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There are eight (nine) gates in Jerusalem's Old City Walls.
| Name | Alternative names | Construction Year | Location |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1537 CE | Middle of the northern side | ||
| 1538-40 | South-eastern side | ||
| The Golden Gate, | Gate of Mercy, the Gate of Gold, the Gate of Eternal Life, Sha'ar Harahamim | 5th century CE | Middle of the eastern side |
| 1530-40 | Western side | ||
| 1538-39 | Western side | ||
| The New Gate, | Gate of Hammid, Bab al-Jedid, Sha'ar Hahadash | 1887 | North-western part |
| 1540 | Southern part |
Note: The links after the gate names links to photos of the gates
There is also another series of blocked gates called the Huldah Gates, accessible from the Southern Wall Excavations. Dating from the Herodian period, these two gates were used by pilgrims coming to the Second Temple and were within the city walls until Crusader times. The gates lead to a series of tunnels beneath the Temple Mount. Because of the large crowds of people that thronged the Temple during the pilgrimage festival, one gate was used to enter the Temple compound and the other to exit it. One exception was mourners, who would use the opposite route.
See also: Jerusalem's Old City Walls, Jerusalem's Old City, City gate