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Art Institute of Chicago

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Francis Frith — The Pool of Hezekiah, from the Tower of Hippicus, Jerusalum
Francis Frith

The Pool of Hezekiah, from the Tower of Hippicus, Jerusalum

1857

Shot from an elevated vantage point, the photograph offers a rare bird's-eye perspective of Jerusalem's Old City during the Ottoman period. Frith's composition demonstrates his eye for urban documentation, capturing both the ancient pool's significance and the city's 19th-century character.

Medium
Albumen print, pl. 4 from the album "Egypt and Palestine, Volume I" (1858)

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About this work

Francis Frith, The Pool of Hezekiah, from the Tower of Hippicus, Jerusalum, 1857

Shot from an elevated vantage point, the photograph offers a rare bird's-eye perspective of Jerusalem's Old City during the Ottoman period. Frith's composition demonstrates his eye for urban documentation, capturing both the ancient pool's significance and the city's 19th-century character.

Medium
Albumen print, pl. 4 from the album "Egypt and Palestine, Volume I" (1858)
Year
1857
Seen at
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL

Related themes

Nineteenth Century, Monochrome, Albumen Print, Documentary, Landscape, British, Architecture

More works by Francis Frith

Collected by

Art Institute of Chicago, Cleveland Museum of Art