Its exact location is uncertain, but most scholars prefer either the spot now covered by the Church of the Holy Sepulchre or a hillock called Gordon's Calvary just north of the Damascus Gate.
People Also Ask
While the Gospels merely identify Golgotha as a place, Christian tradition has described the location as a hill or mountain since at least the 6th century. It has thus often been referenced as Mount Calvary in English hymns and literature.
Currently, the most popular alternative site to traditional Golgotha, located in the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, Jerusalem, is the area of Gordon's Calvary, with the so-called 'Garden Tomb,' but scholarly endorsement of this locality has never been very strong.
Where is Golgotha? Just outside of Old Jerusalem's northern wall, near the Damascus gate, there is a rocky hill that bears the resemblance of a skull. Significant erosion has occurred over time and the bridge of the nose was washed away in a storm a few years ago. So, it looks less like a skull now than it did before.
They have found the Ark of the Covenant, Christ tomb, and the Crucifixion site, buried under a trash pile at Golgotha (Skull Mountain) in Jerusalem. After being lost for over 2,600 years the Ark of the Covenant was found in Jeremiah's Cave (Grotto), directly below where Jesus was crucified.
Golgotha, (Aramaic: “Skull”) also called Calvary, (from Latin calva: “bald head” or “skull”), skull-shaped hill in ancient Jerusalem, the site of Jesus' Crucifixion. It is referred to in all four Gospels (Matthew 27:33, Mark 15:22, Luke 23:33, and John 19:17).
Calvary (golgotha)The Greek Orthodox chapel's altar is over the rock of Calvary, also the 12th Station of the Cross. You can touch the rock through a special hole in the floor beneath the altar. Be ready to wait in a line as this is one of the main reasons people visit the church.
However, scholars began to question this identification in the 19th century, since the Church of the Holy Sepulchre is inside the city walls of the present-day Old City of Jerusalem. Golgotha would have to have been located outside the city in accordance with Roman and Jewish customs of the time.