Early 1900s The photograph at right was taken in the early 1900s and shows the Pool of Siloam before later Muslim construction above it. An early description of the pool reads, "There is nothing picturesque about it, certainly. The crumbling walls, and fallen columns in and around it, give it an air of neglect." It is a parallelogram about fifty-three feet long and eighteen feet wide. . . . Dr. Thomson says he has seen this pool nearly full, but that now the water merely passes through it. "The intermittent flow is supposed to be due to a natural syphon, but the natives' explanation is that a dragon lives below and swallows the water when he is awake, but that when he sleeps it wells up freely. "--Major Conder. Sources: Text: Earthly Footsteps of the Man of Galilee, p. 227. Photo: Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division, LC-DIG-matpc-04245 |
I think there are two pools associated together, I believe it is the much bigger one that was just discovered.