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Associating the destruction of both Temples with the Ninth of Av raises a question of dating. The Bible mentions both the seventh and the tenth of the month as the date on which the First Temple was destroyed (II Kings 25:8-9; Jer. 52: 12-13); there is no mention of the ninth. As far as the Second Temple is concerned, ancient opinion was unanimous in fixing the tenth of the month as the day on which the calamity occurred, and there was an apparent eagerness to mark the same date as the anniversary of the First Temple's destruction. Josephus, the chief non-rabbinic source for the history of the Second Temple, makes this point when he writes: "And now that fatal day was come according to the revolution of the ages; it was the tenth of the month of Av, upon which [the Temple] was previously burned by the king of Babylon" (War, VI, 248-50). The weight of rabbinic evidence is likewise for the tenth as the date of the destruction. The Talmud (Ta'an. 29a) resolves the difficulty by suggesting that, in the last days of the First Temple, the enemy entered the holy precincts on the seventh of Av, attacked the building on the eighth, started the conflagration on the ninth, and the Temple burned to the ground on the tenth. In view of the fact that the fire was actually started on the ninth, that day seemed appropriate for commemoration by fasting and prayer. Later, when the Second Temple was likewise destroyed, the original fast day observed on the Ninth of Av served to commemorate both disasters, in accordance with a rabbinic dictum that later sorrowful events may be ascribed to a date already saddened by an earlier calamity.
The Ninth of Av has associations with many dark chapters in Jewish history. In 135 CE, Bar Kokhba's last surviving fortress, Betar, fell to Hadrian's legions, and traditionally this occurred on Tishah be- Av. On 18 July 1290 (coinciding with the Fast of Av), Edward I signed the edict banishing all Jews from England. Similar associations were made with the expulsion from Spain, the last professing Jew having left Spain four days earlier. Thus, by coincidence or design, Tishah be-Av became the gloomiest date in the Jewish calendar, synonymous with oppression and exile.
In the course of time, Jewish law and custom evolved several degrees of public mourning from SHIVAH ASAR BE- TAMMUZ. The subsequent THREE WEEKS culminate in the NINE DAYS beginning on the New Moon of Av and reach a climax on the eve of Tishah be-Av, when the last meal is frugal, an egg symbolizing the mourner's traditional fare (some Eastern communities dip the food in ashes as a sign of mourning). Thereafter, eating and drinking are forbidden during the fast day; other prohibitions ban shaving, bathing, and marital relations; wearing leather shoes, engaging in work, or even indulging in normal Torah study.
FAST OF AV