inside the Dominus Flevit church on the Mount of Olives. (Shmuel Bar-Am) The Church of St. Mary Magdalene was built by Russia's Alexander ...

  4. The Mount of Olives rises to an altitude of 810 meters, overlooking Jerusalem from the east. The Old City of Jerusalem is just one kilometer from us at an altitude of 750 meters, making the panorama from the Mount of Olives so perfect. Holy traditions adhered to the mountain Since ancient times.

  5. The Mount of Olives pre-1899. The Mount of Olives separates the Judean Desert to the east from the city of Jerusalem. The olive trees that covered the mount in the past are responsible for its name. An alternate name for the mount cited in the Talmud and the Midrash is the Mount of Anointment, named after the anointing oil, prepared from the ...

  6. Location. 1. The Church of Pater Noster is located on the top of the Mount of Olives, just below the Chapel of the Ascension. 2. It was first named the Church of Eleona, which means "olive grove." Then, later, in around 1100 AD, its name was changed by the Crusaders to Pater Noster Church, which means "Our Father" because it refers to the ...

  7. At almost 3,000 feet high, with a spectacular view of Jerusalem, the Mount of Olives has witnessed a lot of history: as the refuge for David when he fled from Absalom (2 Samuel 15:30), where Solomon made altars to false gods (1 Kings 11:5-7), and where King Josiah later “smashed the sacred stones and tore down the Asherah poles” to deter ...

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