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  1. The Mount of Olives, one of three hills on a long ridge to the east of Jerusalem, is the location of many biblical events. Rising to more than 800 metres, it offers an unrivalled vista of the Old City and its environs. The hill, also called Mount Olivet, takes its name from the fact that it was once covered with olive trees.

  2. Mount of Olives (See the Holy Land) Highlights the biblical importance of Jerusalem’s eastern hills, also briefly describes the many holy sites dedicated to events in Jesus’s life and ministry. Mount of Olives (official site) Including interesting data like cemetery capacity, and all sorts of background info, this site is worth perusing.

  3. The Mount of Olives. Table of Contents | Jerusalem | Haifa. 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.

  4. Mar 29, 2024 · Gethsemane, garden across the Kidron Valley on the Mount of Olives, a ridge paralleling the eastern part of Jerusalem, where Jesus is said to have prayed on the night of his arrest before the Crucifixion. The name suggests that the garden was a grove of olive trees in which was located an oil press.

  5. Jan 23, 2018 · Free things to do Jerusalem. The Full Guide to Mount of Olives in Jerusalem. Published: January 23, 2018 Last Updated on October 17, 2023 30 minutes read. 7 comments. Mount of Olives is the beautiful mountain that stands to the east of the Old City of Jerusalem. Well, it’s not really a mountain.

  6. The Mount of Olives or Mount Olivet is a mountain ridge in East Jerusalem, east of and adjacent to Jerusalem's Old City. It is named for the olive groves that once covered its slopes. The southern part of the mount was the Silwan necropolis, attributed to the elite of the ancient Kingdom of Judah.

  7. Named for the olive trees that used to grow here in abundance, and where Roman legions camped during the city siege in 70 A.D., its slopes are now one of the main Jewish burial grounds for Jerusalem. Between the Temple Mount and the Mount of Olives is the Kidron Valley, and on the hillside rising up over it are more than 150,000 Jewish graves.

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