Jacob's Well, Bristol
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Cliftonwood Clifton is both a suburb of Bristol, England, and the name of one of the city's thirty-five council wards. The Clifton ward also includes the areas of Cliftonwood and Hotwells. The eastern part of the suburb lies within the ward of Clifton Do ...
,
Bristol Bristol () is a city, ceremonial county and unitary authority in England. Situated on the River Avon, it is bordered by the ceremonial counties of Gloucestershire to the north and Somerset to the south. Bristol is the most populous city in ...
,
England England is a country that is part of the United Kingdom. It shares land borders with Wales to its west and Scotland to its north. The Irish Sea lies northwest and the Celtic Sea to the southwest. It is separated from continental Europe b ...
is an early medieval structure incorporated into a 19th century building on the corner of Jacob's Wells Road and Constitution Hill. It is thought to be a Jewish ritual bath. The stone structure is built round a natural spring and on a lintel there is an inscription that includes Hebrew characters. It was initially suggested that these might form part of the
Hebrew Hebrew (; ; ) is a Northwest Semitic language of the Afroasiatic language family. Historically, it is one of the spoken languages of the Israelites and their longest-surviving descendants, the Jews and Samaritans. It was largely preserved ...
word ''zochalim'', "flowing". Following the well's rediscovery in 1987, the archaeologists involved in its survey suggested that the well might be a mikveh or Jewish ritual bath. They noted that the small chamber 'filled with clear water issuing from a fissure in the rock, at a constant 53 °F, and left from another opening feeding the presumed conduit.' The temperature reference has led some to characterise it as a 'hot spring'. However, 53 °F (12 °C), is close to average for groundwater in the UK (10 °C-11 °C). The interpretation of the well and the inscription was challenged in 2001. The authors suggested that the well is too deep and restricted for a mikveh and too far from the medieval Jewish quarter, in the centre of the town. In the Middle Ages Jacob's Well lay in a wooded valley, on the edge of the town, about a mile from the Jewry. That was centred first around what is now Quay Street "Old Jewry", then later on Wine Street, close to the castle. Hillaby and Sermon suggest that the well was a ''bet tohorah'' used to cleanse bodies before burial in the nearby Jewish cemetery at
Brandon Hill Brandon Hill () is the highest mountain in County Kilkenny, Ireland, with an elevation of and prominence at . The South Leinster Way, a long-distance trail, meandering through the Barrow Valley and traverses Brandon Hill. The village of ...
which was established after 1177. If so, it would be the only surviving example in England. They note that while inscription on the lintel above the well's chamber certainly includes Hebrew characters, most of the inscription is too damaged to be sure of the reading. They suggest it could be ''mayim chayim'' "living waters", which would be appropriate for waters intended for the ritual purification of a person after touching a corpse. Writing in 1861, the historian George Pryce wrote that Jacob's Well lay close by 'the “Jews Acre”, or burial ground, where now stands
Queen Elizabeth's Hospital Queen Elizabeth's Hospital (also known as QEH) is an independent day school in Clifton, Bristol, England, founded in 1586. QEH is named after its original patron, Queen Elizabeth I. Known traditionally as "The City School", Queen Elizabeth's Hos ...
, on digging the foundation for which, a few years ago, a number of gravestones were found, with inscriptions in Hebrew characters; they were, however, thoughtlessly used in the building' The precise location of the Jews Acre (also referred to as the 'Jews Churchyard') was identified in 2007, using eighteenth and nineteenth century maps and plans of the area. The boundaries of the cemetery correspond to that of the modern school. A Jewish community was known to exist in Bristol from at least 1154 until the wholesale banishment of the Jewish community from England in 1290. It has been claimed that the spring became the property of St Augustine's Abbey in 1142. However, there appear to have been at least two different structures at the site associated with water supply. The 1373 survey of the boundary of the new county of Bristol refers to a 'a great oundarystone fixed near the conduit of the Abbey of Saint Augustine of Bristol on the western part of the same conduit' The more detailed 1736 survey of the county boundary describes this stone as 'standing betwixt Jacob’s-Well and the Vault of the Conduit, which leadeth to the athedralCollege'. The implication is that the Abbey (later Cathedral) conduit lay just to the east of the great boundary stone, while Jacob's Well lay just to the west, putting it just outside of the county of Bristol as established in 1373. The Cathedral continued to be supplied with water from its conduit in Jacob's Well Road until the mid-19th century. A Royal Commission on the Health of Towns reported in 1845 that nearly all of the water laid into the houses of Bristol came from Jacob's Wells. The Commission noted that the water, which also fed the
Cathedral A cathedral is a church that contains the '' cathedra'' () of a bishop, thus serving as the central church of a diocese, conference, or episcopate. Churches with the function of "cathedral" are usually specific to those Christian denominatio ...
and the
Grammar School A grammar school is one of several different types of school in the history of education in the United Kingdom and other English-speaking countries, originally a school teaching Latin, but more recently an academically oriented secondary school ...
, was of good quality but the volume was not enough to supply the city. Most of Bristol's water supply at this time came from the city's medieval conduits, which fed public cisterns / fountains. At some point in the later nineteenth-century the site of Jacob's Well was developed, its superstructure was demolished and the well itself was walled in at the rear of a Victorian property. In 1905 the waters from the area's springs were diverted into the Jacobs Wells Baths. Jacob's Well was rediscovered in 1987 by the Bristol Temple Local History Group, who were investigating the site during the rebuilding of a furniture workshop which had been the Hotwells Police Station bicycle shed, and a one-time fire engine house. In February 2011, the company that now owns the well applied to the Environment Agency to extract and bottle up to 15 million litres (3.3 million imperial gallons) of water a year. Water from the well was previously bottled and sold in the 1980s.


See also

For other similarly named structures, see
Jacob's Well Jacob's Well ( ar, بِئْر يَعْقُوب, Biʾr Yaʿqūb; gr, Φρέαρ του Ιακώβ, Fréar tou Iakóv; he, באר יעקב, Beʾer Yaʿaqov), also known as Jacob's fountain and Well of Sychar, is a deep well constructed into ...
.


References and sources

;Sources * J. H. Bettey
Observed, Visitors' Impressions of the City from Domesday to The Blitz''
(Redcliffe Press, Bristol, 1986) .
J. Hillaby and R. Sermon, 'Jacob's Well, Bristol: Mikveh or Bet Tohorah?', ''Transactions of the Bristol and Gloucestershire Archaeological Society'' 122 (2004) 127–152
* I. Blair, J. Hillaby, I. Howell, R. Sermon and B. Watson, 'The discovery of two medieval mikva'ot in London and a reinterpretation of the Bristol "mikveh"', ''Jewish Historical Studies'' (Jewish Historical Society of England) 37 (2001) 15-40 * Joe Hillaby, 'The Bristol Jewry to 1290' in Madge Dresser and Peter Fleming (eds.), ''Bristol: Ethnic Minorities and the City, 1000-2001'' (Chichester : Phillimore, 2007), pp. 9-32
Joe Hillaby and Richard Sermon, 'Jacob's Well, Bristol: Further Research', ''Bristol and Avon Archaeology'', 22 (2007), 97-106

R. R. Emanuel and M. W. Ponsford, 'Jacob's Well, Bristol, Britain's only known medieval Jewish Ritual Bath (Mikveh)', ''Transactions of the Bristol & Gloucestershire Archaeological Society'', CXII (1994), 73-86
* J. Lea-Jones. ''Historical account of the area known as Jacob’s Wells, Clifton, Bristol, England: from twelfth century to modern times'' (1999) * S. Watson, ''Secret underground Bristol'' (Bristol 1991)


References

{{Reflist Buildings and structures in Bristol Scheduled monuments in Bristol Water_wells Jews and Judaism in England History_of_Bristol Medieval England