JUDEA AND SAMARIA

:''This article refers to a District of Israel called Judea and Samaria. For historical regions of Judaea and Samaria see Judea or Samaria. For uses synonymous with the term "the West Bank", see that entry.''
'Judea and Samaria' ( ''Yehuda ve-Shomron'' , also an acronym יו"ש ''Yosh'' or ש"י ''Shai''; ''al-Yahudiyyah was-Sāmarah'') are the Biblical terms used to describe the area now more commonly referred to as the West Bank. It is the official name of one of the seven Districts of Israel (not recognised by the UN).

The geographical area of Samaria roughly corresponds to the territory of the ancient Kingdom of Israel with the capital in Shomron (Sebastia), while Judea (also Judaea) corresponds to the Kingdom of Judah with the capital in Jerusalem. After about 80 years of United Monarchy under Kings David and Solomon, the United Kingdom of Israel and Judea split into two independent kingdoms that occasionally went to war with each other. Referral to them as a unit is dating from the modern period, specifically the time of their occupation and annexation by Jordan. However, prior to the Jordanian occupation, the United Nations General Assembly Resolution 181 passed on November 29, 1947 used the term "''Samaria and Judea''" as part of the description of the border between the proposed Jewish and Arab/Muslim states.
Sometimes, the term "Judea and Samaria" is employed to distinguish it from the "West Bank", the latter term now thought to include also East Jerusalem and stretches of what used to be no-man's land between Israel and Jordan's West Bank. Following the annexation of East Jerusalem by Israel, according to Israeli law, Judea and Samaria is considered Terra nullius.
The names Judea and Samaria are also employed specifically as a collective term for the Jewish settlements in that area, especially by the settlers and their supporters. Many Palestinians object to this term, which they perceive as a rejection of their rights to the land. Nevertheless, the term ''al-Yahudiyya was-Samarah'' is used by Arab Christians in reference to the Bible. [1]

Contents
Status
Cities
Local councils
Regional councils
See also
References

Status


Main articles: West Bank#Status, West Bank

The United Nations considers Judea and Samaria ("the West Bank") Israeli-occupied territory, while Israel refers to it as "disputed territory". The Israeli government has argued that Judea and Samaria provide Israel with essential security against attack [1]; however, Israel's claim to the territory on this basis has been weakened by the refusal of all Israeli governments since 1967 to contemplate the idea of formally annexing it and granting Israeli citizenship to its Arab inhabitants.
In the 2006 Israeli elections, parties advocating relinquishing parts or all of Judea and Samaria gained 64 out of 120 Knesset seats (Kadima, Labour, Meretz along with the Arab parties). However, due to a change in public opinion following the Second Lebanon War in July-August 2006, such plans are not part of the current agenda.

Cities



Ariel אריאל

Betar Illit ביתר עילית

Ma'ale Adummim מעלה אדומים

Local councils



Alfei Menashe אלפי מנשה

Beit Arieh בית אריה

Bet El בית אל

Efrat אפרת

Elkana אלקנה

Giv'at Ze'ev גבעת זאב

Har Adar הר אדר

Immanuel עמנואל

Karnei Shomron קרני שומרון

Kedumim קדומים

Kiryat Arba קריית ארבע

Ma'ale Efraim מעלה אפרים

Modi'in Illit מודיעין עילית

Oranit אורנית

Regional councils



Gush Etzion גוש עציון

Har Hebron הר חברון

Matte Binyamin מטה בנימין

Megilot Dead Sea מגילות ים המלח

Shomron שומרון

Biq'at HaYarden בקעת הירדן

See also



Judea

Samaria

West Bank

Rule of the West Bank and East Jerusalem by Jordan

Israeli-occupied territories

Israeli-Palestinian conflict

Israeli settlement

1949 Armistice Agreements

References



1. Murqus, Sa'īd. Tafsīr kalimāt al-Kitāb al-Muqaddas (Cairo, 1996). (in Arabic)



"Judea and Samaria", The Jewish Agency for Israel, undated, retrieved August 31, 2005

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