Jesus's Tomb

There are several locations that are recognized by some to be the actual location of Jesus's Tomb. The two most recognized are 1) Shown in this photo, the Garden Tomb, and 2) the site below the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.

In 1842 Otto Thenius proposed that a location known as the "place of the skull" was the Calvary (Golgotha) where the crucifixion of Jesus occurred. In 1867 the above "garden tomb" was discovered near this believed location of Jesus' death. The connection of the "place of the skull" with the garden tomb believed to be where Jesus was buried was given prominence by British general Charles Gordon in 1883. This is why the above tomb location is also known as "Gordon's Tomb".

Golgotha outside city walls - In recent decades, archaeological excavations have revealed more facts about the Jerusalem of Jesus’ day—including the route of the city walls at that time. The Bible requires that Golgotha lie outside those walls. The Church of the Holy Sepulchre is inside the walls of today’s Jerusalem. But that doesn't disqualify it as the authentic site because the walls that now surround the Old City are not the walls of Jesus’ day. They were built in the 16th century by Turkish Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent. Excavations and literary evidence show conclusively that when Jesus was crucified, the line of the city wall ran south of the site on which the Church of the Holy Sepulchre now stands.

It doesn't matter about the true location of the Tomb. I only matters that the event actually occurred as stated in the Holy Bible and that He did as He stated He would do; He arose from the Grave after three days.