Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 367. Not illustrated. Chapters: Former Buildings and Structures of Jerusalem, Tabernacle and Jerusalem Temples, Temple in Jerusalem, Book of Exodus, Ark of the Covenant, Kohen, Book of Leviticus, Menorah, Second Temple of Jerusalem, Moriah, Molten Sea, Cherub, Korban, Third Temple, Solomon's Temple, Shavuot, Tisha B'av, Kohen Gadol, Hoshen, Urim and Thummim, Counting of the Omer, Herod's Temple, Talpiot Tomb, Altar, Siege of Jerusalem, Shiloh, Replicas of the Jewish Temple, Mercy Seat, Hasseki Sultan Imaret, List of Significant Religious Sites, Tenth of Tevet, Ephod, Rosh Hashanah, Holy of Holies, Kodesh Hakodashim, the Three Weeks, Seventeenth of Tammuz, House of Yahweh, Mizrah, Tablets of Stone, Versailles Wedding Hall Disaster, Brazen Laver, the Nine Days, Angelic Tongues, Temple Denial, Herodian Architecture, Priestly Divisions, Moed, Me'il, Michnasayim, Holy Anointing Oil, Simchat Beit Hashoeivah, House of Avitnas, Tzitz, Former Synagogues of Jerusalem, Avnet, House of Garmu, Shemen Afarsimon, Beautiful Gate, Mitznefet, Hekhal, Chanuyot, Western Stone, Ketonet, Qalal, Caesarea Obelisk, Solomon's Porch. Excerpt: Korban (Hebrew: "sacrifice"; plural: korbanot ), in Judaism, is the term for a variety of sacrificial offerings described and commanded in the Torah. Such sacrifices were offered in a variety of settings by the ancient Israelites, and later by the Jewish priesthood, the Kohanim, at the Temple in Jerusalem. A Korban was usually an animal sacrifice, such as a sheep or a bull that underwent shechita (Jewish ritual slaughter), and was often cooked and eaten by the offerer, with parts given to the Kohanim and parts burned on the Temple mizbe'ah (altar). Korbanot could also consist of doves, grain, wine, or incense. The Torah narrates that God commanded the Hebrews to offer korbanot on various altars, and describes the offe...