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・ Caven
・ Cave of Altxerri
・ Cave of Bacinete
・ Cave of Beasts
・ Cave of Chufín
・ Cave of Dogs
・ Cave of Echoes
・ Cave of El Castillo
・ Cave of El Soplao
・ Cave of Elijah
・ Cave of Euripides
・ Cave of Forgotten Dreams
・ Cave of Letters
・ Cave of Mayrières supérieure
・ Cave of Niaux
Cave of Nicanor
・ Cave of Niño
・ Cave of Pan
・ Cave of Reveillon
・ Cave of Saint Blaise
・ Cave of Saint Ignatius
・ Cave of Santo Hermano Pedro
・ Cave of septum pellucidum
・ Cave of Swallows
・ Cave of Swimmers
・ Cave of the Apocalypse
・ Cave of the Barranc del Migdia
・ Cave of the Bells
・ Cave of the Crystals
・ Cave of the Lakes


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Cave of Nicanor : ウィキペディア英語版
Cave of Nicanor

The Cave of Nicanor is an ancient burial cave located on Mount Scopus in Jerusalem, Israel. Excavations in the cave discovered an ossuary referring to "Nicanor the door maker." 〔Clermont-Ganneau, "Archeological and epigraphic notes on Palestine," Palestine Exploration Fund Quarterly Statement, 1903, pp.125-131; Gladys Dikson, "The tomb of Nicanor of Alexandria," Palestine Exploration Fund Quarterly Statement, 1903, pp.326-332〕 The cave is located in the National Botanic Garden of Israel on the grounds of the Mount Scopus campus of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
==History==
In 1903, John Gray Hill discovered the family tomb of Nicanor of Alexandria in a field just north of his house. Gladys Dickson brought it to the attention of the Palestine Exploration Fund. Charles Simon Clermont-Ganneau, a French diplomat and orientalist, examined it, publishing his conclusions in the ''Palestine Exploration Fund Quarterly Statement''. Later that year Dickson published a detailed report on the tomb complex illustrated with plans by R.A. Stewart Macalister. Gray Hill gave the ossuary to the Palestine Exploration Fund, which transferred it to the British Museum.〔(Nicanor sarcophagus in the British Museum )〕
Nicanor belonged to a wealthy Alexandrian Jewish family. He is mentioned in the works of the Roman Jewish historian Josephus and the Talmud as the donor of the bronze doors of the Court of the Women in the Second Temple in Jerusalem. This fact is also inscribed in Greek on his ossuary: ‘Bones of the family of Nicanor the Alexandrian who made the gates.’ The ossuary is engraved with geometric patterns, with rough red-painted decoration on the lid. The inscriptions appear at one end.
This form of burial cave is typical of the Second Temple period. Four burial halls of burial, each with a number of niches. In the passages between the halls rock depressions indicate that the entrances were decorated with stone slabs, a phenomenon unique to this cave. Outside the cave is a hewn rectangular courtyard. A fifth burial cave not linked to the rest of the hall, opens to the right of the front yard, on the eastern side of the courtyard.
Byzantine pottery found at the bottom of the shafts in the yard and two crosses engraved on the wall of the main room, show that use of the cave continued until the Byzantine period.
The architectural plan of the cave, the artistic style, and finds within it, allow the cave to be dated to the middle of first century CE.

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