×
Friends,    
More than 3,000 people have given a collective $200,000 toward our High Holiday campaign. Please join them before Rosh Hashanah, and your gift will be matched for two-times the impact.    
With your support, Sefaria will continue to deliver you new texts and translations, enhance our user interface on the web and app, and serve as a vital resource for rabbis, educators, and learners the worldover.    
Thank you and Shanah Tovah,    
Team Sefaria        
There were two Jewish Temples, or battei mikdash (singular: beit mikdash) that stood in ancient Jerusalem. The first was built by King Solomon and destroyed by the Babylonians in 586 BCE, and the second was built in the late sixth century BCE with the blessing of the Persian Empire and was later destroyed by the Romans in 70 CE. These Temples were the central site of Jewish sacrifice and pilgrimage while they stood. The destruction of these holy Temples was tragic, traumatic, and completely transformational for Jews and Judaism. The Temples and the service of God that took place there are described extensively in Jewish texts, as are their destructions and practices surrounding how they are mourned to this very day.
Notable Sources
All Sources
A
Loading...
An illustration of Beit Hamikdash, Leipnik Haggadah.,1740. From the British Library archive
An illustration of Beit Hamikdash, Leipnik Haggadah.,1740. From the British Library archive
We use cookies to give you the best experience possible on our site. Click OK to continue using Sefaria. Learn More.OKאנחנו משתמשים ב"עוגיות" כדי לתת למשתמשים את חוויית השימוש הטובה ביותר.קראו עוד בנושאלחצו כאן לאישור