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  • The Wailing Wall, also referred to as the Kotel, the Western Wall, or Solomon's Wall, and whose lower sections date to about the first century BCE, is located in the Old Quarter of East Jerusalem in Israel. Built of thick, corroded limestone, it is about 60 feet (20 meters) high and close to 160 feet (50 meters) long, though most of it is engulfed in other structures. A Sacred Jewish Site.
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  • [The] Wailing Wall [The] Kotel Al-Buraq Wall الْحَائِط ٱلْبُرَاق (Ḥā’iṭ al-Burāq). ... Only when used in this sense is it synonymous with the term Wailing Wall.
  • Today Israel’s Jewish community offers prayers at the exposed Western (or Wailing) Wall. As noted above, this complex is a significant flash point between the two...
  • Wailing Wall was a captive shrine held — jealously guarded by the Moslem religious authorities. ... massive western side, or “Wailing Wall of the Temple Mount”.
  • The Western Wall, also known as the “Wailing Wall” or the “Kotel”, is the most religious site in the world for the Jewish people.
  • ‘The Wailing Wall, Jerusalem’ was created by Gustav Bauernfeind in Romanticism style. Find more prominent pieces of genre painting at Wikiart.org...
  • The Wailing Wall as a Jewish holy place is a modern invention that was selected for Jewish worship by one of the greatest mystics of the Kabbalistic age.
  • The Wailing Wall, also known as the Western Wall, is a 187-foot-high section of the ancient wall built by Herod the Great as the retaining wall of the Temple...
  • Typically, the Wailing Wall is regarded as a 57-meter-long fragment of the ancient wall on the western slope of the Temple Mount, the facade of which overlooks the...
  • Table of contents
    • Wailing Wall: size and location
    • Free delivery of notes to the Wailing Wall
  • So, the first point is that the Wailing Wall has nothing to do with the earlier Jewish temples. The second point is a theological one.