Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Old City of Jerusalem and its Walls' has mentioned 'Hebrew' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Part of a series onJerusalem History Timeline City of David Second Temple Period Aelia Capitolina Middle Ages Early Muslim period Kingdom of Jerusalem Mutasarrifate British Mandate Israeli takeover of West Jerusalem Jordanian annexation of East Jerusalem Reunification Sieges 701 BCE 597 BCE 587 BCE 63 BCE 37 BCE 70 614 637 1099 1187 1244 1834 1917 1948 Places East West Old City Temple Mount Temple Western Wall Dome of the Rock Synagogues Mosques Al-Aqsa Church of the Holy Sepulchre Hebrew University Knesset Biblical Zoo People Demographic history Mayor Chief Rabbi Grand Mufti Greek Orthodox Patriarch Crusader kings Political status Religious significance Judaism Christianity Islam Jerusalem Law Jerusalem Day Quds Day Alleged Judaization Islamization U.S. Jerusalem Embassy Act U.S. recognition Other topics Names Flag Emblem Municipality Greater Jerusalem City Line Transport Songs Historical Maps vte
The Old City (Hebrew: xd7x94xd6xb8xd7xa2xd6xb4xd7x99xd7xa8 xd7x94xd6xb8xd7xa2xd6xb7xd7xaaxd6xb4xd6xbcxd7x99xd7xa7xd6xb8xd7x94xe2x80x8e, Ha'Ir Ha'Atiqah, Arabic: xd8xa7xd9x84xd8xa8xd9x84xd8xafxd8xa9 xd8xa7xd9x84xd9x82xd8xafxd9x8axd9x85xd8xa9xe2x80x8e, al-Balda al-Qadimah) is a 0.9-square-kilometer (0.35xc2xa0sqxc2xa0mi) walled area[2] within the modern city of Jerusalem.
The Bible names the city ruled by King David as the City of David, in Hebrew Ir David, which was identified southeast of the Old City walls, outside the Dung Gate.
The Jewish Quarter (Hebrew: xd7x94xd7xa8xd7x95xd7x91xd7xa2 xd7x94xd7x99xd7x94xd7x95xd7x93xd7x99xe2x80x8e, HaRova HaYehudi, known colloquially to residents as HaRova, Arabic: xd8xadxd8xa7xd8xb1xd8xa9 xd8xa7xd9x84xd9x8axd9x87xd9x88xd8xafxe2x80x8e, xe1xb8xa8xc4x81rat al-Yahxc5xabd) lies in the southeastern sector of the walled city, and stretches from the Zion Gate in the south, bordering the Armenian Quarter on the west, along the Cardo to Chain Street in the north and extends east to the Western Wall and the Temple Mount.
Before being rebuilt, the quarter was carefully excavated under the supervision of Hebrew University archaeologist Nahman Avigad.
The quarter includes the "Karaites' street" (Hebrew: xd7xa8xd7x97xd7x95xd7x91 xd7x94xd7xa7xd7xa8xd7x90xd7x99xd7x9d, Rhehov Ha'karaim), on which the old Anan ben David Kenesa is located.