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 "Palestine." Major Conder. "Modern Jerusalem." C. F. Tyrwhitt Drake. "Walks about Jerusalem." W. H. Bartlett. "Quarterly Statements of P. E. Fund."]

"In considering the annals of the city of Jerusalem," says Mr W. Aldis Wright, "nothing strikes one so forcibly as the number and severity of the sieges which it underwent. We catch our earliest glimpse of it in the brief notice of the first chapter of Judges, which describes how 'the children of Judah smote it with the edge of the sword, and set the city on fire;' and almost the latest mention of it in the New Testament is contained in the solemn warnings in which Christ foretold how Jerusalem should be compassed with armies, and the abomination of desolation be seen standing in the Holy Place. In the fifteen centuries which elapsed between these two points, the city was besieged no fewer than seventeen times; twice it was razed to the ground, and on two other occasions its walls were levelled. In this respect it stands without a parallel in any city ancient or modern."

The first siege appears to have taken place soon after the death of Joshua. The men of Judah and Simeon "fought against it and took it, and smote it with the edge of the sword, and set the city on fire" (Judges i. 8). Josephus adds that the siege lasted some time, and that the part of the city captured at last was "the lower," but that the part above them was so difficult, by reason of its walls and from the nature of the place, that they relinquished their attempt upon it. As long as the strongest part of the city remained in the hands of the Jebusites they practically had possession of the whole. The Benjamites followed the men of Judah to Jerusalem, but