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Easton's Bible Dictionary

 

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Bethesda
        house of mercy, a reservoir (Gr. kolumbethra, "a swimming bath")
        with five porches, close to the sheep-gate or market (Neh. 3:1;
        John 5:2). Eusebius the historian (A.D. 330) calls it "the
        sheep-pool." It is also called "Bethsaida" and "Beth-zatha"
        (John 5:2, R.V. marg.). Under these "porches" or colonnades were
        usually a large number of infirm people waiting for the
        "troubling of the water." It is usually identified with the
        modern so-called Fountain of the Virgin, in the valley of the
        Kidron, and not far from the Pool of Siloam (q.v.); and also
        with the Birket Israel, a pool near the mouth of the valley
        which runs into the Kidron south of "St. Stephen's Gate." Others
        again identify it with the twin pools called the "Souterrains,"
        under the convent of the Sisters of Zion, situated in what must
        have been the rock-hewn ditch between Bezetha and the fortress
        of Antonia. But quite recently Schick has discovered a large
        tank, as sketched here, situated about 100 feet north-west of
        St. Anne's Church, which is, as he contends, very probably the
        Pool of Bethesda. No certainty as to its identification,
        however, has as yet been arrived at. (See FOUNTAIN ¯T0001378;
        GIHON ¯T0001485.)
Bibliography Information
Easton, Matthew George. M.A., D.D., "Biblical Meaning for 'Bethesda' Eastons Bible Dictionary".
bible-history.com - Eastons; 1897.

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