Jerusalem was rebuilt in the style of its original
Hippodamian plan, although adapted to Roman use. Jews were prohibited from entering the city on pain of death except for one day each year: during the
fast day of
Tisha B'Av. Taken together, these measures (which also affected
Jewish Christians) essentially secularized the city. Historical sources and archaeological evidence indicate that veterans of the Roman military and immigrants from the western parts of the empire now inhabited the rebuilt city. Archaeological evidence from this period indicates that Roman customs, including pork consumption and the presence of statues and figured decorations, became widespread. Jewish symbols and practices, such as the use of
miqvaot (ritual baths) and
traditional stone vessels, disappeared. The city was without walls, protected by a light garrison of
Legio X Fretensis during the Late Roman period. The detachment at Jerusalem, which encamped all over the city's western hill, was responsible for preventing Jews from returning to the city. Roman enforcement of this prohibition continued through the 4th century.
Layout and street pattern The urban plan of Aelia Capitolina was that of a typical Roman town wherein main thoroughfares crisscrossed the
urban grid lengthwise and widthwise. The urban grid was based on the usual central north–south road (
cardo maximus) and central east–west route (
decumanus maximus). However, as the main cardo ran up the western hill, and the
Temple Mount blocked the eastward route of the main decumanus, the strict pattern had to be adapted to the local topography; a secondary, eastern cardo, diverged from the western one and ran down the
Tyropoeon Valley, while the decumanus had to zigzag around the Temple Mount, passing it on its northern side. The Hadrianic western cardo terminated not far beyond its junction with the decumanus, where it reached the Roman garrison's encampment, but in the Byzantine period, it was extended over the former camp to reach the southern, expanded margins of the city. The two cardines converged near the
Damascus Gate, and a semicircular
piazza covered the remaining space; in the piazza, a columnar monument was constructed, hence the Arabic name for the gate,
Bab el-Amud ("Gate of the Column").
Tetrapylones were constructed at the other junctions between the main roads. This street pattern has been preserved in the
Old City of Jerusalem to the present. The original thoroughfare, flanked by rows of columns and shops, was about wide, but buildings have extended onto the streets over the centuries, and the modern lanes replacing the ancient grid are now quite narrow. The substantial remains of the western cardo have now been exposed to view near the junction with Suq el-Bazaar, and remnants of one of the tetrapylones are preserved in the 19th-century
Franciscan chapel at the junction of the Via Dolorosa and Suq Khan ez-Zeit.
Western forum As was standard for new Roman cities, Hadrian placed the city's main
forum at the junction of the main cardo and decumanus, now the location for the (smaller)
Muristan. Adjacent to the forum, Hadrian built
a large temple to Venus, at a site later used for the construction of the
Church of the Holy Sepulchre; several boundary walls of Hadrian's temple have been found among the archaeological remains beneath the church.
Valley cardo and eastern forum The
Struthion Pool lay in the path of the northern decumanus, so Hadrian placed
vaulting over it, added a large pavement on top, and turned it into a secondary forum; the pavement can still be seen under the
Convent of the Sisters of Zion. Traditionally, this was thought to be the gate of
Herod's
Antonia Fortress, which itself was alleged to be the location of
Jesus' trial and
Pontius Pilate's
Ecce homo speech as described in
John 19:13. This was due in part to the 1864 discovery of a game etched on a flagstone of the pool. According to the convent's nuns, the game was played by Roman soldiers and may have ended in the execution of a 'mock king'.
Ermete Pierotti is the first to term the words
Ecce Homo to the arch, in reference to Pilate's words to Jesus. It is possible that following its destruction, the Antonia Fortress's pavement tiles were brought to the cistern of Hadrian's plaza. The southern arch was incorporated into a
zawiya (Sufi monastery) for
Uzbek dervishes of the
Naqshbandi order in the 16th century, but these were demolished in the 19th century in order to found a mosque. == Population ==