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Bethmaus

Bethmaus, (Greek: Βηθμαούς) or Beth Maʿon (Hebrew: בית מעון), also called Maon, was a Jewish village during the late Second Temple and Mishnaic periods, and which was already a ruin (Tell Maʿūn) when Kitchener visited the site in 1877.[1][2] It was situated upon the hill, directly north-west of the old city of Tiberias, at a distance of one biblical mile,[3] rising to an elevation of 250 metres (820 ft) above sea-level. It is now incorporated within the modern city bounds of Upper Tiberias. Others place the ancient Bethmaus (Ma'on) where is now the Arab ruin, Khirbet Nadhr ad-Din, saying that with the passing of time, the old namesake was transferred to Tell Maʿūn, a short distance away.[4]

Bethmaus
Beth Maʿon
Shown within Mandatory Palestine
Bethmaus (Israel)
Location
RegionLower Galilee
Coordinates32°47′40″N 35°32′00″E / 32.79444°N 35.53333°E / 32.79444; 35.53333
Typevillage (ruin)
History
PeriodsHellenistic, Roman, Byzantine
CulturesJewish
Associated withJews

The Midrash (Genesis Rabba § 85:7) says of the village, "Beth Maʿon, they ascend to it from Tiberias, but they go down to it from Kefar Shobtai."[5][6] The Jerusalem Talmud, citing a variant account, says that they would go down to Beth Maʿon from its broad place.[7]

History edit

Based on the potsherds found in situ, the place was inhabited as early as the Bronze Age and Iron Age.[8]

Josephus, the Jewish general turned historian, mentions that when he was put in charge of the public affairs of Galilee by the people of Jerusalem during the war with Rome, he moved with two of his fellow-legates who were priests of Aaron's lineage from Sepphoris to the village Bethmaus (henceforth: Beth Maʿon), a village situated four furlongs (stadia) distant from Tiberias.[9] It was at Beth Maʿon that Josephus met Justus of Tiberias. There, they convened a meeting with the principal persons of Tiberias, to discuss a plan to demolish a house built by Herod the Tetrarch in Tiberias, and which had the figures of living creatures in it (contrary to Jewish law), but to restore the royal furniture of that house, consisting of candlesticks made of Corinthian brass, and of royal tables, and of a great quantity of uncoined silver, to the king. However, when Josephus took leave of Beth Maʿon and went into Upper Galilee, before Josephus and the senate of Tiberias could carry out their schemes, certain mariners and poor people of Galilee had plundered the house built by Herod of its effects, and taken away the spoils.

In the early 2nd-century CE, following the Bar Kokhba revolt, Beth Maʿon became the residence of one of the priestly clans known as Ḥuppah. Around this time, representatives of the twenty-four priestly wards moved and settled in the Galilee.[10][11] In the 20th-century, three stone inscriptions were discovered bearing the names of the priestly wards, their order and the name of the locality to which they had moved after the destruction of the Second Temple: In 1920, a stone inscription was found in Ashkelon showing a partial list of the priestly wards; in 1962 three small fragments of one Hebrew stone inscription bearing the partial names of places associated with the priestly courses (the rest of which had been reconstructed) were found in Caesarea Maritima, dated to the third-fourth centuries;[12][13] in 1970 a stone inscription was found on a partially buried column in a mosque, in the Yemeni village of Bayt al-Ḥaḍir, showing ten names of the priestly wards and their respective towns and villages. The Yemeni inscription is the longest roster of names of this sort ever discovered unto this day, and mentions the priestly course in Beth Maʿon. The seventh-century poet, Eleazar ben Killir, echoing the same tradition, also wrote a liturgical poem detailing the 24-priestly wards and their places of residence.[14]

In the 3rd-century CE, Rabbi Yohanan officiated in the synagogue of Maon and was called to render a decision in the case of a ritual slaughterer (shochet) who had improperly slaughtered a chicken and whether or not he was to be held liable on that account.[15] Many other incidents are attributed unto Rabbi Yohanan in Maon,[16] one of which involved the kid of a goat that was roasted whole over a spit without first removing the suet (forbidden fat).[17]

In extant Turkish documents dating to May 1566, the Ottoman ruler, Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent, ordered that water be drawn from Beth Maʿon and brought to Tiberias,[18] the purpose of which is not now known, although thought to have been for agricultural crops. By April 1566, when the work had not yet been completed and the workers (under Don Joseph Nasi) demanded more money from the Sultan to complete the project, the Sultan refused to set aside more money for the project. Below Beth Maʿon, between the ruins of the ancient village and Tiberias, are found three natural springs: ʿAin el-Kelbeh, ʿAin et-Tineh and al-Biyyar.

 
Palestine Exploration Fund map of 1880, showing Tell Maʿūn
 
1794 Anville Map of Israel, Palestine or the Holy Land, showing Bethmaus in relation to Tiberias (click to enlarge)

References edit

  1. ^ Conder & Kitchener (1881), p. 371. Tell Maʿūn is shown on the 1880 Survey of Western Palestine map, sheet no. 6.
  2. ^ Cf. Conder, C.R. (1879), p. 181
  3. ^ Ishtori Haparchi (2007), p. 56, who makes mention of the village Maʿon, which he describes as being "within a Sabbath day's journey to the west of Tiberias." The editor of the volume has identified the site as Beth Maʿon, mentioned in the Jerusalem Talmud, Sotah 1:8, and Baba Metziah 7:1. Ishtori Haparhi had mistaken this Maʿon in Galilee for being the one where David and his men took refuge from King Saul, in I Samuel 23:24.
  4. ^ M. Aviam & P. Richardson, "Josephus` Galilee in Archeological Perspective", 177-201
  5. ^ Klein, S. (1939), p. 16
  6. ^ Neubauer, A. (1868), p. 218
  7. ^ Original: paloṭetha = perhaps der. of πλατεια ("a broad place"). Above Bethmaus there was an extensive plateau. See Jerusalem Talmud, Sotah 1:8 (7a)
  8. ^ Yitzhaki, A. [in Hebrew] (1978). Israel Guide - Lower Galilee and Kinneret Region (A useful encyclopedia for the knowledge of the country) (in Hebrew). Vol. 3. Jerusalem: Keter Publishing House, in affiliation with the Israel Ministry of Defence. p. 216. OCLC 745203905., s.v. Ancient sites in the vicinity of Tiberius: The ruin of Beit Ma'on
  9. ^ Josephus, Vita § 12, which happens to be the equivalent of a biblical mile.
  10. ^ Klein, S. (1939), p. 164 (s.v. בית מעון); Klein, S. (1945), p. 65
  11. ^ Rosenfeld, B. (1998), p. 82 [26]
  12. ^ Avi-Yonah, M. (1962), pp. 137–139
  13. ^ Avi-Yonah, M. (1964), pp. 24–28
  14. ^ Poem entitled, Lamentation for the 9th of Ab, composed in twenty-four stanzas, and the last line of each stanza contains the name of the village where each priestly family lived.
  15. ^ Babylonian Talmud (Baba Kama 99b)
  16. ^ Cf. Babylonian Talmud (Shabbat 139a; Yebamot 64b), Jerusalem Talmud (Eruvin 5:1)
  17. ^ Babylonian Talmud (Ḥullin 97a)
  18. ^ Heyd, U. (1966), p. 199

Bibliography edit

  • Avi-Yonah, M. (1962). "A List of Priestly Courses from Caesarea". Israel Exploration Journal. 12 (2): 137–139. JSTOR 27924896.
  • Avi-Yonah, M. (1964). "The Caesarea Inscription of the Twenty-Four Priestly Courses". Eretz-Israel: Archaeological, Historical and Geographical Studies (in Hebrew). L.A. Mayer Memorial Volume (1895-1959): 24–28. JSTOR 23614642.
  • Conder, C.R. (1879). Tent Work in Palestine - A Record of Discovery and Adventure. Vol. 2. London: Richard Bentley & Son.
  • Conder, C.R.; Kitchener, H.H. (1881). The Survey of Western Palestine: Memoirs of the Topography, Orography, Hydrography, and Archaeology. Vol. 1. London: Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund.
  • Heyd, U. [in Hebrew] (1966). "Turkish Documents on the Rebuilding of Tiberias in the sixteenth century". Sefunot: Studies and Sources on the History of the Jewish Communities in the East. 10: 193–210. JSTOR 23416042.
  • Ishtori Haparchi (2007). Avraham Yosef Havatzelet (ed.). Sefer Kaftor Ve'ferah (in Hebrew). Vol. 2 (chapter 11). Jerusalem.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Klein, S. (1909). "Barajta der vierundzwanzig Priester Abteilungen (Baraitta of the Twenty-Four Priestly Divisions)". Beiträge zur Geographie und Geschichte Galiläas (in German).
  • Klein, S. (1939). Sefer Ha-Yishuv (The Book of the Yishuv: A treasure of information and records, inscriptions and memoirs, preserved in Israel and in the people in the Hebrew language and in other languages on the settlement of the Land of Israel) (in Hebrew). Jerusalem: Bialik Institute.
  • Klein, S. (1945). Yehuda Elitzur (ed.). Land of the Galilee: From the Time of Babylonian Immigration until the Redaction of the Talmud (in Hebrew). Jerusalem: Mossad Harav Kook.
  • Neubauer, A. (1868). Géographie du Talmud (in French). Paris: M. Lévy Frères.
  • Rosenfeld, Ben-Zion (1998). "Places of Rabbinic Settlement in the Galilee, 70-400 C.E.: Periphery versus Center". Hebrew Union College Annual. 69: 57–103. JSTOR 23508858.

External links edit

  • Survey of Western Palestine, Map 6: IAA, Wikimedia commons

bethmaus, confused, with, tell, maon, confused, with, horvat, maon, greek, Βηθμαούς, beth, maʿon, hebrew, בית, מעון, also, called, maon, jewish, village, during, late, second, temple, mishnaic, periods, which, already, ruin, tell, maʿūn, when, kitchener, visit. Not to be confused with Tell Maon Not to be confused with Horvat Maon Bethmaus Greek Bh8maoys or Beth Maʿon Hebrew בית מעון also called Maon was a Jewish village during the late Second Temple and Mishnaic periods and which was already a ruin Tell Maʿun when Kitchener visited the site in 1877 1 2 It was situated upon the hill directly north west of the old city of Tiberias at a distance of one biblical mile 3 rising to an elevation of 250 metres 820 ft above sea level It is now incorporated within the modern city bounds of Upper Tiberias Others place the ancient Bethmaus Ma on where is now the Arab ruin Khirbet Nadhr ad Din saying that with the passing of time the old namesake was transferred to Tell Maʿun a short distance away 4 BethmausBeth MaʿonShown within Mandatory PalestineShow map of Mandatory PalestineBethmaus Israel Show map of IsraelLocationRegionLower GalileeCoordinates32 47 40 N 35 32 00 E 32 79444 N 35 53333 E 32 79444 35 53333Typevillage ruin HistoryPeriodsHellenistic Roman ByzantineCulturesJewishAssociated withJews The Midrash Genesis Rabba 85 7 says of the village Beth Maʿon they ascend to it from Tiberias but they go down to it from Kefar Shobtai 5 6 The Jerusalem Talmud citing a variant account says that they would go down to Beth Maʿon from its broad place 7 Contents 1 History 2 References 3 Bibliography 4 External linksHistory editBased on the potsherds found in situ the place was inhabited as early as the Bronze Age and Iron Age 8 Josephus the Jewish general turned historian mentions that when he was put in charge of the public affairs of Galilee by the people of Jerusalem during the war with Rome he moved with two of his fellow legates who were priests of Aaron s lineage from Sepphoris to the village Bethmaus henceforth Beth Maʿon a village situated four furlongs stadia distant from Tiberias 9 It was at Beth Maʿon that Josephus met Justus of Tiberias There they convened a meeting with the principal persons of Tiberias to discuss a plan to demolish a house built by Herod the Tetrarch in Tiberias and which had the figures of living creatures in it contrary to Jewish law but to restore the royal furniture of that house consisting of candlesticks made of Corinthian brass and of royal tables and of a great quantity of uncoined silver to the king However when Josephus took leave of Beth Maʿon and went into Upper Galilee before Josephus and the senate of Tiberias could carry out their schemes certain mariners and poor people of Galilee had plundered the house built by Herod of its effects and taken away the spoils In the early 2nd century CE following the Bar Kokhba revolt Beth Maʿon became the residence of one of the priestly clans known as Ḥuppah Around this time representatives of the twenty four priestly wards moved and settled in the Galilee 10 11 In the 20th century three stone inscriptions were discovered bearing the names of the priestly wards their order and the name of the locality to which they had moved after the destruction of the Second Temple In 1920 a stone inscription was found in Ashkelon showing a partial list of the priestly wards in 1962 three small fragments of one Hebrew stone inscription bearing the partial names of places associated with the priestly courses the rest of which had been reconstructed were found in Caesarea Maritima dated to the third fourth centuries 12 13 in 1970 a stone inscription was found on a partially buried column in a mosque in the Yemeni village of Bayt al Ḥaḍir showing ten names of the priestly wards and their respective towns and villages The Yemeni inscription is the longest roster of names of this sort ever discovered unto this day and mentions the priestly course in Beth Maʿon The seventh century poet Eleazar ben Killir echoing the same tradition also wrote a liturgical poem detailing the 24 priestly wards and their places of residence 14 In the 3rd century CE Rabbi Yohanan officiated in the synagogue of Maon and was called to render a decision in the case of a ritual slaughterer shochet who had improperly slaughtered a chicken and whether or not he was to be held liable on that account 15 Many other incidents are attributed unto Rabbi Yohanan in Maon 16 one of which involved the kid of a goat that was roasted whole over a spit without first removing the suet forbidden fat 17 In extant Turkish documents dating to May 1566 the Ottoman ruler Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent ordered that water be drawn from Beth Maʿon and brought to Tiberias 18 the purpose of which is not now known although thought to have been for agricultural crops By April 1566 when the work had not yet been completed and the workers under Don Joseph Nasi demanded more money from the Sultan to complete the project the Sultan refused to set aside more money for the project Below Beth Maʿon between the ruins of the ancient village and Tiberias are found three natural springs ʿAin el Kelbeh ʿAin et Tineh and al Biyyar nbsp Palestine Exploration Fund map of 1880 showing Tell Maʿun nbsp 1794 Anville Map of Israel Palestine or the Holy Land showing Bethmaus in relation to Tiberias click to enlarge References edit Conder amp Kitchener 1881 p 371 Tell Maʿun is shown on the 1880 Survey of Western Palestine map sheet no 6 Cf Conder C R 1879 p 181 Ishtori Haparchi 2007 p 56 who makes mention of the village Maʿon which he describes as being within a Sabbath day s journey to the west of Tiberias The editor of the volume has identified the site as Beth Maʿon mentioned in the Jerusalem Talmud Sotah 1 8 and Baba Metziah 7 1 Ishtori Haparhi had mistaken this Maʿon in Galilee for being the one where David and his men took refuge from King Saul in I Samuel 23 24 M Aviam amp P Richardson Josephus Galilee in Archeological Perspective 177 201 Klein S 1939 p 16 Neubauer A 1868 p 218 Original paloṭetha perhaps der of plateia a broad place Above Bethmaus there was an extensive plateau See Jerusalem Talmud Sotah 1 8 7a Yitzhaki A in Hebrew 1978 Israel Guide Lower Galilee and Kinneret Region A useful encyclopedia for the knowledge of the country in Hebrew Vol 3 Jerusalem Keter Publishing House in affiliation with the Israel Ministry of Defence p 216 OCLC 745203905 s v Ancient sites in the vicinity of Tiberius The ruin of Beit Ma on Josephus Vita 12 which happens to be the equivalent of a biblical mile Klein S 1939 p 164 s v בית מעון Klein S 1945 p 65 Rosenfeld B 1998 p 82 26 Avi Yonah M 1962 pp 137 139 Avi Yonah M 1964 pp 24 28 Poem entitled Lamentation for the 9th of Ab composed in twenty four stanzas and the last line of each stanza contains the name of the village where each priestly family lived Babylonian Talmud Baba Kama 99b Cf Babylonian Talmud Shabbat 139a Yebamot 64b Jerusalem Talmud Eruvin 5 1 Babylonian Talmud Ḥullin 97a Heyd U 1966 p 199Bibliography editAvi Yonah M 1962 A List of Priestly Courses from Caesarea Israel Exploration Journal 12 2 137 139 JSTOR 27924896 Avi Yonah M 1964 The Caesarea Inscription of the Twenty Four Priestly Courses Eretz Israel Archaeological Historical and Geographical Studies in Hebrew L A Mayer Memorial Volume 1895 1959 24 28 JSTOR 23614642 Conder C R 1879 Tent Work in Palestine A Record of Discovery and Adventure Vol 2 London Richard Bentley amp Son Conder C R Kitchener H H 1881 The Survey of Western Palestine Memoirs of the Topography Orography Hydrography and Archaeology Vol 1 London Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund Heyd U in Hebrew 1966 Turkish Documents on the Rebuilding of Tiberias in the sixteenth century Sefunot Studies and Sources on the History of the Jewish Communities in the East 10 193 210 JSTOR 23416042 Ishtori Haparchi 2007 Avraham Yosef Havatzelet ed Sefer Kaftor Ve ferah in Hebrew Vol 2 chapter 11 Jerusalem a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Klein S 1909 Barajta der vierundzwanzig Priester Abteilungen Baraitta of the Twenty Four Priestly Divisions Beitrage zur Geographie und Geschichte Galilaas in German Klein S 1939 Sefer Ha Yishuv The Book of the Yishuv A treasure of information and records inscriptions and memoirs preserved in Israel and in the people in the Hebrew language and in other languages on the settlement of the Land of Israel in Hebrew Jerusalem Bialik Institute Klein S 1945 Yehuda Elitzur ed Land of the Galilee From the Time of Babylonian Immigration until the Redaction of the Talmud in Hebrew Jerusalem Mossad Harav Kook Neubauer A 1868 Geographie du Talmud in French Paris M Levy Freres Rosenfeld Ben Zion 1998 Places of Rabbinic Settlement in the Galilee 70 400 C E Periphery versus Center Hebrew Union College Annual 69 57 103 JSTOR 23508858 External links editSurvey of Western Palestine Map 6 IAA Wikimedia commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bethmaus amp oldid 1191088602, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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