Daroma (Aramaic) or Darom (Hebrew), both meaning 'South', [1] [2] [3] was the name of the southern Hebron Hills in the Late Roman and Byzantine periods. [2] [3] The term is used in Eusebius's Onomasticon (4th century) and in rabbinic literature. [2] [3] By the late tenth century, the Arab geographer al-Muqaddasi ('the Jerusalemite') was still referring to part of the region of Beth Guvrin by this name. [1]
In late antiquity, the term "Daroma" referred to the region extending from Ein Gedi, near the Dead Sea, to Eleutheropolis (Beth Govrin), a prominent city of the time. [4] Its northern boundary was marked by Hebron and Mamre. [5] For Eusebius, it is the southern part of the territory of Eleutheropolis. [1] Eusebius also mentioned several large Jewish villages in Daroma. The region's Jewish inhabitants were particularly devoted to Hebrew. [4]
In late antiquity, the 'borders' of the Daroma region were marked to the north by Mamre and nearby Hebron, to the east by En Gedi on the Dead Sea and to the west by the territory of Eleutheropolis. [4]
Jodi Magness writes that the defeat of the Bar Kokhba Revolt in 135 led to the depopulation of Jewish inhabitants throughout most of Judaea, with the exception of Daroma. [1] Here the Jewish population actually peaked after the revolt due to incoming refugees, reaching sizable numbers. [1] Hagith Sivan states that Daroma, while constituting the core of Jewish settlement in Judaea up until the Bar Kokhba Revolt (132–35), was largely emptied of its Jewish population in the aftermath of the revolt. [4] Mamre turned into the main slave market for the captured Jews and the surplus was sent on to Gaza. [4]
Gideon Avni notes that after 135, the Hebron Hills were demographically divided into two distinct sub-regions: in the northern part there were just Christian villages built atop destroyed former Jewish ones, while in the southern Hebron Hills there were both Jewish and Christian communities. [6] By c. 300, Eusebius is describing seven contemporary large Jewish villages in Daroma region: Juttah, Carmel, Eshtemoa, Rimmon, Tele, Lower Anim, and Ein Gedi. [6]
The Jewish population in the southern Hebron Hills apparently consisted of those who had remained in place after the Bar Kokhba revolt, then joined by Jewish migrants from Galilee. [7] The latter might have arrived during the time of Judah the Prince, who managed to have good relations with the Roman authorities. [7]
There is evidence for the region also being inhabited by pagans and Jewish Christians during that period. [2]
Archaeology has shown that Jewish settlements were typically built around a synagogue, [6] with those of Eshtemoa, Maon, Susya and Anim being particularly notable. [8] The edifice from En Gedi is also counted among the "Daroma synagogues". [4]
Jerome studied Hebrew with Jewish teachers from Daroma, a typical situation in those early days of Christianity, with strong Christian learning centres immediately to the north, in Jerusalem and Bethlehem. [4] The Daromean Jews were famed as "fanatic linguists", who were very strict with Hebrew pronunciation. [4] This must be seen in connection with the ornamentation of synagogues from the area, which show that efforts were made to imitate rituals specific to the destroyed Jerusalem Temple, possibly due to the presence of refugees from priestly families who had escaped from the former Jewish capital. [4] Funerary inscriptions as well as such from worship houses showing gratitude to donors, were written in Hebrew, in contrast with those from Galilee, where Greek or Aramaic were preferred. [4] These are seen as aspects of a conscious attempt at creating associations with the former times of religious glory. [4]
Al-Muqaddasi or al-Maqdisi (c. 945/946-991), who lived during the Abbasid and Fatimid Caliphates, knew the Daroma region by its Arabic corruption, ad-Dārūm, [9] but was well aware of its older name:
"[Bayt Jibrin] is a city partly in the hill country, partly in the plain. Its territory has the name of Ad Darum (the ancient Daroma and the modern Dairan)....It is an emporium for the neighbouring country, and a land of riches and plenty, possessing fine domains." [10] [11]
Syria Palaestina was a Roman province in the Palestine region between the early 2nd and late 4th centuries AD. The provincial capital was Caesarea Maritima. It forms part of timeline of the period in the region referred to as Roman Palestine.
The Bar Kokhba revolt was a large-scale armed rebellion initiated by the Jews of Judea, led by Simon bar Kokhba, against the Roman Empire in 132 CE. Lasting until 135 or early 136, it was the third and final escalation of the Jewish–Roman wars. Like the First Jewish–Roman War and the Second Jewish–Roman War, the Bar Kokhba revolt resulted in a total Jewish defeat; Bar Kokhba himself was killed by Roman troops at Betar in 135 and the Jewish rebels who remained after his death were all killed or enslaved within the next year.
Ein Gedi, also spelled En Gedi, meaning "spring of the kid", is an oasis, an archeological site and a nature reserve in Israel, located west of the Dead Sea, near Masada and the Qumran Caves. Ein Gedi, a kibbutz, was established nearby in 1954.
Jattir is a town in Judea mentioned several times in the Hebrew Bible. It was known as Iethira during the 4th century CE, when it was a Christian town. It is identified with Horvat Yattir/Khirbet Attir, an archeological site in the southern Hebron Hills, located in modern day Israel.
Eshtemoa, meaning obedience or "'place where prayer is heard", was an ancient city in the Judaean Mountains, mentioned several times in the Hebrew Bible. It is also the name of two people mentioned in the First Book of Chronicles.
The Judaean Desert or Judean Desert is a desert in the West Bank and Israel that lies east of the Judaean Mountains, so east of Jerusalem, and descends to the Dead Sea. Under the name El-Bariyah, it has been nominated to the Tentative List of World Heritage Sites in the State of Palestine, particularly for its monastic ruins.
Maresha was an Iron Age city mentioned in the Hebrew Bible, whose remains have been excavated at Tell Sandahanna, an archaeological mound or 'tell' renamed after its identification to Tel Maresha. The ancient Judahite city became Idumaean after the fall of Judah in 586 BCE, and after Alexander's conquest of the region in 332 BCE became Hellenised under the name Marisa or Marissa. The tell is situated in Israel's Shephelah region, i.e. in the foothills of the Judaean Mountains, about 1.5 kilometres (0.93 mi) south of Beit Gubrin.
The Hebron Hills, also known as Mount Hebron, are a mountain ridge, geographic region, and geologic formation, constituting the southern part of the Judean Mountains. The Hebron Hills are located in the southern West Bank.
Bayt Jibrin or Beit Jibrin was an Arab village in the Hebron District of Mandate Palestine, in what is today central Israel, which was depopulated during the 1948 Arab–Israeli War. It was preceded by the Iron Age Judahite city of Maresha, the later Hellenistic Marissa, located slightly south of Beit Jibrin's built-up area; and the Roman and Byzantine city of Beth Gabra, known from the Talmud as Beit Guvrin, renamed Eleutheropolis after 200 CE. After the 7th-century Arab conquest of the Levant, the Arabic name of Beit Jibrin was used for the first time, followed by the Crusaders' Bethgibelin, given to a Frankish colony established around a Hospitaller castle. After the Muslim reconquest the Arab village of Beit Jibrin was reestablished.
Naaran was an ancient Jewish village dating to the 5th and 6th century CE, located in the modern-day West Bank. Remains of the village have been excavated north-west of Jericho. Naaran is archeologically notable for a mosaic floor of a synagogue, featuring a large zodiac design, which was discovered at the site.
Zif is a Palestinian village located 7 kilometers (4.3 mi) south of Hebron. The village is in the Hebron Governorate in the southern West Bank. According to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics, Zif had a population of 1,061 in 2017. The primary health care facilities in the village itself are designated by the Ministry of Health as level 1 and at nearby Yatta as level 3.
Susya is a location in the southern Hebron Governorate in the West Bank. It houses an archaeological site with extensive remains from the Second Temple and Byzantine periods, including the ruins of an archeologically notable synagogue, repurposed as a mosque after the Muslim conquest of Palestine in the 7th century. A Palestinian village named Susya was established near the site in the 1830s. The village lands extended over 300 hectares under multiple private Palestinian ownership, and the Palestinians on the site are said to exemplify a southern Hebron cave-dwelling culture present in the area since the early 19th century whose transhumant practices involved seasonal dwellings in the area's caves and ruins of Susya.
The Second Temple period or post-exilic period in Jewish history denotes the approximately 600 years during which the Second Temple stood in the city of Jerusalem. It began with the return to Zion and subsequent reconstruction of the Temple in Jerusalem, and ended with the First Jewish–Roman War and the Roman siege of Jerusalem.
Judea or Judaea is a mountainous region of the Levant. Traditionally dominated by the city of Jerusalem, it is now part of Palestine and Israel. The name's usage is historic, having been used in antiquity and still into the present day; it originates from Yehudah, a Hebrew name. Yehudah was a son of Jacob, who was later given the name "Israel" and whose sons collectively headed the Twelve Tribes of Israel. Yehudah's progeny among the Israelites formed the Tribe of Judah, with whom the Kingdom of Judah is associated. Related nomenclature continued to be used under the rule of the Babylonians, the Persians, the Greeks, and the Romans. Under the Hasmoneans, the Herodians, and the Romans, the term was applied to an area larger than Judea of earlier periods. In 132 CE, the Roman province of Judaea was merged with Galilee to form the enlarged province of Syria Palaestina.
The Eshtemoa Synagogue, located 15 km south of Hebron in as-Samu, West Bank, refers to the remains of an ancient Jewish synagogue dating from around the 4th–5th century CE.
Anim Synagogue, a 25 km (16 mi) drive northwest of Arad, was an ancient synagogue in use during the 4th–7th centuries CE. The site is recognized as a National Heritage Site of Israel. It is located in the Yatir Forest, immediately south of the Green Line, in Israel.
The Onomasticon, more fully On the Place Names in the Holy Scripture, is a 4th-century gazetteer of historical and then-current place names in Palestine and Transjordan compiled by Eusebius, bishop of Caesarea.
Kfar Aziz was a Jewish village from the period of the Mishnah. It is identified with Hurbat al Aziz, in the southern part of Yatta in the southern West Bank, lying at an elevation of 765 metres (2,510 ft) above sea level.
Horvat Maon/Horvat Ma'on, Arabic: Khirbet Ma'in or Tell Máîn, is an archaeological site in the Hebron Hills, West Bank, rising 863 metres (2,831 ft) above sea level, where the remains of the ancient town of Ma'on have been excavated. The town, now a ruin, is mentioned in the Book of Joshua and the Books of Samuel. It still had a Jewish population during the Roman and Byzantine periods, and a synagogue was discovered there.
The Makhamra family, also Muhamara or Mahamara, is a Palestinian clan from the city of Yatta, in the Hebron Governorate, West Bank. It is one of the largest clans in the southern Hebron Hills and have a tradition of descending from a Jewish tribe of Arabia. They have also preserved several practices of Jewish origin.