Offence, Mount of, its position indisputable, [21];
its present state, [189];
forms the third summit of Mount Olivet, [191].
Old Gate, its supposed site, [27].
Olivet, Mount, [4];
Panoramic view from its summit, [8], [16];
its position indisputable, [21];
its points of interest examined, [190];
its three summits, [191];
histories attached to these, [192].
Olive-tree, traditionary, to which our Saviour was bound, [156];
those remaining in the garden of Gethsemane, [178]; Note XIII. [309].
Omar, Mosque of, built over the threshing-floor of Araunah, [57];
this proved by history, [58], [59]; Notes XVI-XXIV. XXVI. [292]-[4];
see Dome of the Rock.
Omar, Mosque of, the octagonal monument so called, [81], [130]; Note VI. [286].
Omar, remains of his boys' school and hospital, [153].
Onuphrius, chapel of, on the Hill of Evil Counsel, [206].
Ophel, the hill of [18];
its site identified, [21];
works of defence on, [25], [26].
Oratory near the Haram barrack, [75].

P.

Palace of the Council, its supposed site, [30];
of Dives, its fictitious site, [142];
of Herod Antipas, its site, [141].
Panorama of Jerusalem from Mount Olivet, [8].
Passages from the Holy Bible bearing on the statements in this work, [315].
Patriarch's Pool, [241].
Pelagia, S., her tomb on Mount Ascension, [197].
Peristerion, the supposed site of, [40].
Peter, S., Church of, [150].
Peter's, S. prison, traditional site of, [158]
Peter, S. at the Cock-crow, ruins of Church of, [221].
Phasaëlus Tower, its supposed site, [28].
Pilate, conduit of, [14].
Pilgrims, the numbers of, visiting Jerusalem, [10];
their unseemly conduct at the Holy Sepulchre, [123];
the different communities of, at Jerusalem, [274].
Pilgrim's Pool, [7], [14];
account of it, and its traditions, [229].
Pisans, castle of the, [159];
Adrichomius' account of, Note VIII. [286].
Place of the Ashes, [50];
its probable position, [89], [91], [100].
Pompeius the Great captures the second Temple, [52].
Pools of Jerusalem, [14], [27].
"Pool that was made," the, (Birket es-Sultan), [27], [96].
Population of Jerusalem, [10];
compared with its size, [14];
at the time of Alexander the Great, [41];
exaggerated by Josephus, ib..
Postal system at Jerusalem, [264].
Potter's field, the site of, [206].
Prætorium, the, situated in the Antonia Tower, [55], [64];
its position identified, [137].
Prince's Pool, (Birket es-Sultan), [15], [96], [209].
Procopius, his account of the Basilica of Justinian, [78], [83].
Prophets, the tombs of, [198];
their authenticity considered, [199].
Proselytism at Jerusalem, its failure, [273], [4].
Protestants, their number in Jerusalem, [13].
Protestant Missions at Jerusalem, their ill success, [172];
their charitable institutions, [278].
Provisions, supply of, at Jerusalem, [264].
Prussian Mission-house at Jerusalem, [165].
Psephinus tower, its supposed site, [35].

Q.

Quarries used for the Temple and walls, [38]; see Royal Caverns.
Quarries of red breccia, [243].

R.

Ramah identified with Neby Samwîl, Note II. [281].
Ramleh, its accommodation for travellers, [262].
Religious communities in Jerusalem, [10], [13].
Resurrection, Church of the, its history, [108];
its present dangerous condition, [110];
its exterior described, ib.;
its interior, [113];
the great Dome, [114];
state of the Monks living there, [122];
Pilgrims visiting it, [123];
account of its neighbourhood, [125]; Notes III.-XIII. [299]-[304];
see Holy Sepulchre.
Retreat of the Apostles, see James, S. tomb of.
Road of the Capture, [182].
Robinson, Dr, his opinion of the Tyropœon disputed, [19].
Rock near the Haram barrack, site of the Tower Antonia, [59], [64].
Rock, the Sacred, description of, [87];
proved to be the site of the threshing-floor of Araunah, [88];
and the Altar of burnt-offerings, [89];
legends and traditions connected with it, Notes III. IV. XXXIX. XL. [291], [296].
Rogel, its supposed site, [188];
Fountain of, see Joab, Fountain of.
Roman Catholics, their number and position in Jerusalem, [12].
Roman inscription on El-Aksa gateway, [69].
Roman Walls, the characteristics of their masonry, Note V. [286].
Rossellane the Sultana, her munificence, [59];
description of her hospital, [151];
view from its roof, [152].
Royal Caverns of Josephus, their supposed site, [38];
description of them, [226].
Russia, her position in Jerusalem, [13].
Russians, their conventual buildings in Jerusalem, [13], [240];
their charitable institutions, [279].

S.

Sæwulf, his account of the Holy Places, Note V. [300].
Saladin's school, fragment of, [74];
his hospice, [127];
his generosity to the Christians, Note XXV. [294].
Salem and Jerusalem distinct places, [1].
Sanhedrim, hall of, in the Temple, [54].
Sanitary condition of Jerusalem, [9], [15], [261].
Saracenic buildings in Jerusalem, [153];
the characteristics of their masonry, Note V. [286].
Saviour, S. Church of, on Mount Sion, [220];
Convent of, [160].
Scala Sancta, the, in Via Dolorosa, [138].
Scopus, Mount, [4];
Note from Josephus upon, Note III. [281];
see Shafat.
Sea of Bronze, its dimensions, [49]; Note VI. [291].
Sects, Christian, at Jerusalem, their animosity to each other, [269];
their property, &c. [270].
Sennacherib, spot of his encampment, [241].
Sepulchre, the Holy; see Holy Sepulchre.
Sepulchre, vertical, near the Tombs of the Kings, [236].
Sepulchres, Mount of the, [4], [205].
Serai, the, Minaret of, [75].
Serpents' pool, [241].
Sewer discovered near the Convent of the daughters of Sion, [62].
Sewers of Jerusalem, [15], [19].
Shafat, mountain of, [4];
its site identified, [22].
Shaveh, the valley of, [1].
Sheep-gate, its supposed site, [27].
Shefa, Bath of, [15], [16], [91].
Sheikh Jerrah, Arab building, [236].
Siloam, fountain of, its undoubted site, [31].
Siloam, gardens of, [4], [5].
Siloam, pool of, [8], [15];
its site identified, [8], [16];
reverence attached to it, [185];
its history, [186];
its present appearance, [187].
Siloam, village of, described, [189];
ancient Egyptian monument there, [190].
Simon the Cyrenian, spot of his meeting with Jesus in Via Dolorosa, [142].
Simon the Just, Tomb of, [237].
Simon the Pharisee, traditionary site of his house, [148], [9].
Sion gate, [7], [8].
Sion, Mount, [6], [16], [17];
excavations there, [23];
examination of it, [209];
the tomb of David, [210];
Tombs of the Jewish Kings, [215];
the Cœnaculum, [216];
the house of the Virgin, [219];
of Caiaphas, [220];
remains of antiquity found there, Note III. [284].
Slaughter, valley of, [22].
Society in Jerusalem, its present state, [268].
Soil of the environs of Jerusalem, [5].
Solomon, the Conduit of, [14];
his additions to the city of David, [24];
situation of his "Millo" and house, [25];
excavations in his pool, [31];
its present state, [187];
masonry of his wall described, [66]; Note V. [285], XXVIII. [294];
traditional site of his throne, [76];
his hydraulic works at Jerusalem, [245], [6].
Solomon's Temple; see Temple.
Solyman the Magnificent restores the walls of Jerusalem, [6];
leaving their form unchanged, [44].
Sources of water supply of Jerusalem, [14].
Spring discovered near the Daughters of Sion Convent, [63];
great sensation caused by this, Note XXVII. [294].
Springs in Jerusalem, [257].
Stables of the Templars in the vaults of the Haram, [78].
Stairs from the city of David, site of, [27].
State of Jerusalem and its environs, [267].
Station of the first fall in Via Dolorosa, [141];
of the second, [143];
of the third, [144].
Stephen, S. gate of, [7].
Stephen, S. pretended site of his martyrdom, [168];
the genuine site on the north of the city, [223];
the Empress Eudoxia's Church there, [224].
Stone, the, of Unction, [114], [122].
Stones of largest size in Solomon's walls, Note XXVIII. [294].
Strato's Tower on Moriah, [52];
its site discovered, [62].
Streets of Jerusalem, [8], [10];
their present state, [266];
the principal ones enumerated, Note VI. [282].
Struthium pool, its supposed site, [64], [65].
Syrian Convent, the, [164].
Summary of the history of Jerusalem, [2].
---- chronological, of ditto, [311].

T.