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Sebil is a Turkish public drinking fountain. There are several such fountains in the city. They provided water to the visitors of the temple mount and the old city.
An aerial view is seen below showing the places of the sebils that are featured in this page. You can point on the purple points to navigate to the selected site.

Along the Hagai (Al-Wad) road, on the western side of the Temple mount, are several Ottoman sebils. The photo below shows one of the Sebils which is closest to the Western Wall.
Click on the photos to view in higher resolution...
A closer detail of the sebil.
A second Sebil in the Hagai road is seen in the photo below.
Photo by Gal Shain
Another sebil is seen outside the walls, on the south-west side of the old city, on the bridge over the Valley of the son-of- Hinnom. The road is called Hebron. The sebil was built by the Ottoman Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent (reigned 1520-1566). This great builder of Jerusalem built additional 4 sebils inside the walls.
The photo below shows the sebil, with the "Sultan's pool" behind it in the near right side, and the Tower of David and the walls of the old city in the far right background.
The inscription reads: "Instructed us to build here a drinking place, our lord the Sultan, the great King... Sultan Suleiman son of Sultan Selim Khan, Allah will keep his kingdom and government for eternity".
The water was fed from an aqueduct that supplied water to the temple, and also filled up the reservoir behind the sebil (called "Sultan's pool"). The aqueduct was based on the Jerusalem "lower aqueduct" that delivered water to the city in the Roman period, from Solomon's pools (near Bethlehem) to the temple mount (20KM in total length). Its traces are visible on the west side of the pool. The Turks added clay pipes into the ancient rock-hewn aqueduct.
A modern sebil was built in 1927 in the Scottish hospital structure (now Jerusalem's house of quality), near St. Andrew's church. It is beautifully decorated with blue Armenian ceramic tiles.
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