Silwan
Silwan is a neighborhood in East Jerusalem located along the eastern slope of the Kidron Valley immediately south of the Old City walls, encompassing the archaeological site known as the City of David, which represents the core of ancient Jerusalem's settlement from the Chalcolithic period through the Iron Age.[1] The area features significant biblical and historical landmarks, including the Pool of Siloam, a Second Temple-era reservoir where, according to the Gospel of John, Jesus instructed a blind man to wash for healing, and Hezekiah's Tunnel, an 8th-century BCE engineering feat documented by the Siloam Inscription.[2] Archaeological excavations have uncovered structures like large stone buildings and fortifications potentially linked to King David's era, alongside artifacts from successive periods including the Roman siege of Jerusalem in 70 CE.[3] Predominantly inhabited by Palestinian Arabs, Silwan has experienced territorial tensions since 1967, marked by Israeli archaeological developments, settlement expansions under organizations like Elad, and disputes over land ownership and evictions that reflect broader Israeli-Palestinian conflicts in East Jerusalem.[4]