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JEZREEL VALLEY

Jezreel Valley and Mount Tabor, Israel

Jezreel Valley

The 'Jezreel Valley' ; , ''Emek Yizrael'', also known as the 'Plain of Esdraelon' (''Esdraelon'' is the Koine Greek rendering of ''Jezreel''[1]), and as the 'Zirin Valley' (, ''Sahel Zir'in''), and as the ''Meadow of Amr's son'' (مرج بن عامر, ''Marj Ibn Amer''), is a large plain and inland valley in the south of the Lower Galilee of Israel, on the northern border of the West Bank. The valley was once the channel by which the Dead Sea (to the southeast of the valley) connected to the Mediterranean Sea; around two million years ago, the land between the Mediterranean Sea and the Great Rift Valley rose to such a degree that this connection was severed, and periodic floods from the Mediterranean Sea were interrupted, resulting in the Dead Sea no longer having an outlet, and becoming heavily saline.
It takes its ancient name from the city of 'Jezreel' (known in Arabic as 'Zir'in'; زرعين) located on a low hill on the southern edge and overlooking the valley, though some scholars think that the name of the city originated from the name of the clan that founded it, as in their view the Merneptah stele mentions the existence of this clan, not the similarly spelt ''Israel''[2]; ''Jezreel'' means ''God sows'' or ''El sows''[3]. The phrase "valley of Jezreel" was sometimes used to refer to the central part of the valley, around the city of Jezreel, while the southwestern portion was known as the ''valley of Megiddo'', after the ancient city of Megiddo, which was located there.
In addition to Jezreel and Megiddo, the valley is the location of a number of other important settlements both ancient and modern. The largest modern settlement in the Jezreel Valley is the city of Afula (, ), also known as the "Capital of the Valley"; Afula may once have been the Biblical city of Ophrah, which the Book of Judges identifies as the home of Gideon. The valley formed an easier route through the Levant than crossing the mountains on either side, and so saw a large amount of traffic, and was the site of many historic battles; the earliest battle for which there is known to be a surviving detailed account - the Battle of Megiddo - was fought in the valley. Due to the surrounding terrain, Egyptian chariots were only able to travel from Egypt as far as the Jezreel valley and the valley north of Lake Huleh.
According to the Bible, the valley was the scene of a victory by the Israelites, lead by Gideon, against the Midianites, the Amalekites, and the ''children of the east''[4], but was later the location at which the Israelites, lead by king Saul, were defeated by the Philistines[4]; according to textual scholars, the account of a Philistine victory at Jezreel derives from the ''monarchial source'', in contrast to the ''republican source'', which places the Philistine victory against the Israelites at Gilboa[4][4]. In Christian Eschatology, the part of the valley on which the Battle of Megiddo was fought is believed to be destined to be the site of a final battle, between good and evil, known as Armageddon (a word derived from ''Megiddo'').

Contents
Zionist settlement
See also
References
External links

Zionist settlement


Between 1912 and 1925 the Lebanese Sursock family of Beirut (then under the French Mandate of Syria) sold their 80,000 acres (320 km²) of land in the Vale of Esdraelon to the American Zion Commonwealth; Sursock himself had purchased the land, in 1872, from the Ottoman government for about ₤20,000, but around the 1920s the American Zion Commonwealth paid nearly three quarters of a million pounds, more than 35 times what the Sursuks payed the Ottomans, and purchased the land for Jewish resettlementpg. 49
However, 8,000 Palestinian fellahin (landless farmers) inhabitants in 22 Arab villages, suddenly lost the land they had worked on for the absentee landowners, and although the new owners of the land were compelled to pay compensation in addition to the purchase of the land itself, for the most part they considered themselves evicted following these sales. In some cases, the farmers refused to leave their land, as in Afula (El-Ful)[1], but the new Zionist owners decided that it would be forbidden for fellahins to remain as tenants on land intended for Jewish labor, and they also followed the socialist ideology of the Yishuv, believing that it would be wrong for a (Jewish) landlord to exploit a landless (Arab) peasantry.
As eviction orders increased over the following years, British police had to be used to expel the villagers from their homes. The dispossessed fellahin had to make their way to the coast to search for new work; most ended up in shanty towns on the edges of Jaffa and Haifa[8]. In the 1920s the American Zion Commonwealth founded the modern day city of Afula; The first moshav, Nahalal, was settled in this valley on September 11, 1921.

See also



Jezreel Valley Regional Council

Dead Sea

References


1. ''Jewish Encyclopedia''
2. Cheyne and Black, ''Encyclopedia Biblica''
3. ibid
4.
5.
6.
7.
8. Gilmore 1983, pp. 44-45


★ Nevill Barbour: ''Nisi Dominus: A Survey of the Palestine Controversy''. George G. Harrap, London 1946, pp. 117-118

★ Polk, Stamler, Asfour: ''Backdrop to Tragedy: The Struggle for Palestine''. Beacon Press, Boston, 1957, pp. 237-238.

★ The above two books are quoted in David Gilmour: ''Dispossessed: the Ordeal of the Palestinians''. Sphere Books, Great Britain, 1983, pp. 44-45.

External links



Jezreel Valley College

Emek Medical Center

Jezreel Valley Regional Council Official website (in Hebrew)

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