Valley of Jezreel, Israel, courtesy, Wikipedia |
In
the Biblical period, the Jezreel Valley partly covered the Israelite
territories of Asher, Menasheh, Zvulun,
and Yissasschar. During the rule of the
Prophetess Deborah, a major battle occurred at Mount Tabor, in the eastern part of the valley, between the
Israelites under Barak and the Canaanites under Sisera. The valley was also the
scene of a victory by the Israelites under Gideon, against the Midianites, the Amalekites, and the Children of the East (Judges 6:3), but was later the location at which the Israelites, led
by King Saul, were defeated by the Philistines at Mount Gilboa (1 Samuel 28:4, 29:1–29:6, 31:1-31.6). During the period
of the Divided Kingdom, Jehu, an army captain
of the northern Kingdom of Israel, killed King Jehoram in the valley, and had Jezebel killed in Jezreel town (2 Kings
9:1-9:10).
After
the Roman destruction of Jerusalem and due to subsequent invasions and
counter-invasions in the following centuries, the area gradually lost its population
and by the 13th century, after the Crusader period, it was largely
deserted, became a swampland, and abandoned to nomads. However, the edges of
the valley, namely villages like Bet
Shean were still populated, mainly by Muslim Arab settlers but also by some
Jews who remained. The 14th century topographer Ishtori
Haparchi settled there
and completed his work Kaftor Vaferach in 1322, the first Hebrew book on the geography of
Palestine. But in the main, the valley remained swampland which bred
malaria making settlement impossible. In the 1870s,
the Sursock family, a Greek family in Beirut purchased 80,000 acres of valley land from the Ottoman
government for approximately £20,000. In 1910, Yehoshua Hankin completed his first major Jewish purchase
in the Jezreel Valley. He bought some 10,000 dunams of land in the area of Al-Fuleh
(now Afula), which became the home
of two moshav settlements, Merhavia in 1911 and Tel
Adashim in 1913. Afula
itself, was then an Arab hamlet that was also home to a small Jewish community.
By 1924, this community had grown sufficiently and was able to establish the Emek Medical Center which served the
entire region. By the 1920s, Nazareth
also had a Jewish population (see article on Nazareth). Between 1912 and 1925 the Sursocks sold part of their
landholdings to the Jewish National Fund
which established Nahalal, the 1st
large moshav, in 1921, and part to the American Zion Commonwealth which purchased Afula in 1925. The Jewish farmers who
settled on the land, set about the task of draining the swamps to enable
further land development.
In
the late 1920s, a synagogue mosaic was uncovered by archaeologists at Bet Alfa. (see Bet Alfa and Synagogue).
Valley sites established during the British Mandate period
included: Ginnegar, Balfouria
(1922), Mizra, Kfar Gidon (1923), Gevat, Ramat David, Bet Shearim, Bet Zaid,
Kfar Baruch (1926), Kfar Yehoshua,
Sde Yaacov (1927), Kfar Hahoresh
(1933), Alonim (1938), Dovrat (1946), and Gazit (1947).
During the
Arab riots in the 1930s, Bet Shean served as a base for Arab attacks against
Jews whether they were immigrants or not. Throughout the centuries, Jews have
live in Bet Shean, on and off, but during the riots, the Arabs finally expelled
them. During this time, the settlement of Tel
Amal was established as a Tower and Stockade settlement for the purpose of
defense against Arab attacks. Today, it is part of Gan Hashlosha National Park, one of the most popular recreation
areas in Israel. After Israeli independence, development of the valley
increased in pace. In 1954, Kibbutz Yifat
was established. It houses the Museum of
the Beginning of Settlement and contains exhibiting items and photos of the
pioneer settlement in Israel. Max Stern Yizreel Valley College, located between Afula and Nazareth, was founded in 1965
and offers BA degrees and holds courses in such fields as Economics, Behavioral
Sciences, Social Sciences, Communication
Studies, Human
Services, Health
Administration, Nursing Studies and General
Studies. In 1980, the Jezreel Valley gained regional status and the Jezreel Valley Regional Council was established
in Nahalal. In 2006, the Israeli Transportation Ministry and the Regional
Council announced plans to build an international airport near Megiddo but the project was shelved due
to environmental objections.
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