survey measurements and photocoordinates as the
weighted observations would be used. Therefore any
photograph and any survey measurement which could be
obtained would contribute to the record of the Tomb.
Permission to place small adhesive paper targets or the
steel girders which supported the Edicule was given in
advance, but when they were first emplaced they were
viewed with great suspicion by some of the
representatives of the Communities. Some targets were
removed and thrown down. It was known that the right to
clean, or affix things to, certain parts of the Edicule was
defined by the Status Quo. Could placing a target be
construed as an infringement of the Status Quo? Patience
and goodwill prevailed. The presence of the small targets
was finally seen as not a threat to the Status Quo. During
the next few days one of the custodians of the Tomb
guarded the targets from inquisitive tourists with almost
as much fervour as he performed his more usual duties.
Five survey stations were defined by identifying marks on
the floor of the Rotunda and three more on the floor of the
gallery. These eight stations and the lines of sight between
them formed a framework which enclosed the Edicule.
Measurements of horizontal and zenith angles and slope
distances were made using a Wild TC1600 recording
tacheometer. For distance measurements to the targets on
the Edicule a hand-held mini-prism was used. Had free
access to stations and targets been possible, the control
survey could have been done in a few hours. It took five
days to complete the external control survey. Lines of
sight were usually obscured by the almost continuous
throng of tourists and pilgrims around the Rotunda and
queuing to enter the Edicule. Similar problems have
presumably always faced those who wished to survey the
Tomb. Over 850 years ago, the Russian Abbot Daniel
wrote "I went after my mass to the Guardian of the Keys
of the Holy Sepulchre and said ' I want to retrieve my
lamp!' He received me with affection and let me go alone
into the Sepulchre..... Then I measured the length and the
Figure 3. Plan of the Edicule (in progress) showing the two inner chambers.
width and the height of the tomb as it is presently, an act
no one can do when there are people about." (Daniel the
Abbot, 1106).
Photography was equally difficult to acquire. The overall
plan adopted was to take, as far as possible, converging
sets of near-normal stereopairs using a Zeiss (Jena) UMK
10/1318 with Agfa Avipan 100PE glass plates. The
ambient light levels in the Rotunda were very low. A little
daylight filtered down from the crown of the Rotunda
dome. A few tungsten light bulbs of low wattage were
sometimes alight in adjacent chapels, but they added little
to the light from the candles inside the Edicule and on
altars around the Rotunda. Two 2kW tungsten halogen
light sources had been taken to Jerusalem. The light from
these was reflected off the walls of the Rotunda onto the
Edicule to minimise harsh shadows, especially those cast
by the steel girders. Variations of the type and reliability
of the power sockets available resembled the diversities
of the Communities in the Church. Once again, much
patience and understanding were necessary on all sides.
Often two hours and once four hours passed between
taking the first and second photographs of a stereopair.
Hours spent waiting to take a photograph were
nevertheless full of interest: the passing throng of pilgrims
and tourists speaking many different languages and
behaving in very different ways; a chant from the Copts
in a language similar to that spoken by the Pharoahs; a
fugue on the Franciscans' organ; a liturgical procession
lead by the Armenian Patriarch; bass and tenor choral
singing from the Greek Orthodox Katholikon. Events such
as these, sometimes taking place simultaneously, made
surveying a unique experience for all involved. It was
clearly not going to be possible to make any survey
measurements or take any photographs with the UMK
inside the Edicule during the time the Church was open to
the public. Only by joining the queue could it be entered
during the day.