Calling All Jews: Even King Herod Had a Mikveh…

King Herod’s Ritual Bath at Machaerus

Ritual purification high above the Dead Sea

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In this old aerial photograph taken from above the Old City of Jerusalem, one can see Jerusalem (including the Dome of the Rock) and its environs, the Dead Sea and the clifftop site of Machaerus (circled) 28 miles away as the crow flies.

Jewish ritual baths—called mikva’ot (singular: mikveh)—are immersion pools used in ritual purification. A large mikveh—the largest thus far uncovered in modern Jordan—was excavated in 2016 at King Herod’s palace at Machaerus on the eastern shore of the Dead Sea. This mikveh was used by King Herod and his royal family to purify themselves in accordance with Jewish religious law (halakhah).

King Herod’s personal ritual bath was not the only mikveh at Machaerus, though. In “Machaerus: A Palace-Fortress with Multiple Mikva’ot,” published in the July/August 2017 issue of Biblical Archaeology Review, Machaerus excavator Győző Vörös presents a brief history of the excavations that uncovered four ancient mikva’ot installed over the span of almost 100 years at Machaerus.

In BAR, Vörös explains the importance of mikva’ot and ritual purification in Judaism:

The Hebrew Bible stipulates that bathing is required after certain events to become ritually pure again. For example, after recovering from leprosy, a person was to bathe (Leviticus 14:8–9). After coming into contact with a grave or with a dead person, it was necessary to bathe (Numbers 19:19). Men were to bathe fully in “living water” after having genital discharges before they are able to present an offering or sacrifice (Leviticus 15:13–15). They were also to bathe after emissions of semen (Leviticus 15:16).


Herod’s desert fortress on the mountaintop of Masada was made famous as the site of the last stand between the besieged Jewish rebels and the relentlessly advancing Romans at the conclusion of the First Jewish Revolt. In the free ebook Masada: The Dead Sea’s Desert Fortress, discover what archaeology reveals about the defenders’ identity, fortifications and arms before their ultimate sacrifice.


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In 2016, Machaerus excavators discovered the mikveh King Herod and his family used for ritual purification. Photo: Courtesy of the Hungarian Archaeological Mission to Machaerus.

Machaerus is perhaps best known as the place where Salome danced for her stepfather, Herod Antipas (r. 4 B.C.E.–39 C.E.), and ordered the beheading of John the Baptist. Perched on a clifftop high above the Dead Sea, Machaerus was where King Herod the Great (Herod Antipas’s father and predecessor) built a lavish palace-fortress around 20 B.C.E. The site was occupied by Jewish rebels during the First Jewish Revolt against Rome (66–72 C.E.) and became one of the last strongholds to fall.

The royal mikveh discovered in 2016 had 12 steps (which are still intact) that led down to a depth of 12 feet. A vaulted stone roof once covered the bath, and attached to it was a 20-foot-deep cistern-reservoir that fed in water. The mikveh went out of use in 71 C.E., when Machaerus was destroyed by the Roman army unit known as the Legio X Fretensis (the Tenth Legion of the Sea Straits).

King Herod’s mikveh gives us a glimpse into the activities of the royal family at Machaerus. To learn about the other mikva’ot at Machaerus, including a modest one used by the common people found in the lower city, read the full article “Machaerus: A Palace-Fortress with Multiple Mikva’ot” by Győző Vörös in the July/August 2017 issue of Biblical Archaeology Review.


This Bible History Daily feature was originally published in June 2017.

From The Biblical Archeology Society, here.

How NOT to End Racial Discrimination: Learn History!

Here’s a short US history lesson:

At the root of most of the problems black people face is the breakdown of the family structure. Slightly over 70% of black children are raised in female-headed households. According to statistics about fatherless homes, 90% of homeless and runaway children are from fatherless homes; 71% of pregnant teenagers lack a father figure; 63% of youth suicides are from fatherless homes; 71% of high school dropouts come from fatherless homes; and 70% of juveniles in state-operated institutions have no father. Furthermore, fatherless boys and girls are twice as likely to drop out of high school and twice as likely to end up in jail.

One might say, “Williams, one cannot ignore the legacy of slavery and the gross racism and denial of civil rights in yesteryear!” Let’s look at whether black fatherless homes are a result of a “legacy of slavery” and racial discrimination. In the late 1800s, depending on the city, 70% to 80% of black households were two-parent. Dr. Thomas Sowell has argued, “The black family, which had survived centuries of slavery and discrimination, began rapidly disintegrating in the liberal welfare state that subsidized unwed pregnancy and changed welfare from an emergency rescue to a way of life.”

As late as 1950, only 18% of black households were single-parent. From 1890 to 1940, a slightly higher percentage of black adults had married than white adults. In 1938, black illegitimacy was about 11% instead of today’s 75%. In 1925, 85% of black households in New York City were two-parent. Today, the black family is a mere shadow of its past.

Ethiopians, et alii are now promoting the same failed increased “welfare”, counter-discrimination laws, with quotas, etc. in Israel, too מפלגת צדק – כי כולנו שווים | בראשות אבי ילאו)).

Want to decrease racism? Here’s an idea: Vote Zehut!

My math is simple: Most racism is found in governmental jobs: Because there is no profit/loss feedback, they need not hire the best-qualified workers. Zehut aims (supposedly) to minimize the size of government. Less private-industry jobs will be crowded out, ergo more job opportunities.

האם מותר לגלח את הפאות לחילונים?

ביאור הלכה רנ”א ד”ה אפילו מספר ישראל:
אגב דאיירינן בענין תספורת ראיתי להזכיר ענין אחד מה שאיזה מהמון נכשלין בו בעו”ה והוא בענין איסור דהקפת פאת הראש וכמו שאבאר כי ידוע דעל איסור הקפת פאת הראש יש ג”כ לאו בתורה והוא הלאו דלא תקיפו פאת ראשכם וי”א דפאת הראש חמור עוד מפאת זקן דעובר על הלאו אפי’ אם מעבירים במספרים כעין תער דהיינו סמוך לבשרו ושיעור הפאה הוא מכנגד שער שעל פדחתו ועד למטה מן האוזן מקום שהלחי התחתון יוצא ומתפרד שם וכל רוחב השערות שבמקום זה לא תגע בו יד להעבירם מצד שהוא הכל בכלל פאת הראש ומשם ולמטה מתחלת פאת הזקן וכמבואר כ”ז בש”ע יורה דעה סימן קפ”א ע”ש גם אחד המקיף ואחד הניקף הוא בכלל לאו זה וכמבואר שם ובעו”ה מצוי שמעבירין את הפאות עד סמוך לבשרן ממש ואין משיירין כלל ויש בזה חשש דאורייתא והיה להם לשייר עכ”פ קצת מן הקצת וביותר מזה יש מהבחורים שבעת שהספר מספר ראשו הוא מגלח לו השער שאצל אזנו והוא מחמת שמוטעין שחושבין שפאת הראש נקרא רק מה שאנו קורין פאה ולא כן הוא כאשר כתבנו והוא לאו גמור דאורייתא לד”ה וגם זה הלאו הוא אפילו על הניקף וכנ”ל וע”כ אפילו אם המספר הוא א”י יש לישראל להזהירו שלא יגע בו כלל במקום ההוא וגם במרחץ מותר להפסיק את המספר שלא יגלח במקום ההוא אם יהיו דבריו נשמעין לו וכמבואר לעיל בסימן פ”ד דכדי לאפרושי מאיסורא מותר אפילו במרחץ עיי”ש.

The 28 Mitzvos of the Land: See for YOURSELF!

There is an organization called Kinyan Eretz Yisrael. Their goal is to enable every Jew to perform all 28 Mitzvos of the Land including Terumos, Ma’asros, Pe’ah, Leket, Shikhekha, and so on and so forth.
You don’t need to be in Eretz Yisrael to perform these Mitzvos!

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To learn more, please visit the website.
Wheat harvest footage highlights (for 5779) here:

(From YouTube, here.)