Jerusalem
City of the Passion, the Crucifixion, and the Resurrection
Why this destination matters
Jerusalem is the supreme city of Christian pilgrimage - site of Christ's Passion, Crucifixion, burial and Resurrection. The Church of the Holy Sepulchre, built by Constantine and Helena and consecrated 13-14 September 335 AD, covers both Golgotha and the Tomb. The Edicule was restored in 2016-17. Six denominations share custody under the 1852 Status Quo: Greek Orthodox, Roman Catholic (Franciscan Custody) and Armenian Apostolic are the primary custodians, with Coptic, Syriac, and Ethiopian Orthodox holding lesser rights. The keys have been held since the 12th century by two neutral Muslim families - Joudeh (keeps the key) and Nuseibeh (opens the door). The Immovable Ladder on the facade has not moved since at least 1728.
The Via Dolorosa traces 14 Stations (about 600 m) from the Antonia Fortress to the Holy Sepulchre, with the Franciscan procession every Friday at 15:00 (winter) / 16:00 (summer). The Garden Tomb (identified 1883 by General Gordon outside Damascus Gate) is the Protestant and Anglican alternative - a quiet garden of worship beloved by evangelicals, though modern scholarship favours the Holy Sepulchre as the authentic site.
Beyond Calvary and the Tomb, Jerusalem holds the Cenacle / Upper Room on Mount Zion; the Garden of Gethsemane with the Church of All Nations (Barluzzi, 1924); the Mount of Olives with the Pater Noster, Dominus Flevit, the Russian Mary Magdalene, the Chapel of the Ascension and the Tomb of the Virgin Mary; Saint Anne's Church (finest acoustics in Jerusalem, Pools of Bethesda from John 5); Saint Peter in Gallicantu (Caiaphas's house); and the Pool of Siloam from John 9.
Historical background
Jerusalem has been the supreme destination of Christian pilgrimage since the 4th century, when Constantine the Great and his mother Helena identified and enshrined the sites of Christ's Passion and Resurrection. The Church of the Holy Sepulchre was consecrated on 13-14 September 335 AD, and the city has drawn pilgrims from every nation ever since. The Persian sack of 614, the Crusader conquest of 1099, Saladin's reconquest of 1187, and the Ottoman period (1517-1917) each reshaped the pilgrim landscape.
The 1852 Status Quo — an Ottoman firman freezing the custodial arrangements of the Holy Sepulchre and other shared sites — remains in force today. Six denominations share the Holy Sepulchre: Greek Orthodox, Roman Catholic (Franciscan Custody of the Holy Land), and Armenian Apostolic hold primary custody; Coptic Orthodox, Syriac Orthodox, and Ethiopian Orthodox hold lesser rights. The keys have been held since the 12th century by two Muslim families — Joudeh keeps the key, Nuseibeh opens the door. The Immovable Ladder on the facade has not moved since at least 1728.
Modern Jerusalem is a city of profound complexity — sacred to Jews, Christians, and Muslims — and the political situation affects pilgrim access. The Old City is divided into four quarters (Christian, Muslim, Jewish, Armenian), and Bethlehem lies just 10 km south across Checkpoint 300 in Palestinian Authority Area A. Most pilgrimage groups continue to operate through 2025-2026, but travellers should consult current FCDO and US State Department advisories before booking.
Key sites to visit
Church of the Holy Sepulchre
Stone of Unction, Calvary chapels, the Edicule (restored 2016-17), Chapel of Saint Helena. Six denominations share custody under the 1852 Status Quo. Summer 05:00-21:00, winter 04:00-19:00.
Via Dolorosa
14 Stations of the Cross, about 600 m, from the Antonia Fortress to the Holy Sepulchre. Franciscan procession every Friday 15:00 / 16:00 summer.
Garden of Gethsemane and Church of All Nations
Ancient olive trees, Rock of the Agony, Barluzzi basilica (1924).
Mount of Olives
Pater Noster, Dominus Flevit, Russian Mary Magdalene, Chapel of the Ascension, Tomb of the Virgin Mary.
Cenacle / Upper Room and Dormition Abbey
Mount Zion - Last Supper and Pentecost commemoration; Benedictine Dormition Abbey alongside.
Garden Tomb
Identified 1883 by General Gordon. Protestant / Anglican alternative to the Holy Sepulchre, Mon-Sat 08:30-12:00 + 14:00-17:30, closed Sundays.
Saint Anne's Church and Pools of Bethesda
Crusader 12th-century church (best acoustics in Jerusalem). Pools of Bethesda from John 5.
Saint Peter in Gallicantu
Built over Caiaphas's house. Excavated dungeon shown to pilgrims.
Pool of Siloam
John 9 - where the man born blind washed and received his sight. Excavated 2004-.
Best time to visit
March-May and September-November. Holy Week is the supreme pilgrimage moment - Western Easter 5 April 2026; Orthodox Pascha 12 April 2026; Holy Fire ceremony Saturday 11 April 2026. Christmas Eve, Pentecost (24 May 2026), Feast of the Holy Cross (14 September).
Key feast days
- 11 April 2026 - Orthodox Holy Saturday Holy Fire
- 5 April 2026 - Western Easter
- 12 April 2026 - Orthodox Pascha
- 14 September - Exaltation of the Holy Cross
How to get there
Ben Gurion airport (TLV), 50 km. Direct train ~30 minutes (23.50 NIS). Nesher shared sherut taxi ~80 NIS. Private taxi 250-300 NIS.
Weather by month
| Month | Avg High | Avg Low | Rainfall | Crowds |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jan | 12°C | 6°C | High | Low |
| Feb | 13°C | 6°C | High | Low |
| Mar | 17°C | 9°C | Medium | Medium |
| Apr | 22°C | 12°C | Low | Very High (Easter) |
| May | 26°C | 16°C | Very Low | High |
| Jun | 29°C | 18°C | None | Medium |
| Jul | 31°C | 20°C | None | Medium |
| Aug | 31°C | 21°C | None | Medium |
| Sep | 29°C | 19°C | Very Low | Medium |
| Oct | 26°C | 16°C | Low | High |
| Nov | 20°C | 12°C | Medium | Low |
| Dec | 14°C | 8°C | High | High (Christmas) |
Where to stay
Old City Christian Quarter - Casa Nova Franciscan guesthouse, Christ Church Guest House (Anglican), Notre Dame Center (Vatican), Lutheran Guesthouse. East Jerusalem - American Colony. West Jerusalem - King David, Mamilla, Waldorf Astoria.
| Tier | Examples | Price Range | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Budget | Christ Church Guest House (Anglican), Lutheran Guesthouse, New Gate area hostels | 40-80 EUR/night | Pilgrims on a budget in the Old City |
| Mid-Range | Casa Nova Franciscan guesthouse, Notre Dame Center (Vatican), Gloria Hotel | 100-180 EUR/night | Comfortable pilgrim accommodation with breakfast |
| Premium | American Colony Hotel, King David, Mamilla Hotel, Waldorf Astoria | 250-600 EUR/night | Luxury pilgrimage with historic character |
Tours and experiences
Jerusalem Highlights half- or full-day tours (50-120 USD); Holy Land 5-14 day pilgrimages (Franciscan Pilgrimage Office, Greek Patriarchate, Tutku, Living Passages, Maranatha). Free Franciscan Via Dolorosa procession every Friday.
Transport options
| Method | From | Duration | Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Train | Ben Gurion Airport (TLV) | ~30 minutes | 23.50 NIS (~6 EUR) | Direct to Jerusalem Yitzhak Navon station; frequent service |
| Shared sherut taxi | Ben Gurion Airport | ~50 minutes | ~80 NIS (~20 EUR) | Nesher service; door-to-door to Jerusalem hotels |
| Private taxi | Ben Gurion Airport | ~45 minutes | 250-300 NIS (~65-80 EUR) | Fixed rate; confirm before departure |
| Bus to Bethlehem | Damascus Gate, Jerusalem | ~30-45 minutes | 10 NIS (~2.50 EUR) | Bus 231 or 234; cross at Checkpoint 300 |
Practical information
- Hours
- Holy Sepulchre summer 05:00-21:00, winter 04:00-19:00; arrive 05:30-07:00 to avoid 1-3 hour Edicule queues. Garden Tomb Mon-Sat 08:30-12:00 + 14:00-17:30, closed Sundays. Cenacle daily 08:00-18:00. Gethsemane daily 08:00-11:45 + 14:30-17:00.
- Fees
- Holy Sepulchre free. Garden Tomb free (donation). Saint Anne's small entry charge. Mount of Olives chapels mostly small fees.
- Dress code
- Strict modest dress everywhere. Shoulders and knees covered. No shorts.
- Accessibility
- Old City has cobblestones and steps - limited wheelchair access. The Holy Sepulchre has level ground floor access; the Edicule and Calvary involve steps.
- Notes
- Check current FCDO / US State Department travel advisories. Most pilgrimage groups continue to operate; consult your tour operator on current conditions before booking.
Pilgrim tips
💡 Practical advice for pilgrims
- Arrive at the Holy Sepulchre between 05:30-07:00 to avoid 1-3 hour Edicule queues — the church opens at 04:00 (winter) or 05:00 (summer).
- The Friday Franciscan Via Dolorosa procession starts at 15:00 (winter) or 16:00 (summer) from the Umariyya School near Lions' Gate — arrive 15 minutes early for a good spot.
- Carry your passport at all times — you may need it at checkpoints, and some sites (like the Temple Mount) require ID for non-Muslim visitors.
- Buy olive wood carvings and mother-of-pearl directly from Christian artisans in Bethlehem and the Old City — it directly supports the dwindling local Christian community.
- The Garden Tomb is closed on Sundays — plan your visit Monday-Saturday, and note the lunch closure 12:00-14:00.
- Wear shoes with good grip — the Old City cobblestones are polished smooth by centuries of foot traffic, and the Mount of Olives descent is steep.
Did you know?
ℹ️ Fascinating facts
- The Immovable Ladder on the facade of the Holy Sepulchre has not been moved since at least 1728 — it symbolises the 1852 Status Quo agreement that nothing in the shared church can be changed without the consent of all six denominations.
- The Edicule (the shrine enclosing the Tomb of Christ) was fully restored in 2016-17 by a Greek team from the National Technical University of Athens — the first comprehensive restoration since 1810.
- The keys to the Holy Sepulchre have been held by two Muslim families since the 12th century — the Joudeh family keeps the key and the Nuseibeh family opens and closes the door each morning and evening.
- The Church of Saint Anne, built by the Crusaders in the 12th century, has near-perfect acoustics — pilgrim groups often sing a hymn inside, and the reverberation lasts nearly 10 seconds.
Biblical references
- Matthew 27:32-66; 28 — “The Crucifixion, burial and Resurrection narrative.”
- Mark 15:21-47; 16 — “Mark's Passion and Resurrection.”
- Luke 23:26-56; 24 — “Luke's Passion, Resurrection, road to Emmaus.”
- John 19:17-42; 20-21 — “John's Passion, Resurrection and post-Resurrection appearances.”
- Luke 22:7-38; John 13-17 — “The Upper Room and the High-Priestly Prayer.”
- Acts 1:9-12 — “The Ascension from the Mount of Olives.”
- Acts 2:1-4 — “Pentecost in the Upper Room.”
- Luke 19:41 — “Dominus Flevit - 'When He saw the city, He wept over it.'”
- John 5 — “The healing at the Pool of Bethesda.”
- John 9 — “The healing at the Pool of Siloam.”
Suggested reading before you go
| Title / Reference | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| The Gospels (Matthew, Mark, Luke, John) | The Passion and Resurrection narratives — read all four accounts before visiting the Holy Sepulchre. |
| Acts 1-2 | The Ascension from the Mount of Olives and Pentecost in the Upper Room. |
| Jerome Murphy-O'Connor, The Holy Land: An Oxford Archaeological Guide (5th ed., 2008) | The standard scholarly field guide — indispensable for understanding what you're looking at. |
| Franciscan Custody of the Holy Land — Status Quo guide | Official explanation of the 1852 arrangements at the Holy Sepulchre and Nativity. |
Nearby destinations to combine
Bethlehem
Grotto of the Nativity - oldest continuously used Christian worship site
10 km south — Grotto of the Nativity — oldest continuously used Christian worship site
Nazareth
Basilica of the Annunciation in the boyhood town of Christ
150 km north — Basilica of the Annunciation in the boyhood town of Christ
Sea of Galilee
Capernaum, Mount of Beatitudes, Tabgha and the Primacy of Peter
180 km north — Capernaum, Mount of Beatitudes, Tabgha and the Primacy of Peter
Featured on these routes
- Holy Land Classic — Jerusalem, Bethlehem, Nazareth and the Sea of Galilee
Frequently asked questions
Names in other languages
| Hebrew | Yerushalayim |
|---|---|
| Arabic | Al-Quds |
| Greek | Ierousalim |
| German | Jerusalem |
| Russian | Ierusalim |
| French | Jerusalem |
| Armenian | Yerusaghem |