JERICHO, a town in the plain of the same name, not far from the River Jordan, at the point where it enters the Dead Sea. It lay before the Israelites when they crossed the river on first entering the Promised Land, and was utterly destroyed by them, an awful curse being pronounced upon any one who should rebuild it. All the inhabitants were put to the sword except Rahab and her family (Josh. ii. vi.).
Notwithstanding the curse, Jericho was soon rebuilt, and became a school of the prophets. Its inhabitants returned after the exile, and it was eventually fortified by the Syrian general Bacchides. Pompey marched from Scythopolis, along the valley of the Jordan, to Jericho, and thence to Jerusalem; and Strabo speaks of the castles Thrax and Taurus, in or near Jericho, as having been destroyed by him. Herod the Great, in the beginning of his career, captured and sacked Jericho, but afterwards strengthened and adorned it, when he had redeemed its revenues from Cleopatra, on whom the plain had been bestowed by Antony. He appears to have often resided here, probably in winter; he built over the city a fortress called Cypros, between which and the former palace he erected other palaces, and called them by the names of his friends. Here also was a hippodrome, or circus, in which the same tyrant, when lying at Jericho on his deathbed, caused the nobles of the land to be shut up for massacre after his death: he died here, but his bloody intention was not executed. The palace at this place was afterwards rebuilt more magnificently by Archelaus. By this it will be seen that the Jericho which existed in the time of our Saviour was a great and important city, probably more so than it had ever been since its foundation. It was visited by him, as when he lodged with Zaccheus, and healed the blind man. Jericho was afterwards made the head of one of the toparchies, and was visited by Vespasian before he left the country, who stationed there the tenth legion in garrison. Eusebius and Jerome describe Jericho as having been destroyed during the siege of Jerusalem, on account of the perfidy of the inhabitants, but add that it was afterwards rebuilt; but, as Josephus is silent respecting this event, Dr Robinson regards it as doubtful. That the town continued to exist as a place of importance, appears from the names of five bishops of Jericho which have been collected (Oriens Christ. iii. 654). The emperor Justinian built here a Xenodochium, apparently for pilgrims, and also a church dedicated to the Virgin; and the monastery of St John, near the Jordan, was already in existence (Procop. De Edificio Justiniani, v. 9). The town, however, appears to have been overthrown during the Mohammedan conquest; for Adamnanus, at the close of the seventh century, describes the site as without human habitations, and covered with corn and vines. The celebrated palm groves still existed. In the next century a church is mentioned; and in the ninth century several monasteries appear. About the same time the plain of Jericho is again noticed for its fertility and peculiar products; and it appears to have been brought under cultivation by the Saracens, for the sake of the sugar and other products for which the soil and climate were more suitable than any other in Palestine. Ruins of extensive aqueducts, with pointed Saracenic arches, remain in evidence of the elaborate irrigation and culture of this fine plain, at a period long subsequent to the occupation of the country by the Jews. It is to this age that we may probably refer the origin of the castle and village which have since been regarded as representing Jericho. The place has been mentioned by travellers and pilgrims down to the present time as a poor hamlet consisting of a few houses. In the fifteenth century the square castle or tower began to pass among pilgrims as the house of Zaccheus, a title which it bears to the present day. The village identified with Jericho now bears the name of Ribah, and is situated about the middle of the plain, 6 miles W. from the Jordan, in N. Lat. 31. 57., and E. Long. 35. 33.