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Jaffa

Jaffa, in Hebrew Yafo (Hebrew: יָפוֹ, Yāfō ) and in Arabic Yafa (Arabic: يَافَا) and also called Japho or Joppa, the southern and oldest part of Tel Aviv-Yafo, is an ancient port city in Israel. Jaffa is known for its association with the biblical stories of Jonah, Solomon and Saint Peter as well as the mythological story of Andromeda and Perseus, and later for its oranges.

Aerial view of Jaffa
Aerial view of old Jaffa and port with Tel Aviv behind

Today, Jaffa is one of Israel's mixed cities, with approximately 37% of the city being Arab.[1]

Etymology

The town was mentioned in Egyptian sources and the Amarna letters as Yapu. Mythology says that it is named for Yafet (Japheth), one of the sons of Noah, the one who built it after the Flood.[2][3] The Hellenist tradition links the name to Iopeia, or Cassiopeia, mother of Andromeda. An outcropping of rocks near the harbor is reputed to have been the place where Andromeda was rescued by Perseus. Pliny the Elder associated the name with Iopa, daughter of Aeolus, god of the wind. The medieval Arab geographer al-Muqaddasi referred to it as Yaffa.[4]

History

 
Market at Jaffa, by Gustav Bauernfeind, 1877

Ancient Jaffa was built on a 40 metres (130 ft) high ridge, with a broad view of the coastline, giving it a strategic importance in military history.[5] The tell of Jaffa, created through the accumulation of debris and landfill over the centuries, made the hill even higher.

Middle Bronze Age

The city as such was established at the latest around 1800 BCE.[6]

Late Bronze Age

Jaffa is mentioned in an Ancient Egyptian letter from 1440 BCE. The so-called story of the Taking of Joppa glorifies its conquest by Pharaoh Thutmose III, whose general, Djehuty hid Egyptian soldiers in sacks carried by pack animals and sent them camouflaged as tribute into the Canaanite city, where the soldiers emerged and conquered it. The story predates the story of the Trojan horse, as told by Homer, by at least two centuries.

The city is also mentioned in the Amarna letters under its Egyptian name Ya-Pho (Ya-Pu, EA 296, l.33). The city was under Egyptian rule until around 800 BCE.[citation needed]

 
1877 illustration of "Jaffa, or Joppa"

Hebrew Bible: conquest to return from Babylon

Jaffa is mentioned four times in the Hebrew Bible, as a city opposite the territory given to the Hebrew Tribe of Dan (Joshua 19:46), as port-of-entry for the cedars of Lebanon for Solomon's Temple (2 Chronicles 2:16), as the place whence the prophet Jonah embarked for Tarshish (Jonah 1:3) and again as port-of-entry for the cedars of Lebanon for the Second Temple of Jerusalem (Ezra 3:7).

Jaffa is mentioned in the Book of Joshua as the territorial border of the Tribe of Dan, hence the modern term "Gush Dan" for the center of the coastal plain. The tribe of Dan did not manage to dislocate the Philistines from Jaffa, but many descendants of Dan lived along the coast and earned their living from shipmaking and sailing. In the "Song of Deborah" the prophetess asks: "דן למה יגור אוניות": "Why doth Dan dwell in ships?"[7]

After Canaanite and Philistine dominion, King David and his son, King Solomon, conquered Jaffa and used its port to bring the cedars used in the construction of the First Temple from Tyre.[citation needed]

At some point following the death of Solomon, Jaffa returned to Philistine control, because in the late VIII century BC, Neo-Assyrian emperor Sennacherib recorded conquering and Jaffa from its sovereign, the Philistine king of Ashkelon.[8]

Assyrian, Babylonian and Persian periods

In 701 BCE, in the days of King Hezekiah (חזקיהו), Sennacherib, king of Assyria, invaded the region from Jaffa. After a period of Babylonian occupation, under Persian rule, Jaffa was governed by Phoenicians from Tyre.[citation needed]

Hellenistic to Byzantine periods

Alexander the Great's troops were stationed in Jaffa. It later became a port city of the Seleucid Empire until it was taken over by the Maccabees (1 Maccabees 10:74–76) and ruled by the Hasmonean dynasty.[citation needed] According to Josephus, however, the harbor at Jaffa was inferior to that of Caesarea.[9]

During the First Jewish–Roman War, Jaffa was captured and burned by Cestius Gallus. The Roman Jewish historian Josephus (Jewish War 2.507–509, 3:414–426) writes that 8,400 inhabitants were massacred. Pirates operating from the rebuilt port incurred the wrath of Vespasian, who razed the city and erected a citadel in its place, installing a Roman garrison there.[citation needed]

The New Testament account of Saint Peter bringing back to life the widow Dorcas (recorded in Acts of the Apostles, 9:36–42, takes place in Jaffa, then called in Greek Ἰόππη (Latinized as Joppa). Acts 10:10–23 relates that, while Peter was in Jaffa, he had a vision of a large sheet filled with "clean" and "unclean" animals being lowered from heaven, together with a message from the Holy Spirit telling him to accompany several messengers to Cornelius in Caesarea Maritima. Peter retells the story of his vision in Acts 11:4–17, explaining how he had come to preach Christianity to the gentiles.

In Midrash Tanna'im in its chapter Deuteronomy 33:19, reference is made to Jose ben Halafta (2nd century) traveling through Jaffa. Jaffa seems to have attracted serious Jewish scholars in the 4th and 5th century. The Jerusalem Talmud (compiled 4th and 5th century) in Moed Ketan references Rabi Akha bar Khanina of Jaffa; and in Pesachim chapter 1 refers to Rabi Pinchas ben Yair of Jaffa. The Babylonian Talmud (compiled 5th century) in Megillah 16b mentions Rav Adda Demin of Jaffa. Leviticus Rabbah (compiled between 5th and 7th century) mentions Rav Nachman of Jaffa. The Pesikta Rabbati (written in the 9th century) in chapter 17 mentions R. Tanchum of Jaffa.[10] Several streets and alleys of the Jaffa Flea Market area are named after these scholars.

During the first centuries of Christianity, Jaffa was a fairly unimportant Roman and Byzantine locality, which only in the 5th century became a bishopric.[11] A very small number of its Greek or Latin bishops are known.[12][13]

Early Islamic period

 
Jaffa Museum in Old Saraya building, in the historical Old Jaffa region

In 636 Jaffa was conquered by Arabs. Under Islamic rule, it served as a port of Ramla, then the provincial capital.

Al-Muqaddasi (c. 945/946 – 991) described Yafah as "lying on the sea, is but a small town, although the emporium of Palestine and the port of Ar Ramlah. It is protected by a strong wall with iron gates, and the sea-gates also are of iron. The mosque is pleasant to the eye, and overlooks the sea. The harbour is excellent".[4]

Crusader/Ayyubid period

Jaffa was captured in June 1099 during the First Crusade, and was the centre of the County of Jaffa and Ascalon, one of the vassals of the Kingdom of Jerusalem. One of its counts, John of Ibelin, wrote the principal book of the Assizes of the Kingdom of Jerusalem.[citation needed]

Saladin conquered Jaffa in 1187. The city surrendered to King Richard the Lionheart on 10 September 1191, three days after the Battle of Arsuf. Despite efforts by Saladin to reoccupy the city in the July 1192 Battle of Jaffa, the city remained in the hands of the Crusaders. On 2 September 1192, the Treaty of Jaffa was formally signed, guaranteeing a three-year truce between the two armies.

In 1229, Frederick II signed a ten-year truce in a new Treaty of Jaffa. He fortified the castle of Jaffa and had two inscriptions carved into city wall, one Latin and the other Arabic. The inscription, deciphered in 2011, describes him as the "Holy Roman Emperor" and bears the date "1229 of the Incarnation of our Lord Jesus the Messiah."[14]

Mamluk period

In March of 1268, Baibars, the sultan of the Egyptian Mamluks, conquered Jaffa simultaneously with conquering Antioch.[15][16] Baibars's goal was to conquer Christian crusader strongholds.[16] An inscription from the White Mosque of Ramla, today visible in the Great Mosque of Gaza,[17] commemorates the event:

In the name of God the Merciful, the Compassionate,...gave power to his servant...who has trust in him...who fights for Him and defends the faith of His Prophet...Sultan of Islam and the Muslims, Baybars...who came out with his victorious army on the 10th of the month of Rajab from the land of Egypt, resolved to carry out jihad and combat the intransigent infidels. He camped in the port city of Jaffa in the morning and conquered it, by God's will, in the third hour of that day. Then he ordered the erection of the dome over the blessed minaret, as well as the gate of this mosque...in the year 666 of the Hijra [1268 CE]. May God have mercy upon him and upon all Muslims.[17][18]

Abu'l-Fida (1273–1331), writing in 1321, described "Yafa, in Filastin" as "a small but very pleasant town lying on the sea-shore. It has a celebrated harbour. The town of Yafa is well fortified. Its markets are much frequented, and many merchants ply their trades here. There is a large harbour frequented by all the ships coming to Filastin, and from it they set sail to all lands. Between it and Ar Ramlah the distance is 6 miles, and it lies west of Ar Ramlah."[4]

Ottoman period

 
Bonaparte Visiting the Plague Victims of Jaffa, 1804 propaganda painting commissioned by Napoleon; completed by Baron Gros, who had not visited Jaffa
 
View of the port by Félix Bonfils, 1867–1870
 
Jewish preschool, c. 1890s
 
Boatmen waiting to land passengers, c. 1911

In 1515, Jaffa was conquered by the Ottoman sultan Selim I.[19]

In the census of 1596, it appeared located in the nahiya of Ramla in the liwa of Gaza. It had a population of 15 households, all Muslim. They paid a fixed tax rate of 33,3 % on various products; a total of 7,520 akçe.[19]

The traveller Jean Cotwyk (Cotovicus) described Jaffa as a heap of ruins when he visited in 1598.[20][21] Botanist and traveller Leonhard Rauwolf landed near the site of the town on 13 September 1575 and wrote "we landed on the high, rocky shore where the town of Joppe did stand formerly, at this time the town was so demolished that there was not one house to be found." (p. 212, Rauwolf, 1582)

The 17th century saw the beginning of the re-establishment of churches and hostels for Christian pilgrims en route to Jerusalem and the Galilee. During the 18th century, the coastline around Jaffa was often besieged by pirates and this led to the inhabitants relocating to Ramla and Lod, where they relied on messages from a solitary guard house to inform them when ships were approaching the harbour. The landing of goods and passengers was notoriously difficult and dangerous. Until well into the 20th century, ships had to rely on teams of oarsmen to bring their cargo ashore.[22]

On 7 March 1799, Napoleon captured the town in what became known as the Siege of Jaffa, ransacked it, and killed scores of local inhabitants as a reaction to his envoys being brutally killed when delivering an ultimatum of surrender. Napoleon ordered the massacre of thousands of Muslim soldiers who were imprisoned having surrendered to the French.[23] Napoleon's deputy commissioner of war Jacques-François Miot described it thus:

On 10 March 1799 in the afternoon, the prisoners of Jaffa were marched off in the midst of a vast square phalanx formed by the troops of General Bon... The Turks, walking along in total disorder, had already guessed their fate and appeared not even to shed any tears... When they finally arrived in the sand dunes to the south-west of Jaffa, they were ordered to halt beside a pool of yellowish water. The officer commanding the troops then divided the mass of prisoners into small groups, who were led off to several different points and shot... Finally, of all the prisoners there only remained those who were beside the pool of water. Our soldiers had used up their cartridges, so there was nothing to be done but to dispatch them with bayonets and knives. ... The result ... was a terrible pyramid of dead and dying bodies dripping blood and the bodies of those already dead had to be pulled away so as to finish off those unfortunate beings who, concealed under this awful and terrible wall of bodies, had not yet been struck down.[23]

Many more died in an epidemic of bubonic plague that broke out soon afterwards.[24] The governor who was appointed after these devastating events, Muhammad Abu-Nabbut, commenced wide-ranging building and restoration work in Jaffa, including the Mahmoudiya Mosque and Sabil Abu Nabbut. During the 1834 Peasants' revolt in Palestine, Jaffa was besieged for forty days by "mountaineers" in revolt against Ibrahim Pasha of Egypt.[25]

Residential life in the city was reestablished in the early 19th century. In 1820, Isaiah Ajiman of Istanbul built a synagogue and hostel for the accommodation of Jews on their way to the holy cities of Jerusalem, Hebron, Tiberias and Safed. This area became known as Dar al-Yehud (Arabic for "the house of the Jews"); and was the basis of the Jewish community in Jaffa. The appointment of Mahmud Aja as Ottoman governor marked the beginning of a period of stability and growth for the city, interrupted by the 1832 conquest of the city by Muhammad Ali of Egypt.[citation needed]

By 1839, at least 153 Sephardi Jews were living in Jaffa.[26] The community was served for fifty years by Rabbi Yehuda HaLevi miRagusa. In the early 1850s, HaLevi leased an orchard to Clorinda S. Minor, founder of a Christian messianic community that established Mount Hope, a farming initiative to encourage local Jews to learn manual trades, which the Messianics did in order to pave wave for the Second Coming of Jesus. In 1855, the British Jewish philanthropist Moses Montefiore bought the orchard from HaLevi, although Minor continued to manage it.[27]

American missionary Ellen Clare Miller, visiting Jaffa in 1867, reported that the town had a population of "about 5000, 1000 of these being Christians, 800 Jews and the rest Moslems".[28][29] The city walls were torn down during the 1870s, allowing the city to expand.[30]

 
Jaffa street beside port, 1914

By the beginning of the 20th century, the population of Jaffa had swelled considerably. A group of Jews left Jaffa for the sand dunes to the north, where in 1909 they held a lottery to divide the lots acquired earlier. The settlement was known at first as Ahuzat Bayit (Hebrew: אחוזת בית), but an assembly of its residents changed its name to Tel Aviv on 21 May 1910. Other Jewish suburbs to Jaffa were founded at about the same time. In 1904, rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook (1864–1935) moved to Ottoman Palestine and took up the position of Chief Rabbi of Jaffa.[31] In 1917, the Tel Aviv and Jaffa deportation resulted in the Ottomans expelling the entire civilian population. While Muslim evacuees were allowed to return before long, the Jewish evacuees remained in camps (and some in Egypt) until after the British conquest.[32]

During the course of their campaign through Ottoman Palestine and the Sinai against the Ottomans, the British took Jaffa in November 1917 although it remained under observation and fire from the Ottomans. The battle of Jaffa in late December 1917 pushed back the Ottoman forces securing Jaffa and the line of communication between it and Jerusalem (which had been taken on 11 December in the Battle of Jerusalem).

British Mandate

 
New Zealand soldiers outside Jaffa municipality building, WWI (winter 1917–18)
 
Alhambra Cinema boasting an Arab flag, 1937

According to the 1922 census of Palestine conducted by the British Mandate authorities, Jaffa had a population of 47,799, consisting of 20,699 Muslims, 20,152 Jews and 6,850 Christians,[33] increasing to 51,866 in the 1931 census, residing in 11,304 houses.[34]

During the British Mandate, tension between the Jewish and Arab population increased. A wave of Arab attacks during 1920 and 1921 caused many Jewish residents to flee and resettle in Tel Aviv, initially a marginal Jewish neighborhood north of Jaffa. The Jaffa riots in 1921, (known in Hebrew as Meoraot Tarpa) began with a May Day parade that turned violent. Arab rioters attacked Jewish residents and buildings killing 47 Jews and wounding 146.[35] The Hebrew author Yosef Haim Brenner was killed in the riots.[36] At the end of 1922, Tel Aviv had 15,000 residents: by 1927, the population had risen to 38,000.

Still, during most of the 1920s Jaffa and Tel Aviv maintained peaceful co-existence. Most Jewish businesses were located in Jaffa, some Jewish neighbourhoods paid taxes to the municipality of Jaffa, many young Jews who could not afford the housing costs of Tel Aviv resided there, and the big neighbourhood of Menashiya was by and large fully mixed. The first electric company in the British Mandate of Palestine, although owned by Jewish shareholders, had been named the Jaffa Electric Company. In 1923, both Jaffa and Tel Aviv had begun a rapid process of wired electrification through a joint grid.[37]

The 1936–39 Arab revolt in British Palestine inflicted great economic and infrastructural damage on Jaffa. It began on 19 April 1936 with a riot which ended with 9 Jews killed and scores injured.[38] The Arab leadership declared a general strike, which began in the Jaffa Port, a place that had already become a symbol of Arab resistance.[39] Military reinforcements were brought in from Malta and Egypt to subdue the rioting which spread throughout the country. The Old City, with its maze of homes, winding alleyways and underground sewer system, provided an ideal escape route for the rioters fleeing the British army.[39]

In May 1936, municipal services were cut off, the old city was barricaded, and access roads were covered with glass shards and nails.[39] In June, British bombers dropped boxes of leaflets in Arabic requesting the inhabitants to evacuate that same day.[39] On June 16, British Royal Engineers blew up from 220 to 240 Arab homes from east to west, leaving an open strip that cut through the heart of the city from end to end, leaving 6,000 Jaffa Palestinians destitute.[40] On the evening of 17 June 1936, 1500 British soldiers entered Jaffa and a British warship sealed off escape routes by sea. On 29 June, security forces implemented another stage of the plan, carving a swath from north to south.[39] The mandatory authorities claimed the operation was part of a "facelift" of the old city.[39] Local Arab papers could only employ sarcasm in describing what had happened, speaking of the operation as one in which the British forces beautified the city by using boxes of dynamite.[40] In June, 1936 the Palestine Chief Justice at the time, Sir Michael McDonnell, found in favour of the Jaffa Arab petitioners and, upholding the existing laws regarding demolitions, ruled against the Army's destruction of the Arab old city. In response, the Colonial Office dismissed him from his post.[41]

The report produced by the Peel Commission in 1937 recommended that Jaffa, together with Bethlehem, Jerusalem, Lydda and Ramle, remain under permanent mandatory control, forming a "corridor" from the sea port to the Holy Places, accessible to Arabs and Jews alike; whereas the rest of Mandatory Palestine was to be split between an Arab state and a Jewish state.[42]

In 1945, Jaffa had a population of 94,310, of whom 50,880 were Muslims, 28,000 were Jews, 15,400 were Christians and 30 were classified as "other".[43] The Christians were mostly Greek Orthodox and about one-sixth of them were members of the Eastern Catholic Churches. One of the most prominent members of the Arab Christian community was the Greek Orthodox Issa El-Issa, publisher of the newspaper Falastin.

In 1947, the UN Special Commission on Palestine recommended that Jaffa be included in the planned Jewish state. Due to the large Arab majority, however, it was instead designated as an enclave of the Arab state in the 1947 United Nations Partition Plan for Palestine. The enclave would have excluded the northern Jewish-populated parts of the city, but included the agricultural lands to the south and east of the city, extending to then-boundaries of Mikveh Israel, Holon and Bat Yam.[44]

Following the inter-communal violence which broke out following the passing of the UN partition resolution the mayors of Jaffa and Tel Aviv tried to calm their communities.[45] One of the main concerns for the people of Jaffa was the protection of the citrus fruit export trade which had still not reached its pre-Second World War highs.[46] Eventually the bilateral orange-picking and exporting of both sides continued although without a formal agreement.[47]

 
Ruins of the 'Saraya' after the Lehi bomb attack
 
Tel Aviv civilians trying to hide from Arab snipers shooting at the Carmel market from Hassan Bek Mosque on 25 February 1948

At the beginning of 1948 Jaffa's defenders consisted of one company of around 400 men organised by the Muslim Brotherhood.[48] As in Haifa, the irregulars intimidated the local population.[47]

On 4 January 1948 the Lehi detonated a truck bomb outside the Saraya, formerly the Ottoman administrative building and now housing the Arab National Committee. The building and some nearby buildings were destroyed. Most of the 26 dead and many wounded were not connected to the National Committee but were passersby and staff at a food distribution program for poor children that was also in the same building. Most of the children were not present as it was Sunday.[49]

In February Jaffa's Mayor, Yousef Haikal, contacted David Ben-Gurion through a British intermediary trying to secure a peace agreement with Tel Aviv, but the commander of the Arab militia in Jaffa opposed it.[47][50]

On 25 April 1948, the Irgun launched an offensive on Jaffa. This began with a mortar bombardment which went on for three days during which twenty tons of high explosive were fired into the town.[51][52] On 27 April the British Government, fearing a repetition of the mass exodus from Haifa the week before, ordered the British Army to confront the Irgun and their offensive ended. Simultaneously the Haganah had launched Operation Hametz, which overran the villages east of Jaffa and cut the town off from the interior.[53]

The fall of Haifa a few days earlier, and fear of another massacre similar to Irgun's Deir Yassin massacre, caused panic across the Arabs of Jaffa, leading most of them to flee.[54] The population of Jaffa on the eve of the attack was between 50,000 and 60,000, with some 20,000 people having already left the town.[51] By 30 April, there were 15,000–25,000 remaining.[53][55] In the following days a further 10,000–20,000 people fled by sea. When the Haganah took control of the town on 14 May around 4,000 people were left.[56] The town and harbour's warehouses were extensively looted.[57][58]

The city surrendered to the Haganah on 14 May 1948 and shortly after the British police and army left the city.[59] The 3,800 Arabs who remained in Jaffa after the exodus were concentrated in the Ajami district and subject to strict martial law.[60]

State of Israel

Boundary demarcation of Tel Aviv and Jaffa

 
Red: current boundary (as of 2022); blue: UN proposed enclave (1947); green: historic boundary (as of 1944)
 
Last Tel Aviv–Jaffa border (1949); no street names in Jaffa at that time
 
Alleyway in Jaffa's Old City
 
Former Hotel du Parc in Jaffa's American Colony

The boundaries of Tel Aviv and Jaffa became a matter of contention between the Tel Aviv municipality and the Israeli government during 1948.[61] The former wished to incorporate only the northern Jewish suburbs of Jaffa, while the latter wanted a more complete unification.[61] The issue also had international sensitivity, since the main part of Jaffa was in the Arab portion of the United Nations Partition Plan, whereas Tel Aviv was not, and no armistice agreements had yet been signed.[61] On 10 December 1948, the government announced the annexation to Tel Aviv of Jaffa's Jewish suburbs, the Arab neighborhood of Abu Kabir, the Arab village of Salama and some of its agricultural land, and the working class Jewish area of Hatikva.[61] On 25 February 1949, the depopulated Arab village of Sheikh Muanis, on the opposite (northeast) side of Tel Aviv from Jaffa, was also annexed to Tel Aviv.[61] On 18 May 1949, the new boundary was drawn along Shari' Es Salahi (now Olei Zion Street) and Shari' El Quds (now Ben-Zvi Road), thereby adding into Tel Aviv the former Arab neighbourhood of Manshiya and part of Jaffa city centre, for the first time including land that had been in the Arab portion of the UN partition plan.[61] The government decided on a permanent unification of Tel Aviv and Jaffa on 4 October 1949, but the actual unification was delayed until 16 June 1950 due to concerted opposition from Tel Aviv's mayor Israel Rokach, who had demanded government funding of 1M towards the expenses of providing municipal services to Jaffa.[62][63][61] The name of the unified city was Tel Aviv until 19 August 1950, when it was renamed as Tel Aviv–Yafo in order to preserve the historical name Jaffa.[61] The population of Jaffa prior to the unification was estimated as 40,000, out of them 5,000 Arabs.[64]

The land which had formerly belonged to Jaffa municipality, and was annexed into Tel Aviv, includes the neighbourhoods of Manshiya, Florentin, Abu Kabir, and Shapira; and such landmarks as Charles Clore Park, Hassan Bek Mosque, Carmel Market, the former Jaffa railway station, and the new Tel Aviv central bus station. On the other hand, Jaffa boundaries were expanded to the southeast, incorporating Gaon Stadium and the new neighbourhoods of Neve Ofer, Jaffa Gimel and Jaffa Dalet.[65]

Streets renamed

After the Jewish takeover, all pre-existing street names in Jaffa were abolished, and replaced with numeric identifiers. By 1954, only the four main streets had proper names: Jerusalem (former King George V; then №1) Avenue; Tarshish (former Bustrus; then №2; now David Raziel) Street; Eilat Street (former №298); and Shalma Road (former №310).[66][67]

The road passing between Florentin and Neve Tzedek neighbourhoods was until 1948 named Tel Aviv Road, being the main thoroughfare between the two city centres. After the annexation of Florentin into Tel Aviv, it became an internal road in Tel Aviv, so its name no longer made sense. Thus the section lying within the new Tel Aviv boundaries was renamed into Jaffa Road; and the section which became the new Tel Aviv–Jaffa boundary, into Eilat Street.

Salama Road, a main eastwards road from Jaffa towards the depopulated village of Salama, was renamed Shalma Road after the reconstructed Hebrew name of Capharsalama (Greek: Χαφαρσαλαμα) which is mentioned in 1 Maccabees 7:31 as the location of the battle of Caphar-salama. However, both names remain in use.[68]

Arabic street names were eventually replaced with Hebrew ones, e.g. Al-Kutub Street was renamed Resh Galuta Street, Abu Ubeyda Street was renamed She’erit Yisra’el Street, and Al-Salahi Street was renamed Olei Zion Street.[69] This practice has been criticized by residents of affected Arabic neighborhoods, who deem the names inappropriate (for example, a street where the Al Siksik Mosque located was renamed Beit Eshel Street) and demand a return to Arabic names.[70]

Urban development

From the 1990s onwards, efforts have been made to restore Arab and Islamic landmarks, such as the Mosque of the Sea and Hassan Bek Mosque, and document the history of Jaffa's Arab population. Parts of the Old City have been renovated, turning Jaffa into a tourist attraction featuring old restored buildings, art galleries, theaters, souvenir shops, restaurants, sidewalk cafes and promenades.[citation needed] Many artists have moved their studios from Tel Aviv to the Old City and its surroundings, such as the Jaffa port,[71] the American–Germany Colony and the flea market.[72] Beyond the Old City and tourist sites, many neighborhoods of Jaffa are poor and underdeveloped. However, real-estate prices have risen sharply due to gentrification projects in Ajami, Noga, and Lev Yafo.[73][74][75] The municipality of Tel Aviv–Yafo is currently working to beautify and modernize the port area.

Economy

In the 19th century, Jaffa was best known for its soap industry. Modern industry emerged in the late 1880s.[76] The most successful enterprises were metalworking factories, among them the machine shop run by the Templers that employed over 100 workers in 1910.[76] Other factories produced orange-crates, barrels, corks, noodles, ice, seltzer, candy, soap, olive oil, leather, alkali, wine, cosmetics and ink.[76] Most of the newspapers and books printed in Ottoman Palestine were published in Jaffa.

In 1859, a Jewish visitor, L.A. Frankl, found sixty-five Jewish families living in Jaffa, 'about 400 soul in all.' Of these four were shoemakers, three tailors, one silversmith and one watchmaker. There were also merchants and shopkeepers and 'many live by manual labour, porters, sailors, messengers, etc.'[77]

Until the mid-19th century, Jaffa's orange groves were mainly owned by Arabs, who employed traditional methods of farming. The pioneers of modern agriculture in Jaffa were American settlers, who brought in farm machinery in the 1850s and 1860s, followed by the Templers and the Jews.[78] From the 1880s, real estate became an important branch of the economy. A 'biarah' (a watered garden) cost 100,000 piastres and annually produced 15,000, of which the farming costs were 5,000: 'A very fair percentage return on the investment.' Water for the gardens was easily accessible with wells between ten and forty feet deep.[79][80] Jaffa's citrus industry began to flourish in the last quarter of the 19th century. E.C. Miller records that 'about ten million' oranges were being exported annually, and that the town was surrounded by 'three or four hundred orange gardens, each containing upwards of one thousand trees'.[81] Shamuti oranges were the major crop, but citrons, lemons and mandarin oranges were also grown.[82] Jaffa had a reputation for producing the best pomegranates.[83]

Demography

Modern Jaffa has a heterogeneous population of Jews, Christians, and Muslims. Jaffa currently has 46,000 residents, of whom 30,000 are Jews and 16,000 are Arabs.[84] Tabeetha School in Jaffa was founded in 1863. It is owned by the Church of Scotland. The school provides education in English to children from Christian, Jewish and Muslim backgrounds.[85]

Socioeconomic and political problems

Jaffa suffers from drug problems, high crime rates and violence.[citation needed] Some Arab residents have alleged that the Israeli authorities are attempting to Judaize Jaffa by evicting Arab residents from houses owned by the Amidar government-operated public housing company. Amidar representatives say the residents are illegal squatters.[86]

Landmarks

Sights and museums

 

The Clock Square with its distinctive clocktower was built in 1906 in honor of Sultan Abdul Hamid II. The Saraya (governor's palace) was built in the 1890s.[87][failed verification] Andromeda rock is the rock to which beautiful Andromeda was chained in Greek mythology.[88] The Zodiac alleys are a maze of restored alleys leading to the harbor. Jaffa Hill is a center for archaeological finds, including restored Egyptian gates, about 3,500 years old. Jaffa Lighthouse is an inactive lighthouse located in the old port.

The Jaffa Museum of Antiquities is located in an 18th-century Ottoman building constructed on the remains of a Crusader fortress. In 1811, Abu Nabout turned it into his seat of government. In the late 19th century, the governmental moved to the "New Saraya," and the building was sold to a wealthy Greek-Orthodox family who established a soap factory there. Since 1961, it has housed an archaeological museum,[89] which is currently closed to the general public.[90]

The Libyan Synagogue (Beit Zunana) was a synagogue built by a Jewish landlord, Zunana, in the 18th century. It was turned into a hotel and then a soap factory, and reopened as a synagogue for Libyan Jewish immigrants after 1948. In 1995, it became a museum.

Other museums and galleries in the area include the Farkash Gallery collection.

Churches and monasteries

 
Easter parade in Jaffa, 2011

The Greek Orthodox Monastery of Archangel Michael (Patriarchate of Jerusalem) near Jaffa Port also has Romanian and Russian communities in its compound. Built in 1894, the Church of St. Peter and St. Tabitha serves the Russian Orthodox Christian community, with services in Russian and Hebrew; underneath the chapel nearby there is what is believed to be the tomb of St Tabitha.[91] St. Peter's Church is a Franciscan Roman-Catholic basilica and hospice built in 1654 on the remains of a Crusader fortress, and commemorates St Peter, as he brought the disciple Tabitha back from the dead; Napoleon is believed to have stayed there.

Immanuel Church, built 1904, serves today a Lutheran congregation with services in English and Hebrew.

The Saint Nicholas Armenian Monastery was built in the 17th century.[92]

Mosques

 
Jaffa, by Cornelis de Bruijn, c. 1675
 
Hassan Bek Mosque

Al-Bahr Mosque, lit. the Sea Mosque, overlooking the harbour, is depicted in a painting from 1675 by the Dutch painter Cornelis de Bruijn.[93][94] It may be Jaffa's oldest existing mosque. Built originally in 1675,[95] changes to the structure have been made since then, such as the addition of a second floor and reconstruction of the upper part of the minaret. It was used by fishermen and sailors frequenting the port, and residents of the surrounding area. According to local legend, the wives of sailors living in Jaffa prayed there for the safe return of their husbands. The mosque was renovated in 1997.[citation needed]

Mahmoudia Mosque was built in 1812 by Abu Nabbut, governor of Jaffa from 1810 to 1820.[96] Outside the mosque is a water fountain (sabil) for pilgrims.[97]

Nouzha Mosque on Jerusalem Boulevard is Jaffa's main mosque today.

Archaeology

 
Jaffa flea market

The majority of excavations in Jaffa are salvage in nature and are conducted by the Israel Antiquities Authority since the 1990s. Excavations on Rabbi Pinchas Street, for example, in the flea market have revealed walls and water conduits dating to the Iron Age, Hellenistic, Early Islamic, Crusader and Ottoman periods. A limestone slab (50 cm × 50 cm or 20 in × 20 in) engraved with a menorah discovered on Tanchum Street is believed to be the door of a tomb.[98]

Additional efforts to conduct research excavations at that site included those of B. J. Isserlin (1950), Ze'ev Herzog of Tel Aviv University (1997–1999), and most recently the Jaffa Cultural Heritage Project (since 2007), directed by Aaron A. Burke (UCLA) and Martin Peilstocker (Johannes Gutenberg University).

In December 2020, archaeologists from the Antiquities Authority (IAA) revealed a 3,800-year-old jar containing the badly preserved remains of a baby dates back to the Middle Bronze Age.[99]

"There’s always the interpretation that the jar is almost like a womb, so basically the idea is to return [the] baby back into Mother Earth, or into the symbolic protection of his mother”, said archaeologist Alfredo Mederos Martin.[100]

Researchers also covered the remains of at least two horses and pottery dated to the late Ottoman Empire, 232 seashells, 30 Hellenistic coins, 95 glass vessel fragments from the Roman and Crusader periods 14 fifth-century B.C. rock-carved burials featuring lamps.[101][102]

Education

Collège des Frères de Jaffa, a French international school, is in Jaffa.

Transportation

Jaffa is served by the Dan Bus Company, which operates buses to various neighborhoods of Tel Aviv and Bat Yam.

The Red Line of the planned Tel Aviv Light Rail will cross Jaffa north to south along Jerusalem Boulevard.

Jaffa Railway Station was the first railway station in the Middle East. It served as the terminus for the Jaffa–Jerusalem railway. The station opened in 1891 and closed in 1948. In 2005–09, the station was restored and converted into an entertainment and leisure venue marketed as "HaTachana", Hebrew for "the station" (see homepage here:[103]).

Tel Aviv HaHagana, Holon Junction, and Holon–Wolfson railway stations, are the stations along the Israel Railways network that are located in the vicinity of Jaffa, along its Eastern boundary.

In popular culture

The Knight Of Jaffa is the second episode of the Doctor Who story The Crusade, set in Palestine during the Third Crusade.

Clash of the Titans is set in ancient Joppa. The 2009 Oscar-nominated film Ajami is set in modern Jaffa.

Notable residents

See also

References

  1. ^ Lior, Ilan (28 February 2011). "Tel Aviv to build affordable housing for Jaffa's Arab residents". Haaretz.com. Retrieved 12 May 2022.
  2. ^ One example of this legend is the sixteenth-century French pilgrim Denis Possot who recorded, "Jaffe, est le port de la Terre saincte, anciennement nommé Joppe, faict et construict premierment en ville et cité grande à merveilles et de grant renom, par Japhet, fils de Noé." in his Le Voyage de la Terre Sainte (Geneva: Slatkine Reprints 1971, reprint of Paris edition, 1890, orig. 1532), p. 155.
  3. ^ Another pilgrim, Sir Richard of Guylforde, wrote,"This Jaffe was sometyme a grete Cytie [...] and it was one of the firste Cyties of the worlde founded by Japheth, Noes sone, and beryth yet his name." In the pilgrimage narrative from 1506, recorded by his chaplain in 1511, edited by Sir Henry Ellis (London: Camden Society, 1851), p. 16.
  4. ^ a b c le Strange, 1890, pp. 550-551
  5. ^ Stacey Jennifer Miller, The Lion Temple of Jaffa: Archaeological Investigations of the Late Bronze Age Egyptian Occupation in Canaan. BA thesis, University of California, Los Angeles, 2012
  6. ^ "Judges Chapter 5 שׁוֹפְטִים". Judges 5:17 – Gilead abode beyond the Jordan; and Dan, why doth he sojourn by the ships? Asher dwelt at the shore of the sea, and abideth by its bays.
  7. ^ Anson F. Rainey (February 2001). "Herodotus' Description of the East Mediterranean Coast". Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research. The University of Chicago Press on behalf of The American Schools of Oriental Research (321): 58–59. doi:10.2307/1357657. JSTOR 1357657. S2CID 163534665. Retrieved 20 May 2021.
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Bibliography

  • Barron, J. B., ed. (1923). Palestine: Report and General Abstracts of the Census of 1922. Government of Palestine.
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  • Department of Statistics (1945). Village Statistics, April, 1945. Government of Palestine.
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  • Lebor, Adam (2007). City of Oranges. Arabs and Jews in Jaffa. New York: W.W. Norton & Co. ISBN 978-0-7475-8602-9.
  • Levine, Mark (2005). Overthrowing Geography, Jaffa, Tel Aviv, and the Struggle for Palestine, 1880–1948. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-23994-6.
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External links

  • Jaffa in 1880, SWP Map 13: IAA, Wikimedia commons Coordinates: East longitude, 34.45; North latitude, 32.3
  • The Jaffa Cultural Heritage Project
  • , archived from the original on 4 March 2016
  • , archived from the original on 28 March 2015
  • Neff, Donald (April–May 1994). "Arab Jaffa seized before Israel's creation in 1948". Washington Report on Middle East Affairs: 75.
  • "JAFFA (Hebr. Yafo; A. V. Joppa; Greek, Joppe; Arabic, Yaffa)". Jewish Encyclopedia. 1906.
  • Schaalje, Jacqueline (May 2001). "Jaffa". The Jewish Magazine.
  • The Old City of Yafo (Travel photos of Old Jaffa and its port), Common Ground
  • . World Cities Images. Archived from the original on 8 January 2009.
  • . 3Disrael.com. Archived from the original on 13 January 2008. Retrieved 4 January 2008. (no plugin needed)
  • . tel aviv 4 fun. Archived from the original on 22 June 2011. Retrieved 7 January 2009.
  • Plan of Jaffa, 1:6,000, 1918. Eran Laor Cartographic Collection, The National Library of Israel.

Coordinates: 32°03′08″N 34°45′11″E / 32.05222°N 34.75306°E / 32.05222; 34.75306

jaffa, other, uses, disambiguation, hebrew, yafo, hebrew, פו, yāfō, help, info, arabic, yafa, arabic, اف, also, called, japho, joppa, southern, oldest, part, aviv, yafo, ancient, port, city, israel, known, association, with, biblical, stories, jonah, solomon, . For other uses see Jaffa disambiguation Jaffa in Hebrew Yafo Hebrew י פו Yafō help info and in Arabic Yafa Arabic ي اف ا and also called Japho or Joppa the southern and oldest part of Tel Aviv Yafo is an ancient port city in Israel Jaffa is known for its association with the biblical stories of Jonah Solomon and Saint Peter as well as the mythological story of Andromeda and Perseus and later for its oranges Aerial view of Jaffa Aerial view of old Jaffa and port with Tel Aviv behind Today Jaffa is one of Israel s mixed cities with approximately 37 of the city being Arab 1 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Middle Bronze Age 2 2 Late Bronze Age 2 3 Hebrew Bible conquest to return from Babylon 2 4 Assyrian Babylonian and Persian periods 2 5 Hellenistic to Byzantine periods 2 6 Early Islamic period 2 7 Crusader Ayyubid period 2 8 Mamluk period 2 9 Ottoman period 2 10 British Mandate 2 11 State of Israel 2 11 1 Boundary demarcation of Tel Aviv and Jaffa 2 11 2 Streets renamed 2 11 3 Urban development 3 Economy 4 Demography 4 1 Socioeconomic and political problems 5 Landmarks 5 1 Sights and museums 5 2 Churches and monasteries 5 3 Mosques 6 Archaeology 7 Education 8 Transportation 9 In popular culture 10 Notable residents 11 See also 12 References 13 Bibliography 14 External linksEtymologyThe town was mentioned in Egyptian sources and the Amarna letters as Yapu Mythology says that it is named for Yafet Japheth one of the sons of Noah the one who built it after the Flood 2 3 The Hellenist tradition links the name to Iopeia or Cassiopeia mother of Andromeda An outcropping of rocks near the harbor is reputed to have been the place where Andromeda was rescued by Perseus Pliny the Elder associated the name with Iopa daughter of Aeolus god of the wind The medieval Arab geographer al Muqaddasi referred to it as Yaffa 4 HistorySee also Timeline of Jaffa and Old Jaffa Market at Jaffa by Gustav Bauernfeind 1877 Ancient Jaffa was built on a 40 metres 130 ft high ridge with a broad view of the coastline giving it a strategic importance in military history 5 The tell of Jaffa created through the accumulation of debris and landfill over the centuries made the hill even higher Middle Bronze Age The city as such was established at the latest around 1800 BCE 6 Late Bronze Age Jaffa is mentioned in an Ancient Egyptian letter from 1440 BCE The so called story of the Taking of Joppa glorifies its conquest by Pharaoh Thutmose III whose general Djehuty hid Egyptian soldiers in sacks carried by pack animals and sent them camouflaged as tribute into the Canaanite city where the soldiers emerged and conquered it The story predates the story of the Trojan horse as told by Homer by at least two centuries The city is also mentioned in the Amarna letters under its Egyptian name Ya Pho Ya Pu EA 296 l 33 The city was under Egyptian rule until around 800 BCE citation needed 1877 illustration of Jaffa or Joppa Hebrew Bible conquest to return from Babylon Jaffa is mentioned four times in the Hebrew Bible as a city opposite the territory given to the Hebrew Tribe of Dan Joshua 19 46 as port of entry for the cedars of Lebanon for Solomon s Temple 2 Chronicles 2 16 as the place whence the prophet Jonah embarked for Tarshish Jonah 1 3 and again as port of entry for the cedars of Lebanon for the Second Temple of Jerusalem Ezra 3 7 Jaffa is mentioned in the Book of Joshua as the territorial border of the Tribe of Dan hence the modern term Gush Dan for the center of the coastal plain The tribe of Dan did not manage to dislocate the Philistines from Jaffa but many descendants of Dan lived along the coast and earned their living from shipmaking and sailing In the Song of Deborah the prophetess asks דן למה יגור אוניות Why doth Dan dwell in ships 7 After Canaanite and Philistine dominion King David and his son King Solomon conquered Jaffa and used its port to bring the cedars used in the construction of the First Temple from Tyre citation needed At some point following the death of Solomon Jaffa returned to Philistine control because in the late VIII century BC Neo Assyrian emperor Sennacherib recorded conquering and Jaffa from its sovereign the Philistine king of Ashkelon 8 Assyrian Babylonian and Persian periods In 701 BCE in the days of King Hezekiah חזקיהו Sennacherib king of Assyria invaded the region from Jaffa After a period of Babylonian occupation under Persian rule Jaffa was governed by Phoenicians from Tyre citation needed Hellenistic to Byzantine periods Alexander the Great s troops were stationed in Jaffa It later became a port city of the Seleucid Empire until it was taken over by the Maccabees 1 Maccabees 10 74 76 and ruled by the Hasmonean dynasty citation needed According to Josephus however the harbor at Jaffa was inferior to that of Caesarea 9 During the First Jewish Roman War Jaffa was captured and burned by Cestius Gallus The Roman Jewish historian Josephus Jewish War 2 507 509 3 414 426 writes that 8 400 inhabitants were massacred Pirates operating from the rebuilt port incurred the wrath of Vespasian who razed the city and erected a citadel in its place installing a Roman garrison there citation needed The New Testament account of Saint Peter bringing back to life the widow Dorcas recorded in Acts of the Apostles 9 36 42 takes place in Jaffa then called in Greek Ἰopph Latinized as Joppa Acts 10 10 23 relates that while Peter was in Jaffa he had a vision of a large sheet filled with clean and unclean animals being lowered from heaven together with a message from the Holy Spirit telling him to accompany several messengers to Cornelius in Caesarea Maritima Peter retells the story of his vision in Acts 11 4 17 explaining how he had come to preach Christianity to the gentiles In Midrash Tanna im in its chapter Deuteronomy 33 19 reference is made to Jose ben Halafta 2nd century traveling through Jaffa Jaffa seems to have attracted serious Jewish scholars in the 4th and 5th century The Jerusalem Talmud compiled 4th and 5th century in Moed Ketan references Rabi Akha bar Khanina of Jaffa and in Pesachim chapter 1 refers to Rabi Pinchas ben Yair of Jaffa The Babylonian Talmud compiled 5th century in Megillah 16b mentions Rav Adda Demin of Jaffa Leviticus Rabbah compiled between 5th and 7th century mentions Rav Nachman of Jaffa The Pesikta Rabbati written in the 9th century in chapter 17 mentions R Tanchum of Jaffa 10 Several streets and alleys of the Jaffa Flea Market area are named after these scholars During the first centuries of Christianity Jaffa was a fairly unimportant Roman and Byzantine locality which only in the 5th century became a bishopric 11 A very small number of its Greek or Latin bishops are known 12 13 Early Islamic period Jaffa Museum in Old Saraya building in the historical Old Jaffa region In 636 Jaffa was conquered by Arabs Under Islamic rule it served as a port of Ramla then the provincial capital Al Muqaddasi c 945 946 991 described Yafah as lying on the sea is but a small town although the emporium of Palestine and the port of Ar Ramlah It is protected by a strong wall with iron gates and the sea gates also are of iron The mosque is pleasant to the eye and overlooks the sea The harbour is excellent 4 Crusader Ayyubid period Jaffa was captured in June 1099 during the First Crusade and was the centre of the County of Jaffa and Ascalon one of the vassals of the Kingdom of Jerusalem One of its counts John of Ibelin wrote the principal book of the Assizes of the Kingdom of Jerusalem citation needed Saladin conquered Jaffa in 1187 The city surrendered to King Richard the Lionheart on 10 September 1191 three days after the Battle of Arsuf Despite efforts by Saladin to reoccupy the city in the July 1192 Battle of Jaffa the city remained in the hands of the Crusaders On 2 September 1192 the Treaty of Jaffa was formally signed guaranteeing a three year truce between the two armies In 1229 Frederick II signed a ten year truce in a new Treaty of Jaffa He fortified the castle of Jaffa and had two inscriptions carved into city wall one Latin and the other Arabic The inscription deciphered in 2011 describes him as the Holy Roman Emperor and bears the date 1229 of the Incarnation of our Lord Jesus the Messiah 14 Mamluk periodIn March of 1268 Baibars the sultan of the Egyptian Mamluks conquered Jaffa simultaneously with conquering Antioch 15 16 Baibars s goal was to conquer Christian crusader strongholds 16 An inscription from the White Mosque of Ramla today visible in the Great Mosque of Gaza 17 commemorates the event In the name of God the Merciful the Compassionate gave power to his servant who has trust in him who fights for Him and defends the faith of His Prophet Sultan of Islam and the Muslims Baybars who came out with his victorious army on the 10th of the month of Rajab from the land of Egypt resolved to carry out jihad and combat the intransigent infidels He camped in the port city of Jaffa in the morning and conquered it by God s will in the third hour of that day Then he ordered the erection of the dome over the blessed minaret as well as the gate of this mosque in the year 666 of the Hijra 1268 CE May God have mercy upon him and upon all Muslims 17 18 Abu l Fida 1273 1331 writing in 1321 described Yafa in Filastin as a small but very pleasant town lying on the sea shore It has a celebrated harbour The town of Yafa is well fortified Its markets are much frequented and many merchants ply their trades here There is a large harbour frequented by all the ships coming to Filastin and from it they set sail to all lands Between it and Ar Ramlah the distance is 6 miles and it lies west of Ar Ramlah 4 Ottoman period Jaffa in 1841 as mapped by the British Royal Engineers after the Oriental Crisis of 1840 Bonaparte Visiting the Plague Victims of Jaffa 1804 propaganda painting commissioned by Napoleon completed by Baron Gros who had not visited Jaffa View of the port by Felix Bonfils 1867 1870 Jewish preschool c 1890s Boatmen waiting to land passengers c 1911 In 1515 Jaffa was conquered by the Ottoman sultan Selim I 19 In the census of 1596 it appeared located in the nahiya of Ramla in the liwa of Gaza It had a population of 15 households all Muslim They paid a fixed tax rate of 33 3 on various products a total of 7 520 akce 19 The traveller Jean Cotwyk Cotovicus described Jaffa as a heap of ruins when he visited in 1598 20 21 Botanist and traveller Leonhard Rauwolf landed near the site of the town on 13 September 1575 and wrote we landed on the high rocky shore where the town of Joppe did stand formerly at this time the town was so demolished that there was not one house to be found p 212 Rauwolf 1582 The 17th century saw the beginning of the re establishment of churches and hostels for Christian pilgrims en route to Jerusalem and the Galilee During the 18th century the coastline around Jaffa was often besieged by pirates and this led to the inhabitants relocating to Ramla and Lod where they relied on messages from a solitary guard house to inform them when ships were approaching the harbour The landing of goods and passengers was notoriously difficult and dangerous Until well into the 20th century ships had to rely on teams of oarsmen to bring their cargo ashore 22 On 7 March 1799 Napoleon captured the town in what became known as the Siege of Jaffa ransacked it and killed scores of local inhabitants as a reaction to his envoys being brutally killed when delivering an ultimatum of surrender Napoleon ordered the massacre of thousands of Muslim soldiers who were imprisoned having surrendered to the French 23 Napoleon s deputy commissioner of war Jacques Francois Miot described it thus On 10 March 1799 in the afternoon the prisoners of Jaffa were marched off in the midst of a vast square phalanx formed by the troops of General Bon The Turks walking along in total disorder had already guessed their fate and appeared not even to shed any tears When they finally arrived in the sand dunes to the south west of Jaffa they were ordered to halt beside a pool of yellowish water The officer commanding the troops then divided the mass of prisoners into small groups who were led off to several different points and shot Finally of all the prisoners there only remained those who were beside the pool of water Our soldiers had used up their cartridges so there was nothing to be done but to dispatch them with bayonets and knives The result was a terrible pyramid of dead and dying bodies dripping blood and the bodies of those already dead had to be pulled away so as to finish off those unfortunate beings who concealed under this awful and terrible wall of bodies had not yet been struck down 23 Many more died in an epidemic of bubonic plague that broke out soon afterwards 24 The governor who was appointed after these devastating events Muhammad Abu Nabbut commenced wide ranging building and restoration work in Jaffa including the Mahmoudiya Mosque and Sabil Abu Nabbut During the 1834 Peasants revolt in Palestine Jaffa was besieged for forty days by mountaineers in revolt against Ibrahim Pasha of Egypt 25 Residential life in the city was reestablished in the early 19th century In 1820 Isaiah Ajiman of Istanbul built a synagogue and hostel for the accommodation of Jews on their way to the holy cities of Jerusalem Hebron Tiberias and Safed This area became known as Dar al Yehud Arabic for the house of the Jews and was the basis of the Jewish community in Jaffa The appointment of Mahmud Aja as Ottoman governor marked the beginning of a period of stability and growth for the city interrupted by the 1832 conquest of the city by Muhammad Ali of Egypt citation needed By 1839 at least 153 Sephardi Jews were living in Jaffa 26 The community was served for fifty years by Rabbi Yehuda HaLevi miRagusa In the early 1850s HaLevi leased an orchard to Clorinda S Minor founder of a Christian messianic community that established Mount Hope a farming initiative to encourage local Jews to learn manual trades which the Messianics did in order to pave wave for the Second Coming of Jesus In 1855 the British Jewish philanthropist Moses Montefiore bought the orchard from HaLevi although Minor continued to manage it 27 American missionary Ellen Clare Miller visiting Jaffa in 1867 reported that the town had a population of about 5000 1000 of these being Christians 800 Jews and the rest Moslems 28 29 The city walls were torn down during the 1870s allowing the city to expand 30 Jaffa street beside port 1914 By the beginning of the 20th century the population of Jaffa had swelled considerably A group of Jews left Jaffa for the sand dunes to the north where in 1909 they held a lottery to divide the lots acquired earlier The settlement was known at first as Ahuzat Bayit Hebrew אחוזת בית but an assembly of its residents changed its name to Tel Aviv on 21 May 1910 Other Jewish suburbs to Jaffa were founded at about the same time In 1904 rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook 1864 1935 moved to Ottoman Palestine and took up the position of Chief Rabbi of Jaffa 31 In 1917 the Tel Aviv and Jaffa deportation resulted in the Ottomans expelling the entire civilian population While Muslim evacuees were allowed to return before long the Jewish evacuees remained in camps and some in Egypt until after the British conquest 32 During the course of their campaign through Ottoman Palestine and the Sinai against the Ottomans the British took Jaffa in November 1917 although it remained under observation and fire from the Ottomans The battle of Jaffa in late December 1917 pushed back the Ottoman forces securing Jaffa and the line of communication between it and Jerusalem which had been taken on 11 December in the Battle of Jerusalem British Mandate New Zealand soldiers outside Jaffa municipality building WWI winter 1917 18 Alhambra Cinema boasting an Arab flag 1937 According to the 1922 census of Palestine conducted by the British Mandate authorities Jaffa had a population of 47 799 consisting of 20 699 Muslims 20 152 Jews and 6 850 Christians 33 increasing to 51 866 in the 1931 census residing in 11 304 houses 34 During the British Mandate tension between the Jewish and Arab population increased A wave of Arab attacks during 1920 and 1921 caused many Jewish residents to flee and resettle in Tel Aviv initially a marginal Jewish neighborhood north of Jaffa The Jaffa riots in 1921 known in Hebrew as Meoraot Tarpa began with a May Day parade that turned violent Arab rioters attacked Jewish residents and buildings killing 47 Jews and wounding 146 35 The Hebrew author Yosef Haim Brenner was killed in the riots 36 At the end of 1922 Tel Aviv had 15 000 residents by 1927 the population had risen to 38 000 Still during most of the 1920s Jaffa and Tel Aviv maintained peaceful co existence Most Jewish businesses were located in Jaffa some Jewish neighbourhoods paid taxes to the municipality of Jaffa many young Jews who could not afford the housing costs of Tel Aviv resided there and the big neighbourhood of Menashiya was by and large fully mixed The first electric company in the British Mandate of Palestine although owned by Jewish shareholders had been named the Jaffa Electric Company In 1923 both Jaffa and Tel Aviv had begun a rapid process of wired electrification through a joint grid 37 The 1936 39 Arab revolt in British Palestine inflicted great economic and infrastructural damage on Jaffa It began on 19 April 1936 with a riot which ended with 9 Jews killed and scores injured 38 The Arab leadership declared a general strike which began in the Jaffa Port a place that had already become a symbol of Arab resistance 39 Military reinforcements were brought in from Malta and Egypt to subdue the rioting which spread throughout the country The Old City with its maze of homes winding alleyways and underground sewer system provided an ideal escape route for the rioters fleeing the British army 39 In May 1936 municipal services were cut off the old city was barricaded and access roads were covered with glass shards and nails 39 In June British bombers dropped boxes of leaflets in Arabic requesting the inhabitants to evacuate that same day 39 On June 16 British Royal Engineers blew up from 220 to 240 Arab homes from east to west leaving an open strip that cut through the heart of the city from end to end leaving 6 000 Jaffa Palestinians destitute 40 On the evening of 17 June 1936 1500 British soldiers entered Jaffa and a British warship sealed off escape routes by sea On 29 June security forces implemented another stage of the plan carving a swath from north to south 39 The mandatory authorities claimed the operation was part of a facelift of the old city 39 Local Arab papers could only employ sarcasm in describing what had happened speaking of the operation as one in which the British forces beautified the city by using boxes of dynamite 40 In June 1936 the Palestine Chief Justice at the time Sir Michael McDonnell found in favour of the Jaffa Arab petitioners and upholding the existing laws regarding demolitions ruled against the Army s destruction of the Arab old city In response the Colonial Office dismissed him from his post 41 The report produced by the Peel Commission in 1937 recommended that Jaffa together with Bethlehem Jerusalem Lydda and Ramle remain under permanent mandatory control forming a corridor from the sea port to the Holy Places accessible to Arabs and Jews alike whereas the rest of Mandatory Palestine was to be split between an Arab state and a Jewish state 42 In 1945 Jaffa had a population of 94 310 of whom 50 880 were Muslims 28 000 were Jews 15 400 were Christians and 30 were classified as other 43 The Christians were mostly Greek Orthodox and about one sixth of them were members of the Eastern Catholic Churches One of the most prominent members of the Arab Christian community was the Greek Orthodox Issa El Issa publisher of the newspaper Falastin In 1947 the UN Special Commission on Palestine recommended that Jaffa be included in the planned Jewish state Due to the large Arab majority however it was instead designated as an enclave of the Arab state in the 1947 United Nations Partition Plan for Palestine The enclave would have excluded the northern Jewish populated parts of the city but included the agricultural lands to the south and east of the city extending to then boundaries of Mikveh Israel Holon and Bat Yam 44 Following the inter communal violence which broke out following the passing of the UN partition resolution the mayors of Jaffa and Tel Aviv tried to calm their communities 45 One of the main concerns for the people of Jaffa was the protection of the citrus fruit export trade which had still not reached its pre Second World War highs 46 Eventually the bilateral orange picking and exporting of both sides continued although without a formal agreement 47 Ruins of the Saraya after the Lehi bomb attack Tel Aviv civilians trying to hide from Arab snipers shooting at the Carmel market from Hassan Bek Mosque on 25 February 1948 At the beginning of 1948 Jaffa s defenders consisted of one company of around 400 men organised by the Muslim Brotherhood 48 As in Haifa the irregulars intimidated the local population 47 On 4 January 1948 the Lehi detonated a truck bomb outside the Saraya formerly the Ottoman administrative building and now housing the Arab National Committee The building and some nearby buildings were destroyed Most of the 26 dead and many wounded were not connected to the National Committee but were passersby and staff at a food distribution program for poor children that was also in the same building Most of the children were not present as it was Sunday 49 In February Jaffa s Mayor Yousef Haikal contacted David Ben Gurion through a British intermediary trying to secure a peace agreement with Tel Aviv but the commander of the Arab militia in Jaffa opposed it 47 50 On 25 April 1948 the Irgun launched an offensive on Jaffa This began with a mortar bombardment which went on for three days during which twenty tons of high explosive were fired into the town 51 52 On 27 April the British Government fearing a repetition of the mass exodus from Haifa the week before ordered the British Army to confront the Irgun and their offensive ended Simultaneously the Haganah had launched Operation Hametz which overran the villages east of Jaffa and cut the town off from the interior 53 The fall of Haifa a few days earlier and fear of another massacre similar to Irgun s Deir Yassin massacre caused panic across the Arabs of Jaffa leading most of them to flee 54 The population of Jaffa on the eve of the attack was between 50 000 and 60 000 with some 20 000 people having already left the town 51 By 30 April there were 15 000 25 000 remaining 53 55 In the following days a further 10 000 20 000 people fled by sea When the Haganah took control of the town on 14 May around 4 000 people were left 56 The town and harbour s warehouses were extensively looted 57 58 The city surrendered to the Haganah on 14 May 1948 and shortly after the British police and army left the city 59 The 3 800 Arabs who remained in Jaffa after the exodus were concentrated in the Ajami district and subject to strict martial law 60 Jaffa 1929 1 20 000 Jaffa 1943 1 20 000 Jaffa 1945 1 250 000State of Israel Boundary demarcation of Tel Aviv and Jaffa Red current boundary as of 2022 blue UN proposed enclave 1947 green historic boundary as of 1944 Last Tel Aviv Jaffa border 1949 no street names in Jaffa at that time Alleyway in Jaffa s Old City Former Hotel du Parc in Jaffa s American Colony Jaffa Light The boundaries of Tel Aviv and Jaffa became a matter of contention between the Tel Aviv municipality and the Israeli government during 1948 61 The former wished to incorporate only the northern Jewish suburbs of Jaffa while the latter wanted a more complete unification 61 The issue also had international sensitivity since the main part of Jaffa was in the Arab portion of the United Nations Partition Plan whereas Tel Aviv was not and no armistice agreements had yet been signed 61 On 10 December 1948 the government announced the annexation to Tel Aviv of Jaffa s Jewish suburbs the Arab neighborhood of Abu Kabir the Arab village of Salama and some of its agricultural land and the working class Jewish area of Hatikva 61 On 25 February 1949 the depopulated Arab village of Sheikh Muanis on the opposite northeast side of Tel Aviv from Jaffa was also annexed to Tel Aviv 61 On 18 May 1949 the new boundary was drawn along Shari Es Salahi now Olei Zion Street and Shari El Quds now Ben Zvi Road thereby adding into Tel Aviv the former Arab neighbourhood of Manshiya and part of Jaffa city centre for the first time including land that had been in the Arab portion of the UN partition plan 61 The government decided on a permanent unification of Tel Aviv and Jaffa on 4 October 1949 but the actual unification was delayed until 16 June 1950 due to concerted opposition from Tel Aviv s mayor Israel Rokach who had demanded government funding of 1M I towards the expenses of providing municipal services to Jaffa 62 63 61 The name of the unified city was Tel Aviv until 19 August 1950 when it was renamed as Tel Aviv Yafo in order to preserve the historical name Jaffa 61 The population of Jaffa prior to the unification was estimated as 40 000 out of them 5 000 Arabs 64 The land which had formerly belonged to Jaffa municipality and was annexed into Tel Aviv includes the neighbourhoods of Manshiya Florentin Abu Kabir and Shapira and such landmarks as Charles Clore Park Hassan Bek Mosque Carmel Market the former Jaffa railway station and the new Tel Aviv central bus station On the other hand Jaffa boundaries were expanded to the southeast incorporating Gaon Stadium and the new neighbourhoods of Neve Ofer Jaffa Gimel and Jaffa Dalet 65 Streets renamed After the Jewish takeover all pre existing street names in Jaffa were abolished and replaced with numeric identifiers By 1954 only the four main streets had proper names Jerusalem former King George V then 1 Avenue Tarshish former Bustrus then 2 now David Raziel Street Eilat Street former 298 and Shalma Road former 310 66 67 The road passing between Florentin and Neve Tzedek neighbourhoods was until 1948 named Tel Aviv Road being the main thoroughfare between the two city centres After the annexation of Florentin into Tel Aviv it became an internal road in Tel Aviv so its name no longer made sense Thus the section lying within the new Tel Aviv boundaries was renamed into Jaffa Road and the section which became the new Tel Aviv Jaffa boundary into Eilat Street Salama Road a main eastwards road from Jaffa towards the depopulated village of Salama was renamed Shalma Road after the reconstructed Hebrew name of Capharsalama Greek Xafarsalama which is mentioned in 1 Maccabees 7 31 as the location of the battle of Caphar salama However both names remain in use 68 Arabic street names were eventually replaced with Hebrew ones e g Al Kutub Street was renamed Resh Galuta Street Abu Ubeyda Street was renamed She erit Yisra el Street and Al Salahi Street was renamed Olei Zion Street 69 This practice has been criticized by residents of affected Arabic neighborhoods who deem the names inappropriate for example a street where the Al Siksik Mosque located was renamed Beit Eshel Street and demand a return to Arabic names 70 Urban development From the 1990s onwards efforts have been made to restore Arab and Islamic landmarks such as the Mosque of the Sea and Hassan Bek Mosque and document the history of Jaffa s Arab population Parts of the Old City have been renovated turning Jaffa into a tourist attraction featuring old restored buildings art galleries theaters souvenir shops restaurants sidewalk cafes and promenades citation needed Many artists have moved their studios from Tel Aviv to the Old City and its surroundings such as the Jaffa port 71 the American Germany Colony and the flea market 72 Beyond the Old City and tourist sites many neighborhoods of Jaffa are poor and underdeveloped However real estate prices have risen sharply due to gentrification projects in Ajami Noga and Lev Yafo 73 74 75 The municipality of Tel Aviv Yafo is currently working to beautify and modernize the port area EconomyIn the 19th century Jaffa was best known for its soap industry Modern industry emerged in the late 1880s 76 The most successful enterprises were metalworking factories among them the machine shop run by the Templers that employed over 100 workers in 1910 76 Other factories produced orange crates barrels corks noodles ice seltzer candy soap olive oil leather alkali wine cosmetics and ink 76 Most of the newspapers and books printed in Ottoman Palestine were published in Jaffa In 1859 a Jewish visitor L A Frankl found sixty five Jewish families living in Jaffa about 400 soul in all Of these four were shoemakers three tailors one silversmith and one watchmaker There were also merchants and shopkeepers and many live by manual labour porters sailors messengers etc 77 Until the mid 19th century Jaffa s orange groves were mainly owned by Arabs who employed traditional methods of farming The pioneers of modern agriculture in Jaffa were American settlers who brought in farm machinery in the 1850s and 1860s followed by the Templers and the Jews 78 From the 1880s real estate became an important branch of the economy A biarah a watered garden cost 100 000 piastres and annually produced 15 000 of which the farming costs were 5 000 A very fair percentage return on the investment Water for the gardens was easily accessible with wells between ten and forty feet deep 79 80 Jaffa s citrus industry began to flourish in the last quarter of the 19th century E C Miller records that about ten million oranges were being exported annually and that the town was surrounded by three or four hundred orange gardens each containing upwards of one thousand trees 81 Shamuti oranges were the major crop but citrons lemons and mandarin oranges were also grown 82 Jaffa had a reputation for producing the best pomegranates 83 Demography Jaffa Port Modern Jaffa has a heterogeneous population of Jews Christians and Muslims Jaffa currently has 46 000 residents of whom 30 000 are Jews and 16 000 are Arabs 84 Tabeetha School in Jaffa was founded in 1863 It is owned by the Church of Scotland The school provides education in English to children from Christian Jewish and Muslim backgrounds 85 Socioeconomic and political problems Jaffa suffers from drug problems high crime rates and violence citation needed Some Arab residents have alleged that the Israeli authorities are attempting to Judaize Jaffa by evicting Arab residents from houses owned by the Amidar government operated public housing company Amidar representatives say the residents are illegal squatters 86 LandmarksSee also Old Jaffa Sights and museums Jaffa clock tower The Clock Square with its distinctive clocktower was built in 1906 in honor of Sultan Abdul Hamid II The Saraya governor s palace was built in the 1890s 87 failed verification Andromeda rock is the rock to which beautiful Andromeda was chained in Greek mythology 88 The Zodiac alleys are a maze of restored alleys leading to the harbor Jaffa Hill is a center for archaeological finds including restored Egyptian gates about 3 500 years old Jaffa Lighthouse is an inactive lighthouse located in the old port The Jaffa Museum of Antiquities is located in an 18th century Ottoman building constructed on the remains of a Crusader fortress In 1811 Abu Nabout turned it into his seat of government In the late 19th century the governmental moved to the New Saraya and the building was sold to a wealthy Greek Orthodox family who established a soap factory there Since 1961 it has housed an archaeological museum 89 which is currently closed to the general public 90 The Libyan Synagogue Beit Zunana was a synagogue built by a Jewish landlord Zunana in the 18th century It was turned into a hotel and then a soap factory and reopened as a synagogue for Libyan Jewish immigrants after 1948 In 1995 it became a museum Other museums and galleries in the area include the Farkash Gallery collection Churches and monasteries Easter parade in Jaffa 2011 The Greek Orthodox Monastery of Archangel Michael Patriarchate of Jerusalem near Jaffa Port also has Romanian and Russian communities in its compound Built in 1894 the Church of St Peter and St Tabitha serves the Russian Orthodox Christian community with services in Russian and Hebrew underneath the chapel nearby there is what is believed to be the tomb of St Tabitha 91 St Peter s Church is a Franciscan Roman Catholic basilica and hospice built in 1654 on the remains of a Crusader fortress and commemorates St Peter as he brought the disciple Tabitha back from the dead Napoleon is believed to have stayed there Immanuel Church built 1904 serves today a Lutheran congregation with services in English and Hebrew The Saint Nicholas Armenian Monastery was built in the 17th century 92 Mosques Jaffa by Cornelis de Bruijn c 1675 Hassan Bek Mosque Al Bahr Mosque lit the Sea Mosque overlooking the harbour is depicted in a painting from 1675 by the Dutch painter Cornelis de Bruijn 93 94 It may be Jaffa s oldest existing mosque Built originally in 1675 95 changes to the structure have been made since then such as the addition of a second floor and reconstruction of the upper part of the minaret It was used by fishermen and sailors frequenting the port and residents of the surrounding area According to local legend the wives of sailors living in Jaffa prayed there for the safe return of their husbands The mosque was renovated in 1997 citation needed Mahmoudia Mosque was built in 1812 by Abu Nabbut governor of Jaffa from 1810 to 1820 96 Outside the mosque is a water fountain sabil for pilgrims 97 Nouzha Mosque on Jerusalem Boulevard is Jaffa s main mosque today Archaeology Jaffa flea market The majority of excavations in Jaffa are salvage in nature and are conducted by the Israel Antiquities Authority since the 1990s Excavations on Rabbi Pinchas Street for example in the flea market have revealed walls and water conduits dating to the Iron Age Hellenistic Early Islamic Crusader and Ottoman periods A limestone slab 50 cm 50 cm or 20 in 20 in engraved with a menorah discovered on Tanchum Street is believed to be the door of a tomb 98 Additional efforts to conduct research excavations at that site included those of B J Isserlin 1950 Ze ev Herzog of Tel Aviv University 1997 1999 and most recently the Jaffa Cultural Heritage Project since 2007 directed by Aaron A Burke UCLA and Martin Peilstocker Johannes Gutenberg University In December 2020 archaeologists from the Antiquities Authority IAA revealed a 3 800 year old jar containing the badly preserved remains of a baby dates back to the Middle Bronze Age 99 There s always the interpretation that the jar is almost like a womb so basically the idea is to return the baby back into Mother Earth or into the symbolic protection of his mother said archaeologist Alfredo Mederos Martin 100 Researchers also covered the remains of at least two horses and pottery dated to the late Ottoman Empire 232 seashells 30 Hellenistic coins 95 glass vessel fragments from the Roman and Crusader periods 14 fifth century B C rock carved burials featuring lamps 101 102 EducationThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2015 College des Freres de Jaffa College des Freres de Jaffa a French international school is in Jaffa TransportationJaffa is served by the Dan Bus Company which operates buses to various neighborhoods of Tel Aviv and Bat Yam The Red Line of the planned Tel Aviv Light Rail will cross Jaffa north to south along Jerusalem Boulevard Jaffa Railway Station was the first railway station in the Middle East It served as the terminus for the Jaffa Jerusalem railway The station opened in 1891 and closed in 1948 In 2005 09 the station was restored and converted into an entertainment and leisure venue marketed as HaTachana Hebrew for the station see homepage here 103 Tel Aviv HaHagana Holon Junction and Holon Wolfson railway stations are the stations along the Israel Railways network that are located in the vicinity of Jaffa along its Eastern boundary In popular cultureThe Knight Of Jaffa is the second episode of the Doctor Who story The Crusade set in Palestine during the Third Crusade Clash of the Titans is set in ancient Joppa The 2009 Oscar nominated film Ajami is set in modern Jaffa Notable residents Shmuel Yosef Agnon Raja El Issa Asma Agbarieh born 1974 Israeli Arab journalist and political activist Hanan Al Agha 1948 2008 Palestinian plastic artist Shmuel Yosef Agnon 1888 1970 Nobel Prize winning author Dahn Ben Amotz 1924 1989 radio broadcaster and author Yitzhak Ben Zvi 1884 1963 historian Labor Zionist leader and President of Israel Benny Hinn born 1953 TV evangelist and preacher Yosef Eliyahu Chelouche 1870 1934 one of the founders of Tel Aviv businessman Joseph Constant 1892 1969 sculptor and writer Ismail al Faruqi 1921 1986 Palestinian American philosopher Lea Gottlieb 1918 2012 Israeli founder and fashion designer of Gottex Ibtisam Mara ana born 1975 Arab Israeli filmmaker and member of the Knesset Victor Norris Hamilton born c 1919 Palestinian born American cryptologist J E Hanauer 1850 1938 author photographer and Canon of St George s Church Yizhar Harari 1908 1978 Zionist activist and Israeli politician Haim Hazan 1937 1994 Israeli basketball player Nadia Hilou 1953 2015 Arab Israeli politician Pinhas Hozez born 1957 Israeli basketball player Issa El Issa 1878 1950 Arab journalist Daoud El Issa 1903 1983 Arab journalist Yousef El Issa 1870 1948 Arab journalist Raja El Issa 1922 2008 Arab journalist Michel Loeve 1907 1979 probabilist and mathematical statistician Haim Ramon born 1950 Israeli politician Sasha Roiz born 1973 Canadian actor Yoav Saffar born 1975 Israeli basketball player Yosef Sapir 1902 1972 Israeli politician Haim Starkman born 1944 Israeli basketball player Rifaat Turk born 1954 Arab Israeli football player and manager and deputy mayor of Tel AvivSee alsoBonaparte Visiting the Plague Victims of Jaffa County of Jaffa and Ascalon under the Crusaders References Lior Ilan 28 February 2011 Tel Aviv to build affordable housing for Jaffa s Arab residents Haaretz com Retrieved 12 May 2022 One example of this legend is the sixteenth century French pilgrim Denis Possot who recorded Jaffe est le port de la Terre saincte anciennement nomme Joppe faict et construict premierment en ville et cite grande a merveilles et de grant renom par Japhet fils de Noe in his Le Voyage de la Terre Sainte Geneva Slatkine Reprints 1971 reprint of Paris edition 1890 orig 1532 p 155 Another pilgrim Sir Richard of Guylforde wrote This Jaffe was sometyme a grete Cytie and it was one of the firste Cyties of the worlde founded by Japheth Noes sone and beryth yet his name In the pilgrimage narrative from 1506 recorded by his chaplain in 1511 edited by Sir Henry Ellis London Camden Society 1851 p 16 a b c le Strange 1890 pp 550 551 Stacey Jennifer Miller The Lion Temple of Jaffa Archaeological Investigations of the Late Bronze Age Egyptian Occupation in Canaan BA thesis University of California Los Angeles 2012 Aaron A Burke and Martin Peilstocker The Egyptian Fortress in Jaffa Popular Archaeology 3 March 2013 Judges Chapter 5 ש ו פ ט ים Judges 5 17 Gilead abode beyond the Jordan and Dan why doth he sojourn by the ships Asher dwelt at the shore of the sea and abideth by its bays Anson F Rainey February 2001 Herodotus Description of the East Mediterranean Coast Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research The University of Chicago Press on behalf of The American Schools of Oriental Research 321 58 59 doi 10 2307 1357657 JSTOR 1357657 S2CID 163534665 Retrieved 20 May 2021 Josephus 1981 Josephus Complete Works Translated by William Whiston Grand Rapids Michigan Kregel Publications p 331 ISBN 0 8254 2951 X s v Antiquities 15 9 6 15 331 Rabbi Joseph Schwarz Descriptive Geography and Brief Historical Sketch of Palestine archived from the original on 21 June 2011 retrieved 31 May 2011 Michel Le Quien Oriens Christianus III 627 Michel Le Quien Oriens Christianus III 625 30 1291 Konrad Eubel Hierarchia catholica medii aevi Munich I 297 II 186 Catholic Encyclopedia 1 Lorenzi Rossella 15 November 2011 First Arabic Crusader Inscription Found Discovery News archived from the original on 1 May 2012 retrieved 23 November 2011 Who Were the Mamluks History Today www historytoday com Retrieved 23 June 2022 a b Kohn George Childs 31 October 2013 Dictionary of Wars Routledge ISBN 978 1 135 95501 4 a b Wasserstein David J Ayalon Ami 17 June 2013 Mamluks and Ottomans Studies in Honour of Michael Winter Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 57924 0 The Mamluk Minarets of Ramla webcache googleusercontent com Retrieved 23 June 2022 a b Hutteroth and Abdulfattah 1977 p 151 Gotthard Deutsch and M Franco 1903 Jaffa Jewish Encyclopedia Joannes Cotovicus 1619 Itinerarium Hierosolymitanum et Syriacum Antwerp apud Hieronymum Verdussium p 135 Thomson 1859 vol 2 p 275 a b Jacques Francois Miot 1814 Memoires pour servir a l histoire des expeditions en Egypte et en Syrie quoted in Veronique Nahoum Grappe 2002 The anthropology of extreme violence the crime of desecration International Social Science Journal 54 174 549 557 doi 10 1111 1468 2451 00409 Jaffa a City in Evolution Ruth Kark Yad Yitzhak Ben Zvi Jerusalem 1990 pp 8 9 Thomson page 515 The digitalization project of the 19th century censuses in Eretz Israel done under the auspices of Sir Moses Montefiore retrieved 31 May 2011 Friedman Lior 5 April 2009 The mountain of despair Haaretz com Retrieved 25 August 2013 Ellen Clare Miller Eastern Sketches notes of scenery schools and tent life in Syria and Palestine Edinburgh William Oliphant and Company 1871 Page 97 See also Miller s populations of Damascus Jerusalem Bethlehem Nablus and Samaria Thompson above writing in 1856 has 25 years ago the inhabitants of the city and gardens were about 6000 now there must be 15 000 at least Considering the length of time he lived in the area this may be a more accurate count Jaffa an Historical Survey Archived 26 June 2018 at the Wayback Machine Written with the assistance of Mr Tzvi Shacham the curator of the Antiquities Museum of Tel Aviv Jaffa Rav Hillel Rachmani Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook Jewish Virtual Library Friedman Isaiah 1971 German Intervention on Behalf of the Yishuv 1917 Jewish Social Studies Vol 33 pp 23 43 Barron 1923 p 6 Mills 1932 p 13 Report of the Commission of Inquiry into the disturbances in the British Mandate of Palestine in May 1921 with correspondence relating thereto Disturbances 1921 Cmd 1540 p 60 Honig Sarah 30 April 2009 Another Tack The May Day Massacre of 1921 Ronen Shamir 2013 Current Flow The Electrification of Palestine Stanford Stanford University Press Viton Albert 3 June 1936 Why Arabs Kill Jews The Nation Retrieved 24 August 2016 a b c d e f The Land That Become Israel Studies in Historical Geography ed Ruth Kark Yale University Press amp Magnes Press 1989 Aerial Perspectives of Past Landscapes Dov Gavish pp 316 317 a b Matthew Hughes The Banality of Brutality British Armed Forces and the Repression of the Arab Revolt in Palestine 1936 39 English Historical Review Vol CXXIV No 507 pp 323 354 pp 322 323 Matthew Hughes Britain s Pacification of Palestine The British Army the Colonial State and the Arab Revolt 1936 1939 Cambridge University Press2019 p 36 https web archive org web 20220803234548 https unispal un org pdfs Cmd5479 pdf Jaffa is an essentially Arab town in which the Jewish minority has recently been dwindling We suggest that it should form part of the Arab State The question of its communication with the latter presents no difficulty since transit through the Jaffa Jerusalem Corridor would be open to all The Corridor on the other hand requires its own access to the sea and for this purpose a narrow belt of land should be acquired and cleared on the north and south sides of the town This would also solve the problem sometimes said to be insoluble created by the contiguity of Jaffa with Tel Aviv to the north and the nascent Jewish town Bat Yam to the south If necessary Mandatory police could be stationed on this belt This arrangement may seem artificial but it is clearly practicable Department of Statistics 1945 p 27 A RES 181 II A B Resolution 181 II Future government of Palestine UN Partition Plan details United Nations General Assembly 29 November 1947 archived from the original on 16 April 2013 The area of the Arab enclave of Jaffa consists of that part of the town planning area of Jaffa which lies to the west of the Jewish quarters lying south of Tel Aviv to the west of the continuation of Herzl street up to its junction with the Jaffa Jerusalem road to the south west of the section of the Jaffa Jerusalem road lying south east of that junction to the west of Miqve Israel lands to the north west of Holon local council area to the north of the line linking up the north west corner of Holon with the north east corner of Bat Yam local council area and to the north of Bat Yam local council area The question of Karton quarter will be decided by the Boundary Commission bearing in mind among other considerations the desirability of including the smallest possible number of its Arab inhabitants and the largest possible number of its Jewish inhabitants in the Jewish State Joseph Dov 1960 The faithful city the siege of Jerusalem 1948 Simon and Schuster p 24 LCCN 60 10976 OCLC 266413 In an exchange of letters between Mayor Yisrael Rokach of Tel Aviv and Mayor Youssef Haikal of Jaffa both agreed to call upon the residents to maintain peace and quiet A survey of Palestine printed 1946 1947 Reprinted ISP Washington 1991 ISBN 0 88728 211 3 Page 474 Exports of citrus fruit total value in Palestine Pounds 1938 39 P 4 355 853 1944 45 P 1 474 854 Ironically due to the Nazi conquest of the Netherlands Tel Aviv s trade in polished diamonds had increased over three fold to P 3 235 117 Page 476 a b c Benny Morris 2004 The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem Revisited Cambridge University Press pp 115 ISBN 978 0 521 00967 6 p 114 And rifts among the Jaffa Arabs from the beginning subverted all efforts at peacemaking In February Ben Gurion wrote to Shertok that Heikal through a British intermediary was trying to secure an agreement with Tel Aviv but that the new irregulars commander Abdul Wahab Ali Shihaini had blocked him According to Ben Gurion Shihaini had answered I do not mind the destruction of Jaffa if we secure the destruction of Tel Aviv As in Haifa the irregulars intimidated the local population echoing the experience of 1936 1939 The inhabitants were more afraid of their defenders saviours than of the Jews their enemies wrote Nimr al Khatib p 115 But Arab notables through British intermediaries continued to press for a wider citrus agreement In the end a formal agreement was never concluded But neither was a complete blockade imposed on Jaffa and the bilateral orange picking and exporting continued largely unhampered Herbert Pritzke Bedouin Doctor The adventures of a German in the Middle East Translated by Richard Graves Weidenfeld and Nicolson London 1957 Copyright Ullstein and Co Vienna 1956 Page 149 At that time the Arab Brigade in Jaffa consisted of seven Germans one hundred and fifty Jugoslavs thirty Egyptians and two hundred Lebanese and Syrians There were very few Arabs among them as these preferred irregular warfare with the National Guard Radai Itamar 2016 Palestinians in Jerusalem and Jaffa 1948 Routledge p 140 Benny Morris The birth of the Palestinian refugee problem 1947 1949 Cambridge University Press 1987 ISBN 0 521 33028 9 Page 47 a b Morris page 95 Menachem Begin The Revolt story of the Irgun Translated by Samuel Katz Hadar Publishing Tel Aviv 1964 pp 355 371 a b Morris page 100 Eugene Rogan 2012 The Arabs A History Third Edition Penguin p 331 ISBN 9780718196837 Begin page 363 Morris page 101 On 18 May Ben Gurion visited the conquered city for the first time and commented I couldn t understand Why did the inhabitants of Jaffa leave Jon Kimche Seven Falen Pillars The Middle East 1915 1950 Secker and Warburg London 1950 Page 224 the orgy of looting and wanton destruction which hangs like a black pall over almost all the Jewish military successes Karpel Dalia 14 February 2008 Wellsprings of memory Haaretz Archived from the original on 25 March 2009 Yoav Gelber Independence Versus Nakba Kinneret Zmora Bitan Dvir Publishing 2004 ISBN 965 517 190 6 p 104 Goldhaber Ravit Schnell Izhak 2007 A Model of Multidimensional Segregation in the Arab Ghetto in Tel Aviv Jaffa Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie 98 5 603 620 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9663 2007 00428 x a b c d e f g h Arnon Golan 1995 The demarcation of Tel Aviv Yafo s municipal boundaries Planning Perspectives vol 10 pp 383 398 https www nli org il he newspapers haretz 1950 06 14 01 article 50 https www nli org il he newspapers hzh 1950 02 13 01 article 19 https www nli org il he newspapers hzh 1949 10 05 01 article 15 דו ת ועדת הגבולות ידיעות עירית תל אביב 15 ינואר 1949 אוסף העיתונות הספרייה הלאומית https www nli org il he newspapers ytlv 1951 10 14 01 article 17 https www nli org il he newspapers ahr 1954 09 03 01 article 120 Leshem Noam 2017 Life after Ruin The Struggles over Israel s Depopulated Arab Spaces ISBN 9781107149472 Esther Zandberg Where the Streets Have No Arabic Name a Group of Women Reminds Us of Palestinian History Haaretz 20 January 2022 https www makorrishon co il nrg online 54 ART1 965 929 html bare URL Areas to Visit PDF Tel Aviv Municipality archived from the original PDF on 12 July 2012 retrieved 18 December 2012 Today local fisherman still use the harbor and the main hangars of the port have been restored and include art galleries Ashley 20 September 2012 Jaffa Flea Market a Place to Sharpen Those Haggling Skills The Jaffa Flea Market invites a younger hipper crowd to inspect its newly added art galleries Kloosterman Karin 29 November 2006 Changes in the air for Ajami A mixed Arab Jewish neighborhood in Jaffa balances itself between rundown remnants of old world charm and upscale gentrification The Jerusalem Post Canada Israel won the bid to acquire 7 6 acres in prestigious area of south Tel Aviv will pay 211 million TheMarker Tel Aviv American Colony buildings for sale 11 February 2016 a b c Jaffa A City in Evolution Ruth Kark Yad Yitzhak Ben Zvi Jerusalem 1990 pp 256 257 Dr Frankl translated by P Beaton The Jews in the East Volume 1 Hurst and Blackett London 1859 Page 345 He adds The community is poor and receives no alms from any quarter which resulted in some envy of the our bethren in Jerusalem Jaffa A City in Evolution Ruth Kark Yad Yitzhak Ben Zvi Jerusalem 1990 pp 244 246 Thompson page 517 Jaffa A City in Evolution Ruth Kark Yad Yitzhak Ben Zvi Jerusalem 1990 p 262 Miller page 97 The orange gardens are the finest in the East and during the late winter and early spring little white sailed vessels from Greece Constantinople and the islands of the Archipelago lie in calm weather at a short distance from the coast waiting to carry away the fruit Jaffa A City in Evolution Ruth Kark Yad Yitzhak Ben Zvi Jerusalem 1990 pp 242 Thomson p 517 Sidon has best bananas Jaffa the best pomegranates oranges of Sidon are more juicy and have richer flavour Jaffa oranges hang on the trees much later and will bear shipping to distant regions Universal Jerusalem Archived 5 October 2014 at archive today History of Tabeetha Tabeetha School in Jaffa Archived from the original on 23 October 2016 Retrieved 18 December 2012 Hai Yigal 28 April 2007 Protesters rally in Jaffa against move to evict local Arab families Haaretz Tel aviv yafo Tel Aviv Yafo Municipality Pliny the Elder v 69 Natural History Old Jaffa Museum Archived from the original on 26 December 2008 Project Partners The Jaffa Cultural Heritage Project The Jaffa Museum of Archaeology Retrieved 18 December 2012 V den pamyati pravednoj Tavify na podvore Russkoj duhovnoj missii v Yaffo sovershena prazdnichnaya Liturgiya On the feast day of Tabitha of righteous memory a festive liturgy performed in the courtyard of the Russian Ecclesiastical Mission in Jaffa Russian Orthodox Church 9 November 2009 Zafran Eric Resendez Sydney 1998 French Paintings in the Museum of Fine Arts Boston Artists born before 1790 Boston Museum of Fine Arts Boston p 189 ISBN 0878464611 Petersen 2002 p 166 James Silk Buckingham Travels in Palestine Through the Countries of Bashan and Gilead East of the River Jordan Including a Visit to the Cities of Geraza and Gamala in the Decapolis Longman 1821 mentions Lebrun s visit in 1675 coinciding with the date the Sea Mosque is said to have been built Dan Mirkin The Ottoman Port of Jaffa A Port without a Harbour Aaron A Burke Katherine Strange Burke Martin Peilstocker eds The History and Archaeology of Jaffa 2 ISD LLC 2017 ISBN 978 1 938 77057 9 pp 121 155 p 152 n 16 History of Jaffa ArtMag Universite Europeenne de la Recherche retrieved 18 December 2012 Sabil Abu Nabbut ArchNet Digital Library Archived from the original on 4 June 2011 Archaeology News in Israel Biblical Productions 2008 Archived from the original on 1 January 2013 Retrieved 18 December 2012 Davis Marks Isis Archaeologists in Israel Unearth 3 800 Year Old Skeleton of Baby Buried in a Jar Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved 8 January 2021 Trove spanning millennia emerges from construction in ancient Jaffa Haaretz Retrieved 8 January 2021 December 2020 Laura Geggel Associate Editor 21 21 December 2020 3 800 year old baby in a jar unearthed in Israel livescience com Retrieved 8 January 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a first has generic name help Archaeological dig in Jaffa unearths 3 800 year old baby buried in a jar The Jerusalem Post JPost com Retrieved 8 January 2021 Hatachana Culture Entertainment amp Leisure BibliographySee also Bibliography of the history of Jaffa Barron J B ed 1923 Palestine Report and General Abstracts of the Census of 1922 Government of Palestine Chelouche Y E 2005 Arashat Hayai 1870 1930 English Reminiscences of My Life 1870 1930 in Hebrew Tel Aviv Babel ISBN 965 512 096 1 OCLC 62317894 Department of Statistics 1945 Village Statistics April 1945 Government of Palestine Hadawi S 1970 Village Statistics of 1945 A Classification of Land and Area ownership in Palestine Palestine Liberation Organization Research Center Hutteroth Wolf Dieter Abdulfattah Kamal 1977 Historical Geography of Palestine Transjordan and Southern Syria in the Late 16th Century Erlanger Geographische Arbeiten Sonderband 5 Erlangen Germany Vorstand der Frankischen Geographischen Gesellschaft ISBN 3 920405 41 2 Lebor Adam 2007 City of Oranges Arabs and Jews in Jaffa New York W W Norton amp Co ISBN 978 0 7475 8602 9 Levine Mark 2005 Overthrowing Geography Jaffa Tel Aviv and the Struggle for Palestine 1880 1948 Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 0 520 23994 6 Le Strange G 1890 Palestine Under the Moslems A Description of Syria and the Holy Land from A D 650 to 1500 London Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund OCLC 1004386 Mills E ed 1932 Census of Palestine 1931 Population of Villages Towns and Administrative Areas Jerusalem Government of Palestine Morris B 1987 The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem 1947 1949 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 33028 9 Petersen Andrew 2001 A Gazetteer of Buildings in Muslim Palestine British Academy Monographs in Archaeology Vol I Oxford University Press pp 161 175 ISBN 978 0 19 727011 0 Saron Roṭbard Saron 2005 ʻIr levana ʻir seḥora English White City Black City in Hebrew Tel Aviv Babel ISBN 978 965 512 096 7 OCLC 260080254 Segev T 1998 1949 the First Israelis New York Henry Holt ISBN 0 8050 5896 6 Thomson W M 1859 The Land and the Book Or Biblical Illustrations Drawn from the Manners and Customs the Scenes and Scenery of the Holy Land Vol 2 1 ed New York Harper amp brothers Weill Rochant Catherine 2008 L atlas de Tel Aviv 1908 2008 in French Paris CNRS Editions ISBN 978 2 271 06658 9 Yahav Dan 2004 Yafo kalat ha yam me ʻir roshah li shekhunot ʻoni degem le i shiṿyon merḥavi in Hebrew Tel Aviv Tamouz OCLC 59707598 Yavin Shmuel 2006 Bauhaus in Jaffa Modern Architecture in an Ancient City Tel Aviv Bauhaus Center Tel Aviv ISBN 965 90606 2 9 External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jaffa Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Jaffa Jaffa in 1880 SWP Map 13 IAA Wikimedia commons Coordinates East longitude 34 45 North latitude 32 3 The Jaffa Cultural Heritage Project Jaffa Old City Photos in Cafetorah com archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Telaviv Jaffa in Cafetorah com archived from the original on 28 March 2015 Neff Donald April May 1994 Arab Jaffa seized before Israel s creation in 1948 Washington Report on Middle East Affairs 75 JAFFA Hebr Yafo A V Joppa Greek Joppe Arabic Yaffa Jewish Encyclopedia 1906 Schaalje Jacqueline May 2001 Jaffa The Jewish Magazine The Old City of Yafo Travel photos of Old Jaffa and its port Common Ground Jaffa World Cities Images Archived from the original on 8 January 2009 Tel Aviv Virtual Tours Clock Square Jaffa 3Disrael com Archived from the original on 13 January 2008 Retrieved 4 January 2008 no plugin needed Jaffa Old Harbour photo gallery tel aviv 4 fun Archived from the original on 22 June 2011 Retrieved 7 January 2009 Plan of Jaffa 1 6 000 1918 Eran Laor Cartographic Collection The National Library of Israel Coordinates 32 03 08 N 34 45 11 E 32 05222 N 34 75306 E 32 05222 34 75306 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jaffa amp oldid 1133191192, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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