32°56′16″N 35°42′15″E / 32.93778°N 35.70417°E
Yehudiya or Yehudiyye (Arabic: يهودية, lit. "Jewish") is an abandoned village and archeological site in the center of the Golan Heights, about 5 kilometers south of Katzrin within the Yehudiya Forest Nature Reserve.
Ancient Jewish settlement
editIn the houses of the village, artifacts were found which attest to the existence of a settlement from the Roman–Byzantine period. According to multiple testimonies, there was a Jewish presence there after the Arab conquest.[1] The Jewish past of the settlement was known to the Arabs who settled there later, hence its name.
It is one of several possible identifications for Soganaea, a village fortified by Josephus in preparation for the First Jewish–Roman War.[2]
Modern times
editIn the 19th century Arab peasants settled in the village houses. Near the village there is a large stone house that was used as a farm and employed many local villagers.[3] After the establishment of the State of Israel, the Syrians renamed the village "Arabiya" to blur its Jewish past.[4] The village was depopulated in 1967 with the occupation of the Golan Heights by the IDF during the Six-Day War.[5] The ruins of the village are now part of the Yehudiya Forest reserve, covering 66 square kilometers.
References
edit- ^ Neustadt, Mordechai (1969). The Golan. Publishing Systems. p. 68.
- ^ Rogers, Guy MacLean (2021). For the Freedom of Zion: the Great Revolt of Jews against Romans, 66-74 CE. New Haven: Yale University Press. p. 544. ISBN 978-0-300-24813-5.
- ^ Ilan, Zvi (1969). The Land of the Golan. Tarbut and Education. pp. 208–210.
- ^ Ziv, Yehuda (2005). A Moment of Place: Stories Behind Places' Names. p. 67.
- ^ Murphy & Gannon 2008, p28 + p69