 Hey guys, welcome back to my YouTube channel. This is Daniel Rosal here. I'm in downtown Jerusalem on King George Street. I want to kick off a series of videos I'm going to be doing about the names of streets in Jerusalem and why different streets are called different names. King George Street, of course, is one of the best known streets in Jerusalem. It's adjacent to Ben Yehuda Street, which serves as basically the thoroughfare of Jerusalem. As I mentioned a few times, Jerusalem is an interesting city. It's sometimes easier to think of Jerusalem, not as one city, but as a kind of conglomeration of three different cities. West Jerusalem, which has its downtown area, Ben Yehuda Street. You have East Jerusalem, Palestinian, Arab East Jerusalem, which is the center outside the Damascus Gate. And then you have the kind of Kharedi or ultra-Orthodox Jerusalem. And its center is just a little bit up there in the neighborhoods of Gheola and Mea Shireen, which are very, very orthodox. Anyway, getting back to King George Street. King George Street is named after King George the Fifth. And this street was inaugurated in 1924, the seven-year anniversary of when the British conquered Jerusalem during the Mandate period, which is a very, very interesting period. Now, if I just rotate here, the traffic light on the other side at the intersection of King George Street and Yaffo Street, which goes all the way down to Yaffo Gate, that was actually the first traffic light to be installed in Jerusalem. So never say you don't learn stuff watching my YouTube channel. The first traffic light in Jerusalem was at this intersection here, just where there is the Naaman Bakery today. So this street is very interesting for a few reasons. Firstly, it's one of the best-known most central streets in Jerusalem. As I mentioned, it dates back to the Mandate period. It's also interesting because the first Knesset was actually built just up there, about 500 meters. And Karim Qayyamat Lai Israel, they have their offices as well on King George Street. So that's King George Street in Jerusalem, named for the British monarch King George the Fifth, commemorated in 1924, which is, of course, 24 years before the foundation of the State of Israel. More videos forthcoming about interesting streets in Jerusalem and why they have these names. If you have a recommendation for me to look up the history of a particular street, feel free to drop me a comment. Thanks for watching.