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BETHLEHEM

Volume 2 · 502 words · 1778 Edition

a town of Palestine, famous for the birth of Jesus Christ. It was once a flourishing town, but is now only a poor village. It is seated on the ridge of a hill, which runs east and west. Here is a church, built by St Helena, in the form of a cross, which is very large; and from its top may be seen all the country round about. The roof is lofty, flat, and composed of cedar on the inside, and leaded without. Both sides of the nave are supported by two rows of marble pillars, each made of one piece, and eleven in a row, in such a manner that they make as it were five naves, separated from each other by these rows of pillars, in each of which is the picture of some saint. On the wall over the pillars there is a very beautiful Mosaic work, on a gold ground. The walls were formerly overlaid with fine marble, but the Turks have taken it to adorn their mosques. The three upper ends of the cross terminate in three semicircles, having in each an altar. Over the chancel there is a stately cupola, covered with lead on the outside, and within adorned with Mosaic work. Close to the church is the monastery of the Franciscans; which is large, but indifferently built. The gardens are defended with strong walls, and at the north-west of them stands a tower now almost in ruins. Their chapel is better taken care of. Through this there is a passage to a square cave, where they say the Innocents were buried. Beyond this there are passages to the tombs of St Jerom, St Paula, Eustochium, and Eusebius of Cremona. Beyond these there is a grot or cell, which they say was the lodging-place of St Jerom when he translated the Bible. Another entrance leads to a vault or chapel, 12 feet wide and 40 long, whose floor is paved, and sides lined with white marble, and the roof is adorned with Mosaic work, now much decayed. At the end of this there is an arched concavity, with an altar, over which is a picture of the nativity, and under it a vault, the middle of which is a star made with stones of various colours, to mark the place where they say our Saviour was born; and near this is the manger where they pretend he was laid; it is hewn out of a rock, and is now flagged with white marble. The few cottages that are yet standing are inhabited by Greeks and Armenians, who get a poor livelihood by selling the model of the sepulchre and grot of the nativity to strangers, cut in wood or stone; as also by attending on pilgrims. Bethlehem is about six miles west of Jerusalem. E. Long. 35° 55'. N. Lat. 31° 30'.

a town of the Netherlands, in the province of Brabant, subject to the house of Austria. E. Long. 4° 40'. N. Lat. 51° 2'.