The 'Garden Tomb' in
Jerusalem is considered by some to be the site of the burial and resurrection of
Jesus.
[1]
It was first put forward as Jesus' tomb by
Major-General Charles George Gordon CB, who spent time in Palestine in 1882-83. However, Gordon had no academic education in history or anthropology.
The site of the Garden Tomb is outside
Jerusalem's Old City Walls, quite near the
Damascus Gate. It is also close to the side of a rocky escarpment (just behind the Arab bus station), which resembles the face of a skull (thus fitting a possible interpretation of "
Golgotha"), that is near the site Gordon identified as
Calvary.
The traditional site of the Jesus' tomb is where the
Church of the Holy Sepulchre now stands. In his ''Life of Constantine''
[2],
Eusebius of Caesarea states that where the then contemporary Church of the Holy Sepulchre sat was the site the early Christian community in Jerusalem venerated as
Calvary. The ancient claim also follows the precedent set by the Roman
Emperor Constantine, whose mother,
Helena of Constantinople, found a cave containing artifacts claimed to be from the
crucifixion of Jesus Christ, including three nails and the
True Cross, at the site of which Eusebius later spoke.
Gordon's claim is contradicted by modern scholarship, which supports the traditional site, the
Church of the Holy Sepulchre. To quote the
Israeli scholar Dan Bahat, former City Archaeologist of Jerusalem:
:"We may not be absolutely certain that the site of the Holy Sepulchre Church is the site of Jesus' burial, but we have no other site that can lay a claim nearly as weighty, and we really have no reason to reject the authenticity of the site" (Bahat, 1986).
Gordon did find some ancient graves at the Garden Tomb, but recent scholarship suggests that they are not from the right period.

The place where Charles Gordon claimed the body of Jesus Christ was laid.

Entrance to the Garden Tomb.

Entrance to the Garden Tomb showing groove/slot in the ground where the rock guarding the entrance could have been placed.
References
External links
★
Official Website
★
Jesus' Tomb - information at GoSleepGo
★
Site with many links associated with the Garden tomb