Tabernacle The original menorah was made for the
tabernacle, and the Bible records it as being present until the
Israelites crossed the
Jordan River. When the tabernacle tent was pitched in
Shiloh, it is assumed that the menorah was also present. However, no mention is made of it during the years that the
Ark of the Covenant was moved in the times of
Samuel and
Saul.
Benjamin D. Sommer suggested that while the Holy of Holies in the tabernacle was reserved for God's presence, the main room featured a metal menorah with six branches on each side, potentially echoing the
asherah, a
sacred tree or
pole. However, Rachel Hachili argued that theories positing that the menorah had its roots in some kind of sacred tree or plant have several problems.
Solomon's Temple According to
2 Kings and the
Books of Chronicles,
Solomon created ten lampstands ("menorahs") that were put in the
heikhal,
Solomon's Temple main chamber. The weight of the lampstands forms part of the detailed instructions given to Solomon by
David. According to the
Book of Jeremiah, the lampstands were taken away by the
Babylonian general
Nebuzaradan following the
destruction of Jerusalem.
Second Temple During the construction of the
Second Temple following the
Return to Zion, no mention is made of the return of the menorah but only of "vessels." The
book of Maccabees records that
Antiochus IV took away the lampstands (plural) when he pillaged the Temple. The later record of the making of "new holy vessels" may refer to the manufacture of new lampstands. According to the
Talmud, the returning
Hasmoneans were poor and forced to construct the Menorah out of wood. They later upgraded it to silver and ultimately gold. Yonatan Adler argued in
The Origins of Judaism (2022) that no extrabiblical evidence exists for a seven-branch menorah in the Jerusalem temple prior to the late Hasmonean period, in the mid-1st century BCE.
Rome '' by
Francesco Hayez. The menorah is carried away by Roman soldiers, on the bottom-left corner. Oil on canvas, 1867. The menorah from the Second Temple was carried to
Rome after the
destruction of Jerusalem in 70 CE at the height of the
First Jewish–Roman War. Its fate is recorded by Josephus, who states that it was brought to Rome and carried along during the
triumph of
Vespasian and
Titus. The
bas relief on the
Arch of Titus in Rome depicts a scene of Roman soldiers carrying away the spoils of the Second Temple, including the menorah. For centuries, the menorah and the other temple treasures were displayed as
war trophies either at the
Temple of Peace in
Rome, or in the Imperial Palace. It was still there when the
city was sacked by
Vandals in 455 CE.
Whereabouts following the Vandal sack of Rome (1833–1836), depicting the menorah taken away by the Vandals The location and state of the Menorah following the Vandal sack of Rome remains a mystery. Many scholars assume that at this point the Menorah left Rome for Carthage and further destinations, but some believe that the Menorah remains in Rome to this day. • Many scholars consider as fact that the Menorah was carried off by the
Vandals during the
Sack of Rome in 455 CE, the Menorah and other assorted treasures of the Temple in Jerusalem were taken to
Carthage, the capital of the
Vandal Kingdom. They were still there when a
Byzantine army under General
Belisarius captured the city and defeated the Vandals in 533. Belisarius removed the Menorah and the other treasures and brought them to
Constantinople as trophies of war. According to
Procopius, the Menorah was carried through the streets of Constantinople during Belisarius' triumphal procession. However, no record exists of their arrival there, and there are no indications of pilgrimages to a shrine for the Menorah there. If the Menorah arrived in Jerusalem, it may have been destroyed when
Jerusalem was pillaged by the Persians in 614, though legend suggests that it was secreted away by holy men, much as tradition purports the original Menorah was hidden before Nebuchadnezzar's invasion. The above Oral Tradition is codified in the
Avot of Rabbi Natan, one of the
minor tractates printed with the Babylonian Talmud.The objects that were crafted, and then hidden away are these: the tent of meeting and the vessels contained therein, the ark and the broken tablets, the container of manna, and the flask of anointing oil, the stick of Aaron and its almonds and flowers, the priestly garments, and the garments of the anointed [high] priest.But, the spice-grinder of the family of Avtinas [used to make the unique incense in the Temple], the [golden] table [of the showbread],
the menorah, the curtain [that partitioned the holy from the holy-of-holies], and the
head-plate are still sitting in Rome.Filmmaker Rabbi Yoel Gold highlights the theory that the Temple Menorah is hidden within the Vatican and embellishes it with eyewitness accounts in his popular 2025 documentary "Hidden Light". ==Symbolism==