Ritual, Urban Infrastructure, and Gospel Topography
The stepped Pool of Siloam, excavated in the early 2000s in the City of David area, is a late Second Temple period water installation that served both practical and ritual functions and is mentioned in Gospel narratives.
Archaeological Discovery and Features
Excavations exposed broad stone steps, retaining walls, and associated channels that fed and drained the pool; pottery and coins recovered in the fill help date phases of use and repair and link the pool to Jerusalem’s hydraulic system.
Textual Resonance and Interpretive Caution
The pool clarifies the city’s ritual topography and shows how public water installations could acquire theological and communal significance over time, but archaeological data must be integrated with textual analysis rather than used to prove specific narrative details.
Sources
Shiloh; Mazar; City of David reports
Pool of Siloam excavation reports (City of David)
Other Information About Pool of Siloam (Steps)
Mazar A.; Shiloh Y.; Barker J.