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Judea

Judea or Judaea (/ˈdə/ or /ˈdə/;[1] from Hebrew: יהודה, Standard Yəhūda, Tiberian Yehūḏā; Greek: Ἰουδαία, Ioudaía; Latin: Iūdaea) is a mountainous region in the southern part of the modern States of Palestine and Israel.

Judea
יְהוּדָה
A hill in Judea
Coordinates: 31°40′N 35°00′E / 31.667°N 35.000°E / 31.667; 35.000Coordinates: 31°40′N 35°00′E / 31.667°N 35.000°E / 31.667; 35.000
Part ofState of Palestine
Israel
Highest elevation1,020 m (3,350 ft)

The name is an ancient, historic, Biblical Hebrew, contemporaneous Latin, and modern-day term originating from the Hebrew name Yehudah, a son of the biblical patriarch Jacob/Israel, with Yehudah's progeny forming the biblical Israelite tribe of Judah (Yehudah) and later the associated Kingdom of Judah.

Related nomenclature continued to be used by the Babylonians, Persian, Hellenistic, and Roman periods as the Babylonian and Persian Yehud, Hasmonean Kingdom of Judea, and consequently Herodian and Roman Judea, respectively.[2] Under Hasmonean, Herodian and Roman rule, the term was applied to an area larger than the historical region of Judea. In 132 AD, the province of Judaea was merged with Galilee into an enlarged province named Syria Palaestina.[3][4][5]

The term Judea was revived by the Israeli government in the 20th century as part of the Israeli administrative district name Judea and Samaria Area for the territory generally referred to as the West Bank.[6]

Etymology

The name Judea is a Greek and Roman adaptation of the name "Judah", which originally encompassed the territory of the Israelite tribe of that name and later of the ancient Kingdom of Judah. Nimrud Tablet K.3751, dated c. 733 BCE, is the earliest known record of the name Judah (written in Assyrian cuneiform as Yaudaya or KUR.ia-ú-da-a-a).

Judea was sometimes used as the name for the entire region, including parts beyond the river Jordan.[7] In 200 CE Sextus Julius Africanus, cited by Eusebius (Church History 1.7.14), described "Nazara" (Nazareth) as a village in Judea.[8] The King James Version of the Bible refers to the region as "Jewry".[9]

"Judea" was a name used by English speakers for the hilly internal part of Mandatory Palestine until the Jordanian rule of the area in 1948. For example, the borders of the two states to be established according to the UN's 1947 partition scheme[10][dead link] were officially described using the terms "Judea" and "Samaria" and in its reports to the League of Nations Mandatory Committee, as in 1937, the geographical terms employed were "Samaria and Judea".[11][dead link] Jordan called the area ad-difa’a al-gharbiya (translated into English as the "West Bank").[12] "Yehuda" is the Hebrew term used for the area in modern Israel since the region was captured and occupied by Israel in 1967.[13]

Historical boundaries

 
Old Roman road in Judea

Roman-period definition

The first century Roman-Jewish historian Josephus wrote (The Jewish War 3.3.5):

In the limits of Samaria and Judea lies the village Anuath, which is also named Borceos.[14] This is the northern boundary of Judea. The southern parts of Judea, if they be measured lengthways, are bounded by a village adjoining to the confines of Arabia; the Jews that dwell there call it Jordan. However, its breadth is extended from the river Jordan to Joppa. The city Jerusalem is situated in the very middle; on which account some have, with sagacity enough, called that city the Navel of the country. Nor indeed is Judea destitute of such delights as come from the sea, since its maritime places extend as far as Ptolemais: it was parted into eleven portions, of which the royal city Jerusalem was the supreme, and presided over all the neighboring country, as the head does over the body. As to the other cities that were inferior to it, they presided over their several toparchies; Gophna was the second of those cities, and next to that Acrabatta, after them Thamna, and Lydda, and Emmaus, and Pella, and Idumea, and Engaddi, and Herodium, and Jericho; and after them came Jamnia and Joppa, as presiding over the neighboring people; and besides these there was the region of Gamala, and Gaulonitis, and Batanea, and Trachonitis, which are also parts of the kingdom of Agrippa. This [last] country begins at Mount Libanus, and the fountains of Jordan, and reaches breadthways to Lake Tiberias; and in length is extended from a village called Arpha, as far as Julias. Its inhabitants are a mixture of Jews and Syrians. And thus have I, with all possible brevity, described the country of Judea, and those that lie round about it.[15]

Elsewhere, Josephus wrote that "Arabia is a country that borders on Judea."[16]

Geography

 
Mediterranean oak and terebinth woodland in the Valley of Elah, southwestern Judea

Judea is a mountainous region, part of which is considered a desert. It varies greatly in height, rising to an altitude of 1,020 m (3,346 ft) in the south at Mount Hebron, 30 km (19 mi) southwest of Jerusalem, and descending to as much as 400 m (1,312 ft) below sea level in the east of the region. It also varies in rainfall, starting with about 400–500 millimetres (16–20 in) in the western hills, rising to 600 millimetres (24 in) around western Jerusalem (in central Judea), falling back to 400 millimetres (16 in) in eastern Jerusalem and dropping to around 100 millimetres (3.9 in) in the eastern parts, due to a rainshadow effect (this is the Judean desert). The climate, accordingly, moves between Mediterranean in the west and desert climate in the east, with a strip of steppe climate in the middle. Major urban areas in the region include Jerusalem, Bethlehem, Gush Etzion, Jericho and Hebron.[17]

Geographers divide Judea into several regions: the Hebron hills, the Jerusalem saddle, the Bethel hills and the Judean desert east of Jerusalem, which descends in a series of steps to the Dead Sea. The hills are distinct for their anticline structure. In ancient times the hills were forested, and the Bible records agriculture and sheep farming being practiced in the area. Animals are still grazed today, with shepherds moving them between the low ground to the hilltops as summer approaches, while the slopes are still layered with centuries-old stone terracing. The Jewish Revolt against the Romans ended in the devastation of vast areas of the Judean countryside.[18]

Mount Hazor marks the geographical boundary between Samaria to its north and Judea to its south.

Biblical patriarchs narrative

Judea is central to much of the narrative of the Torah, with the Patriarchs Abraham, Isaac and Jacob said to have been buried at Hebron in the Tomb of the Patriarchs.[citation needed]

History

Iron Age, Assyrian, and Babylonian period

 
Map of the southern Levant, c. 830s BCE
  Kingdom of Judah

The early history of Judah is uncertain; the biblical account states that the Kingdom of Judah, along with the Kingdom of Israel, was a successor to a united monarchy of Israel and Judah, but modern scholarship generally holds that the united monarchy is ahistorical.[19][20][21][22] Regardless, the Northern Kingdom was conquered by the Neo-Assyrian Empire in 720 BCE. The Kingdom of Judah remained nominally independent, but paid tribute to the Assyrian Empire from 715 and throughout the first half of the 7th century BCE, regaining its independence as the Assyrian Empire declined after 640 BCE, but after 609 again fell under the sway of imperial rule, this time paying tribute at first to the Egyptians and after 601 BCE to the Neo-Babylonian Empire, until 586 BCE, when it was finally conquered by Babylonia.

Persian and Hellenistic periods

 
Hasmonean Kingdom at its greatest extent under Salome Alexandra

The Babylonian Empire fell to the conquests of Cyrus the Great in 539 BCE.[23] Judea remained under Persian rule until the conquest of Alexander the Great in 332 BCE, eventually falling under the rule of the Hellenistic Seleucid Empire until the revolt of Judas Maccabeus resulted in the Hasmonean dynasty of kings who ruled in Judea for over a century.[24]

Roman period

Judea lost its independence to the Romans in the 1st century BCE, becoming first a tributary kingdom, then a province, of the Roman Empire. The Romans had allied themselves to the Maccabees and interfered again in 63 BCE, at the end of the Third Mithridatic War, when the proconsul Pompeius Magnus ("Pompey the Great") stayed behind to make the area secure for Rome, including his siege of Jerusalem in 63 BCE. Queen Salome Alexandra had recently died, and a civil war broke out between her sons, Hyrcanus II and Aristobulus II. Pompeius restored Hyrcanus but political rule passed to the Herodian family who ruled as client kings. In 6 CE, Judea came under direct Roman rule as the southern part of the province of Iudaea, although Jews living in the province still maintained some form of independence and could judge offenders by their own laws, including capital offences, until c. 28 CE.[25] The Province of Judea, during the late Hellenistic period and early Roman period was also divided into five conclaves: Jerusalem (ירושלם), Gadara (גדרה), Amathus (עמתו), Jericho (יריחו), and Sepphoris (צפורין),[26] and during the Roman period had eleven administrative districts (toparchies): Jerusalem, Gophna, Akrabatta, Thamna, Lydda, Ammaus, Pella, Idumaea, Engaddi, Herodeion, and Jericho.[27]

Eventually, the Jewish population rose against Roman rule in 66 CE in a revolt that was unsuccessful. Jerusalem was besieged in 70 CE and much of the population was killed or enslaved.[28]

70 years later the Jewish population revolted under the leadership of Simon bar Kokhba and established the last Kingdom of Israel, which lasted three years, before the Romans managed to conquer the province for good, at a high cost in terms of manpower and expense.

After the defeat of Bar Kokhba (132–135 CE) the Roman Emperor Hadrian was determined to wipe out the identity of Israel-Judah-Judea, and renamed it Syria Palaestina. Until that time the area had been called the "province of Judaea" by the Romans.[29] At the same time, he changed the name of the city of Jerusalem to Aelia Capitolina. The suppression of the Bar Kokhba revolt led to widespread destruction and displacement throughout Judea, the expulsion of Jews from the territory surrounding Jerusalem, and the penetration of pagan populations.[30] However, there was never a complete Jewish abandonment of the area, and Jews have been an important (and sometimes persecuted) minority in the fringes of Judea since that time,[31] as Jewish communities continued to live in the coastal plain, around Lod, and in the southern Hebron Hills.[32]

Byzantine period

 
5th century CE: Byzantine provinces of Palaestina I (Philistia, Judea and Samaria) and Palaestina II (Galilee and Perea)

The Byzantines redrew the borders of the land of Palestine. The various Roman provinces (Syria Palaestina, Samaria, Galilee, and Peraea) were reorganized into three dioceses of Palaestina, reverting to the name first used by Greek historian Herodotus in the mid-5th century BCE: Palaestina Prima, Secunda, and Tertia or Salutaris (First, Second, and Third Palestine), part of the Diocese of the East.[33][34] Palaestina Prima consisted of Judea, Samaria, the Paralia, and Peraea with the governor residing in Caesarea. Palaestina Secunda consisted of Galilee, the lower Jezreel Valley, the regions east of Galilee, and the western part of the former Decapolis with the seat of government at Scythopolis. Palaestina Tertia included the Negev, southern Jordan—once part of Arabia—and most of Sinai, with Petra as the usual residence of the governor. Palestina Tertia was also known as Palaestina Salutaris.[33][35] According to historian H.H. Ben-Sasson,[36] this reorganisation took place under Diocletian (284–305), although other scholars suggest this change occurred later, in 390.

Crusader period

According to Ellenblum, the Franks tended to settle in the southern half of the region between Jerusalem and Nablus since there was a sizable Christian population there.[37][38]

Mamluk period

Most of the people living in the northern portion of Judea in the late 16th century were Muslims; some of them resided in towns that today have significant Christian populations. According to the 1596–1597 Ottoman census, Birzeit and Jifna, for instance, were wholly Muslim villages, while Taybeh had 63 Muslim families and 23 Christian families. There were 71 Christian families and 9 Muslim families in Ramallah, although the Christians there were recent arrivals who had moved from the Kerak area only a few years previously. According to Ehrlich, the region's Christian population decreased as a result of a combination of factors including impoverishment, oppression, marginalization, and persecution. Sufi activity took place in Jerusalem and the surrounding area, which most likely pushed Christian villagers in the region to convert to Islam.[38]

Timeline

Selected towns and cities

Judea, in the generic sense, also incorporates places in Galilee and in Samaria.

Place Names of the Land of Israel
English Hebrew (Masoretic, 7th–10th century CE) Greek (Josephus, LXX, 3rd century BCE – 1st century CE) Latin Arabic
Jerusalem ירושלם Ιερουσαλήμ Herusalem (Aelia Capitolina) القدس (al-Quds)
Jericho יריחו Ίεριχω Hiericho / Herichonte أريحا (Ariḥa)
Shechem / Nablus שכם Νεάπολις
(Neapolis)
Neapoli نابلس (Nablus)
Jaffa יפו Ἰόππῃ Ioppe يَافَا (Yaffa)
Ascalon אשקלון Ἀσκάλων (Askálōn) Ascalone عَسْقَلَان (Asqalān)
Beit Shean בית שאן Σκυθόπολις (Scythopolis)
Βαιθσάν (Beithsan)
Scytopoli بيسان (Beisan)
Beth Gubrin /Maresha בית גוברין Ἐλευθερόπολις
(Eleutheropolis)
Betogabri بيت جبرين (Bayt Jibrin)
Kefar Othnai (לגיון) כפר עותנאי xxx Caporcotani (Legio) اللجّون (al-Lajjûn)
Peki'in פקיעין Βακὰ[41] xxx البقيعة (al-Buqei'a)
Jamnia יבנה Ιαμνεία Iamnia يبنى (Yibna)
Samaria / Sebaste שומרון / סבסטי Σαμάρεια / Σεβαστή Sebaste سبسطية (Sabastiyah)
Paneas / Caesarea Philippi פנייס Πάνειον (Καισαρεία Φιλίππεια)
(Paneion)
Cesareapaneas بانياس (Banias)
Acre / Ptolemais עכו Πτολεμαΐς (Ptolemais)
Ἀκχώ (Akchó)
Ptoloma عكّا (ʻAkka)
Emmaus אמאוס Ἀμμαοῦς (Νικορολις)
(Nicopolis)
Nicopoli عمواس ('Imwas)

See also

References

  1. ^ . Lexico Dictionaries. Archived from the original on July 20, 2021. Retrieved 20 July 2021.
  2. ^ Crotty, Robert Brian (2017). The Christian Survivor: How Roman Christianity Defeated Its Early Competitors. Springer. p. 25 f.n. 4. ISBN 9789811032141. Retrieved 28 September 2020. The Babylonians translated the Hebrew name [Judah] into Aramaic as Yehud Medinata ('the province of Judah') or simply 'Yehud' and made it a new Babylonian province. This was inherited by the Persians. Under the Greeks, Yehud was translated as Judaea and this was taken over by the Romans. After the Jewish rebellion of 135 CE, the Romans renamed the area Syria Palaestina or simply Palestine. The area described by these land titles differed to some extent in the different periods.
  3. ^ Clouser, Gordon (2011). Jesus, Joshua, Yeshua of Nazareth Revised and Expanded. iUniverse. ISBN 978-1-4620-6121-1.
  4. ^ Spolsky, Bernard (2014-03-27). The Languages of the Jews: A Sociolinguistic History. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-05544-5.
  5. ^ Brand, Chad; Mitchell, Eric; Staff, Holman Reference Editorial (2015). Holman Illustrated Bible Dictionary. B&H Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-8054-9935-3.
  6. ^ Neil Caplan (19 September 2011). The Israel-Palestine Conflict: Contested Histories. John Wiley & Sons. p. 8. ISBN 978-1405175395.
  7. ^ Riggs, J. S. (1894). "Studies in Palestinian Geography. II. Judea". The Biblical World. 4 (2): 87–93. doi:10.1086/471491. JSTOR 3135423. S2CID 144961794 – via JSTOR.
  8. ^ "A few of the careful, however, having obtained private records of their own, either by remembering the names or by getting them in some other way from the registers, pride themselves on preserving the memory of their noble extraction. Among these are those already mentioned, called Desposyni, on account of their connection with the family of the Saviour. Coming from Nazara and Cochaba, villages of Judea, into other parts of the world, they drew the aforesaid genealogy from memory and from the book of daily records as faithfully as possible." (Eusebius Pamphili, Church History, Book I, Chapter VII,§ 14)
  9. ^ For example at Luke 23:5 and John 7:1
  10. ^ "A/RES/181(II) of 29 November 1947". Unispal.un.org. Retrieved 2018-09-20.
  11. ^ "Mandate for Palestine – Report of the Mandatory to the LoN (31 December 1937)". Unispal.un.org. Retrieved 2018-09-20.
  12. ^ "This Side of the River Jordan; On Language," Philologos, September 22, 2010, Forward.
  13. ^ "Judaea". Britannica. Retrieved 2012-12-31.
  14. ^ Based on Charles William Wilson's (1836–1905) identification of this site, who thought that Borceos may have been a place about 18 kilometers to the south of Neapolis (Nablus) because of a name similarity (Berkit). See p. 232 in: Wilson, Charles William (1881). Picturesque Palestine, Sinai and Egypt. Vol. 1. New York: D. Appleton.. This identification is the result of the equivocal nature of Josephus' statement, where he mentions both "Samaria" and "Judea." Samaria was a sub-district of Judea. Others speculate that Borceos may have referred to the village Burqin, in northern Samaria, and which village marked the bounds of Judea to its north.
  15. ^ "Ancient History Sourcebook: Josephus (37 – after 93 CE): Galilee, Samaria, and Judea in the First Century CE". Fordham.edu. Retrieved 2012-12-31.
  16. ^ Josephus, Antiquities XIV.I.4. (14.14)
  17. ^ "Picturesque Palestine I: Jerusalem, Judah, Ephraim". Lifeintheholyland.com. Retrieved 2012-12-31.
  18. ^ "Unlikely A Tale of Two Conquests: The Unlikely Numismatic Association Between the Fall of New France (AD 1760) and the Fall of Judaea (AD 70)". Ansmagazine.com. Archived from the original on 2012-07-07. Retrieved 2012-12-31.
  19. ^ Kuhrt, Amiele (1995). The Ancient Near East. Routledge. p. 438. ISBN 978-0415167628.
  20. ^ Finkelstein, Israel, and Silberman, Neil Asher, The Bible Unearthed : Archaeology's New Vision of Ancient Israel and the Origin of Its Sacred Texts, Simon & Schuster, 2002. ISBN 0-684-86912-8
  21. ^ "The Bible and Interpretation – David, King of Judah (Not Israel)". bibleinterp.arizona.edu. 2014-07-13. Retrieved 2018-09-20.
  22. ^ Thompson, Thomas L., 1999, The Bible in History: How Writers Create a Past, Jonathan Cape, London, ISBN 978-0-224-03977-2 p. 207
  23. ^ "Cyrus the Great | Biography & Facts | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2022-06-26.
  24. ^ "Palestine - The Hasmonean priest-princes | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2022-06-26.
  25. ^ Babylonian Talmud, Avodah Zarah 8b; ibid, Sanhedrin 41a
  26. ^ Josephus, Antiquities Book 14, chapter 5, verse 4
  27. ^ Schürer, E. (1891). Geschichte des jüdischen Volkes im Zeitalter Jesu Christi [A History of the Jewish People in the Time of Jesus Christ]. Geschichte de jüdischen Volkes im Zeitalter Jesu Christi.English. Vol. 1. Translated by Miss Taylor. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. p. 157. Cf. Flavius Josephus, The Wars of the Jews 3:51.
  28. ^ "Titus' Siege of Jerusalem – Livius". www.livius.org.
  29. ^ H.H. Ben-Sasson, A History of the Jewish People, Harvard University Press, 1976, ISBN 0-674-39731-2, page 334: "In an effort to wipe out all memory of the bond between the Jews and the land, Hadrian changed the name of the province from Iudaea to Syria-Palestina, a name that became common in non-Jewish literature."
  30. ^ Bar, Doron (2005). "Rural Monasticism as a Key Element in the Christianization of Byzantine Palestine". The Harvard Theological Review. 98 (1): 49–65. doi:10.1017/S0017816005000854. ISSN 0017-8160. JSTOR 4125284. S2CID 162644246. The phenomenon was most prominent in Judea, and can be explained by the demographic changes that this region underwent after the second Jewish revolt of 132-135 C.E. The expulsion of Jews from the area of Jerusalem following the suppression of the revolt, in combination with the penetration of pagan populations into the same region, created the conditions for the diffusion of Christians into that area during the fifth and sixth centuries. [...] This regional population, originally pagan and during the Byzantine period gradually adopting Christianity, was one of the main reasons that the monks chose to settle there. They erected their monasteries near local villages that during this period reached their climax in size and wealth, thus providing fertile ground for the planting of new ideas.
  31. ^ David Goodblatt, 'The political and social history of the Jewish community in the Land of Israel,' in William David Davies, Louis Finkelstein, Steven T. Katz (eds.) The Cambridge History of Judaism: Volume 4, The Late Roman-Rabbinic Period, Cambridge University Press, 2006 pp.404-430, p.406.
  32. ^ Mor, Menahem (2016-04-18). The Second Jewish Revolt. BRILL. pp. 483–484. doi:10.1163/9789004314634. ISBN 978-90-04-31463-4. Land confiscation in Judaea was part of the suppression of the revolt policy of the Romans and punishment for the rebels. But the very claim that the sikarikon laws were annulled for settlement purposes seems to indicate that Jews continued to reside in Judaea even after the Second Revolt. There is no doubt that this area suffered the severest damage from the suppression of the revolt. Settlements in Judaea, such as Herodion and Bethar, had already been destroyed during the course of the revolt, and Jews were expelled from the districts of Gophna, Herodion, and Aqraba. However, it should not be claimed that the region of Judaea was completely destroyed. Jews continued to live in areas such as Lod (Lydda), south of the Hebron Mountain, and the coastal regions. In other areas of the Land of Israel that did not have any direct connection with the Second Revolt, no settlement changes can be identified as resulting from it.
  33. ^ a b Shahin (2005), p. 8
  34. ^ Thomas A. Idniopulos (1998). "Weathered by Miracles: A History of Palestine From Bonaparte and Muhammad Ali to Ben-Gurion and the Mufti". The New York Times. Retrieved 2007-08-11.
  35. ^ . Encyclopædia Britannica. Archived from the original on 2007-10-11. Retrieved 2007-08-11.
  36. ^ H.H. Ben-Sasson, A History of the Jewish People, Harvard University Press, 1976, ISBN 0-674-39731-2, p. 351
  37. ^ Ronnie, Ellenblum (2010). Frankish Rural Settlement in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem. Cambridge University Press. pp. 225–229. ISBN 978-0-511-58534-0. OCLC 958547332.
  38. ^ a b Ehrlich, Michael (2022). "Judea and Jerusalem". The Islamization of the Holy Land, 634-1800. Leeds: Arc Humanities Press. pp. 111–112. ISBN 978-1-64189-222-3. OCLC 1310046222.
  39. ^ Spolsky, Bernard (2014-03-27). The Languages of the Jews: A Sociolinguistic History. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-05544-5.
  40. ^ Brand, Chad; Mitchell, Eric; Staff, Holman Reference Editorial (2015). Holman Illustrated Bible Dictionary. B&H Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-8054-9935-3.
  41. ^ Josephus, The Jewish War 3.3.1

External links

  • Judea and civil war
  • The subjugation of Judea
  • Judaea 6–66 CE 2015-05-03 at the Wayback Machine
  • Judea photos
  • The Jewish History Resource Center—Project of the Dinur Center for Research in Jewish History, Hebrew University of Jerusalem

judea, judaea, from, hebrew, יהודה, standard, yəhūda, tiberian, yehūḏā, greek, Ἰουδαία, ioudaía, latin, iūdaea, mountainous, region, southern, part, modern, states, palestine, israel, הו, hill, coordinates, coordinates, 000part, ofstate, palestineisraelhighest. Judea or Judaea dʒ uː ˈ d iː e or dʒ uː ˈ d eɪ e 1 from Hebrew יהודה Standard Yehuda Tiberian Yehuḏa Greek Ἰoydaia Ioudaia Latin Iudaea is a mountainous region in the southern part of the modern States of Palestine and Israel Judea י הו ד הA hill in JudeaCoordinates 31 40 N 35 00 E 31 667 N 35 000 E 31 667 35 000 Coordinates 31 40 N 35 00 E 31 667 N 35 000 E 31 667 35 000Part ofState of PalestineIsraelHighest elevation Mount Hebron 1 020 m 3 350 ft The name is an ancient historic Biblical Hebrew contemporaneous Latin and modern day term originating from the Hebrew name Yehudah a son of the biblical patriarch Jacob Israel with Yehudah s progeny forming the biblical Israelite tribe of Judah Yehudah and later the associated Kingdom of Judah Related nomenclature continued to be used by the Babylonians Persian Hellenistic and Roman periods as the Babylonian and Persian Yehud Hasmonean Kingdom of Judea and consequently Herodian and Roman Judea respectively 2 Under Hasmonean Herodian and Roman rule the term was applied to an area larger than the historical region of Judea In 132 AD the province of Judaea was merged with Galilee into an enlarged province named Syria Palaestina 3 4 5 The term Judea was revived by the Israeli government in the 20th century as part of the Israeli administrative district name Judea and Samaria Area for the territory generally referred to as the West Bank 6 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Historical boundaries 2 1 Roman period definition 3 Geography 4 Biblical patriarchs narrative 5 History 5 1 Iron Age Assyrian and Babylonian period 5 2 Persian and Hellenistic periods 5 3 Roman period 5 4 Byzantine period 5 5 Crusader period 5 6 Mamluk period 6 Timeline 7 Selected towns and cities 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksEtymologyThe name Judea is a Greek and Roman adaptation of the name Judah which originally encompassed the territory of the Israelite tribe of that name and later of the ancient Kingdom of Judah Nimrud Tablet K 3751 dated c 733 BCE is the earliest known record of the name Judah written in Assyrian cuneiform as Yaudaya or KUR ia u da a a Judea was sometimes used as the name for the entire region including parts beyond the river Jordan 7 In 200 CE Sextus Julius Africanus cited by Eusebius Church History 1 7 14 described Nazara Nazareth as a village in Judea 8 The King James Version of the Bible refers to the region as Jewry 9 Judea was a name used by English speakers for the hilly internal part of Mandatory Palestine until the Jordanian rule of the area in 1948 For example the borders of the two states to be established according to the UN s 1947 partition scheme 10 dead link were officially described using the terms Judea and Samaria and in its reports to the League of Nations Mandatory Committee as in 1937 the geographical terms employed were Samaria and Judea 11 dead link Jordan called the area ad difa a al gharbiya translated into English as the West Bank 12 Yehuda is the Hebrew term used for the area in modern Israel since the region was captured and occupied by Israel in 1967 13 Historical boundaries The Judean hills Old Roman road in Judea Roman period definitionThe first century Roman Jewish historian Josephus wrote The Jewish War 3 3 5 In the limits of Samaria and Judea lies the village Anuath which is also named Borceos 14 This is the northern boundary of Judea The southern parts of Judea if they be measured lengthways are bounded by a village adjoining to the confines of Arabia the Jews that dwell there call it Jordan However its breadth is extended from the river Jordan to Joppa The city Jerusalem is situated in the very middle on which account some have with sagacity enough called that city the Navel of the country Nor indeed is Judea destitute of such delights as come from the sea since its maritime places extend as far as Ptolemais it was parted into eleven portions of which the royal city Jerusalem was the supreme and presided over all the neighboring country as the head does over the body As to the other cities that were inferior to it they presided over their several toparchies Gophna was the second of those cities and next to that Acrabatta after them Thamna and Lydda and Emmaus and Pella and Idumea and Engaddi and Herodium and Jericho and after them came Jamnia and Joppa as presiding over the neighboring people and besides these there was the region of Gamala and Gaulonitis and Batanea and Trachonitis which are also parts of the kingdom of Agrippa This last country begins at Mount Libanus and the fountains of Jordan and reaches breadthways to Lake Tiberias and in length is extended from a village called Arpha as far as Julias Its inhabitants are a mixture of Jews and Syrians And thus have I with all possible brevity described the country of Judea and those that lie round about it 15 Elsewhere Josephus wrote that Arabia is a country that borders on Judea 16 Geography Mediterranean oak and terebinth woodland in the Valley of Elah southwestern Judea Judea is a mountainous region part of which is considered a desert It varies greatly in height rising to an altitude of 1 020 m 3 346 ft in the south at Mount Hebron 30 km 19 mi southwest of Jerusalem and descending to as much as 400 m 1 312 ft below sea level in the east of the region It also varies in rainfall starting with about 400 500 millimetres 16 20 in in the western hills rising to 600 millimetres 24 in around western Jerusalem in central Judea falling back to 400 millimetres 16 in in eastern Jerusalem and dropping to around 100 millimetres 3 9 in in the eastern parts due to a rainshadow effect this is the Judean desert The climate accordingly moves between Mediterranean in the west and desert climate in the east with a strip of steppe climate in the middle Major urban areas in the region include Jerusalem Bethlehem Gush Etzion Jericho and Hebron 17 Geographers divide Judea into several regions the Hebron hills the Jerusalem saddle the Bethel hills and the Judean desert east of Jerusalem which descends in a series of steps to the Dead Sea The hills are distinct for their anticline structure In ancient times the hills were forested and the Bible records agriculture and sheep farming being practiced in the area Animals are still grazed today with shepherds moving them between the low ground to the hilltops as summer approaches while the slopes are still layered with centuries old stone terracing The Jewish Revolt against the Romans ended in the devastation of vast areas of the Judean countryside 18 Mount Hazor marks the geographical boundary between Samaria to its north and Judea to its south Biblical patriarchs narrativeJudea is central to much of the narrative of the Torah with the Patriarchs Abraham Isaac and Jacob said to have been buried at Hebron in the Tomb of the Patriarchs citation needed HistoryIron Age Assyrian and Babylonian period Main article History of ancient Israel and Judah Map of the southern Levant c 830s BCE Kingdom of Judah The early history of Judah is uncertain the biblical account states that the Kingdom of Judah along with the Kingdom of Israel was a successor to a united monarchy of Israel and Judah but modern scholarship generally holds that the united monarchy is ahistorical 19 20 21 22 Regardless the Northern Kingdom was conquered by the Neo Assyrian Empire in 720 BCE The Kingdom of Judah remained nominally independent but paid tribute to the Assyrian Empire from 715 and throughout the first half of the 7th century BCE regaining its independence as the Assyrian Empire declined after 640 BCE but after 609 again fell under the sway of imperial rule this time paying tribute at first to the Egyptians and after 601 BCE to the Neo Babylonian Empire until 586 BCE when it was finally conquered by Babylonia Persian and Hellenistic periods Main article Yehud Medinata Hasmonean Kingdom at its greatest extent under Salome Alexandra The Babylonian Empire fell to the conquests of Cyrus the Great in 539 BCE 23 Judea remained under Persian rule until the conquest of Alexander the Great in 332 BCE eventually falling under the rule of the Hellenistic Seleucid Empire until the revolt of Judas Maccabeus resulted in the Hasmonean dynasty of kings who ruled in Judea for over a century 24 Roman period See also Judea Roman province Judea lost its independence to the Romans in the 1st century BCE becoming first a tributary kingdom then a province of the Roman Empire The Romans had allied themselves to the Maccabees and interfered again in 63 BCE at the end of the Third Mithridatic War when the proconsul Pompeius Magnus Pompey the Great stayed behind to make the area secure for Rome including his siege of Jerusalem in 63 BCE Queen Salome Alexandra had recently died and a civil war broke out between her sons Hyrcanus II and Aristobulus II Pompeius restored Hyrcanus but political rule passed to the Herodian family who ruled as client kings In 6 CE Judea came under direct Roman rule as the southern part of the province of Iudaea although Jews living in the province still maintained some form of independence and could judge offenders by their own laws including capital offences until c 28 CE 25 The Province of Judea during the late Hellenistic period and early Roman period was also divided into five conclaves Jerusalem ירושלם Gadara גדרה Amathus עמתו Jericho יריחו and Sepphoris צפורין 26 and during the Roman period had eleven administrative districts toparchies Jerusalem Gophna Akrabatta Thamna Lydda Ammaus Pella Idumaea Engaddi Herodeion and Jericho 27 Eventually the Jewish population rose against Roman rule in 66 CE in a revolt that was unsuccessful Jerusalem was besieged in 70 CE and much of the population was killed or enslaved 28 70 years later the Jewish population revolted under the leadership of Simon bar Kokhba and established the last Kingdom of Israel which lasted three years before the Romans managed to conquer the province for good at a high cost in terms of manpower and expense After the defeat of Bar Kokhba 132 135 CE the Roman Emperor Hadrian was determined to wipe out the identity of Israel Judah Judea and renamed it Syria Palaestina Until that time the area had been called the province of Judaea by the Romans 29 At the same time he changed the name of the city of Jerusalem to Aelia Capitolina The suppression of the Bar Kokhba revolt led to widespread destruction and displacement throughout Judea the expulsion of Jews from the territory surrounding Jerusalem and the penetration of pagan populations 30 However there was never a complete Jewish abandonment of the area and Jews have been an important and sometimes persecuted minority in the fringes of Judea since that time 31 as Jewish communities continued to live in the coastal plain around Lod and in the southern Hebron Hills 32 Byzantine period 5th century CE Byzantine provinces of Palaestina I Philistia Judea and Samaria and Palaestina II Galilee and Perea The Byzantines redrew the borders of the land of Palestine The various Roman provinces Syria Palaestina Samaria Galilee and Peraea were reorganized into three dioceses of Palaestina reverting to the name first used by Greek historian Herodotus in the mid 5th century BCE Palaestina Prima Secunda and Tertia or Salutaris First Second and Third Palestine part of the Diocese of the East 33 34 Palaestina Prima consisted of Judea Samaria the Paralia and Peraea with the governor residing in Caesarea Palaestina Secunda consisted of Galilee the lower Jezreel Valley the regions east of Galilee and the western part of the former Decapolis with the seat of government at Scythopolis Palaestina Tertia included the Negev southern Jordan once part of Arabia and most of Sinai with Petra as the usual residence of the governor Palestina Tertia was also known as Palaestina Salutaris 33 35 According to historian H H Ben Sasson 36 this reorganisation took place under Diocletian 284 305 although other scholars suggest this change occurred later in 390 Crusader period According to Ellenblum the Franks tended to settle in the southern half of the region between Jerusalem and Nablus since there was a sizable Christian population there 37 38 Mamluk period Most of the people living in the northern portion of Judea in the late 16th century were Muslims some of them resided in towns that today have significant Christian populations According to the 1596 1597 Ottoman census Birzeit and Jifna for instance were wholly Muslim villages while Taybeh had 63 Muslim families and 23 Christian families There were 71 Christian families and 9 Muslim families in Ramallah although the Christians there were recent arrivals who had moved from the Kerak area only a few years previously According to Ehrlich the region s Christian population decreased as a result of a combination of factors including impoverishment oppression marginalization and persecution Sufi activity took place in Jerusalem and the surrounding area which most likely pushed Christian villagers in the region to convert to Islam 38 TimelineAround 900 586 BCE Kingdom of Judah 586 539 BCE Yehud Babylonian Empire 539 332 BCE Yehud Medinata Persian Empire 332 305 BCE Macedonian Empire of Alexander the Great 305 198 BCE Ptolemaic Egypt 198 141 BCE Seleucid Empire 141 37 BCE The Hasmonean kingdom established by the Maccabees under the Roman Empire after 63 BCE 63 BCE Pompey s conquest of Jerusalem 37 BCE 132 CE Herodian dynasty ruling Judea as a vassal state of the Roman Empire 37 4 BCE Herod the Great 4 BCE 6 CE Herod Archelaus 41 44 CE Agrippa I interchanging with direct Roman rule 6 41 44 132 c 25 BCE Caesarea Maritima is built by Herod the Great replacing Jerusalem as the capital 6 CE the Roman Empire deposed Herod Archelaus and converted his territory into the Roman province of Judea Census of Quirinius too late to correspond to census related to Jesus birth 26 36 Pontius Pilate prefect of Roman Judea during the Crucifixion of Jesus 66 73 First Jewish Roman War includes Destruction of the Second Temple in 70 115 117 Kitos War 132 Judea was merged with Galilee into the enlarged province of Syria Palaestina 39 40 Selected towns and citiesJudea in the generic sense also incorporates places in Galilee and in Samaria Place Names of the Land of Israel English Hebrew Masoretic 7th 10th century CE Greek Josephus LXX 3rd century BCE 1st century CE Latin ArabicJerusalem ירושלם Ieroysalhm Herusalem Aelia Capitolina القدس al Quds Jericho יריחו Ierixw Hiericho Herichonte أريحا Ariḥa Shechem Nablus שכם Neapolis Neapolis Neapoli نابلس Nablus Jaffa יפו Ἰoppῃ Ioppe ي اف ا Yaffa Ascalon אשקלון Ἀskalwn Askalōn Ascalone ع س ق ل ان Asqalan Beit Shean בית שאן Sky8opolis Scythopolis Bai8san Beithsan Scytopoli بيسان Beisan Beth Gubrin Maresha בית גוברין Ἐley8eropolis Eleutheropolis Betogabri بيت جبرين Bayt Jibrin Kefar Othnai לגיון כפר עותנאי xxx Caporcotani Legio اللج ون al Lajjun Peki in פקיעין Bakὰ 41 xxx البقيعة al Buqei a Jamnia יבנה Iamneia Iamnia يبنى Yibna Samaria Sebaste שומרון סבסטי Samareia Sebasth Sebaste سبسطية Sabastiyah Paneas Caesarea Philippi פנייס Paneion Kaisareia Filippeia Paneion Cesareapaneas بانياس Banias Acre Ptolemais עכו Ptolemais Ptolemais Ἀkxw Akcho Ptoloma عك ا ʻAkka Emmaus אמאוס Ἀmmaoῦs Nikorolis Nicopolis Nicopoli عمواس Imwas See alsoTimeline of the name Judea Seleucid Empire vs Maccabean Revolt History of Palestine Ioudaios Kitos War Judaea Roman province State of JudeaReferences Definition of Judaea in English Lexico Dictionaries Archived from the original on July 20 2021 Retrieved 20 July 2021 Crotty Robert Brian 2017 The Christian Survivor How Roman Christianity Defeated Its Early Competitors Springer p 25 f n 4 ISBN 9789811032141 Retrieved 28 September 2020 The Babylonians translated the Hebrew name Judah into Aramaic as Yehud Medinata the province of Judah or simply Yehud and made it a new Babylonian province This was inherited by the Persians Under the Greeks Yehud was translated as Judaea and this was taken over by the Romans After the Jewish rebellion of 135 CE the Romans renamed the area Syria Palaestina or simply Palestine The area described by these land titles differed to some extent in the different periods Clouser Gordon 2011 Jesus Joshua Yeshua of Nazareth Revised and Expanded iUniverse ISBN 978 1 4620 6121 1 Spolsky Bernard 2014 03 27 The Languages of the Jews A Sociolinguistic History Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 05544 5 Brand Chad Mitchell Eric Staff Holman Reference Editorial 2015 Holman Illustrated Bible Dictionary B amp H Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 8054 9935 3 Neil Caplan 19 September 2011 The Israel Palestine Conflict Contested Histories John Wiley amp Sons p 8 ISBN 978 1405175395 Riggs J S 1894 Studies in Palestinian Geography II Judea The Biblical World 4 2 87 93 doi 10 1086 471491 JSTOR 3135423 S2CID 144961794 via JSTOR A few of the careful however having obtained private records of their own either by remembering the names or by getting them in some other way from the registers pride themselves on preserving the memory of their noble extraction Among these are those already mentioned called Desposyni on account of their connection with the family of the Saviour Coming from Nazara and Cochaba villages of Judea into other parts of the world they drew the aforesaid genealogy from memory and from the book of daily records as faithfully as possible Eusebius Pamphili Church History Book I Chapter VII 14 For example at Luke 23 5 and John 7 1 A RES 181 II of 29 November 1947 Unispal un org Retrieved 2018 09 20 Mandate for Palestine Report of the Mandatory to the LoN 31 December 1937 Unispal un org Retrieved 2018 09 20 This Side of the River Jordan On Language Philologos September 22 2010 Forward Judaea Britannica Retrieved 2012 12 31 Based on Charles William Wilson s 1836 1905 identification of this site who thought that Borceos may have been a place about 18 kilometers to the south of Neapolis Nablus because of a name similarity Berkit See p 232 in Wilson Charles William 1881 Picturesque Palestine Sinai and Egypt Vol 1 New York D Appleton This identification is the result of the equivocal nature of Josephus statement where he mentions both Samaria and Judea Samaria was a sub district of Judea Others speculate that Borceos may have referred to the village Burqin in northern Samaria and which village marked the bounds of Judea to its north Ancient History Sourcebook Josephus 37 after 93 CE Galilee Samaria and Judea in the First Century CE Fordham edu Retrieved 2012 12 31 Josephus Antiquities XIV I 4 14 14 Picturesque Palestine I Jerusalem Judah Ephraim Lifeintheholyland com Retrieved 2012 12 31 Unlikely A Tale of Two Conquests The Unlikely Numismatic Association Between the Fall of New France AD 1760 and the Fall of Judaea AD 70 Ansmagazine com Archived from the original on 2012 07 07 Retrieved 2012 12 31 Kuhrt Amiele 1995 The Ancient Near East Routledge p 438 ISBN 978 0415167628 Finkelstein Israel and Silberman Neil Asher The Bible Unearthed Archaeology s New Vision of Ancient Israel and the Origin of Its Sacred Texts Simon amp Schuster 2002 ISBN 0 684 86912 8 The Bible and Interpretation David King of Judah Not Israel bibleinterp arizona edu 2014 07 13 Retrieved 2018 09 20 Thompson Thomas L 1999 The Bible in History How Writers Create a Past Jonathan Cape London ISBN 978 0 224 03977 2 p 207 Cyrus the Great Biography amp Facts Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 2022 06 26 Palestine The Hasmonean priest princes Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 2022 06 26 Babylonian Talmud Avodah Zarah 8b ibid Sanhedrin 41a Josephus Antiquities Book 14 chapter 5 verse 4 Schurer E 1891 Geschichte des judischen Volkes im Zeitalter Jesu Christi A History of the Jewish People in the Time of Jesus Christ Geschichte de judischen Volkes im Zeitalter Jesu Christi English Vol 1 Translated by Miss Taylor New York Charles Scribner s Sons p 157 Cf Flavius Josephus The Wars of the Jews 3 51 Titus Siege of Jerusalem Livius www livius org H H Ben Sasson A History of the Jewish People Harvard University Press 1976 ISBN 0 674 39731 2 page 334 In an effort to wipe out all memory of the bond between the Jews and the land Hadrian changed the name of the province from Iudaea to Syria Palestina a name that became common in non Jewish literature Bar Doron 2005 Rural Monasticism as a Key Element in the Christianization of Byzantine Palestine The Harvard Theological Review 98 1 49 65 doi 10 1017 S0017816005000854 ISSN 0017 8160 JSTOR 4125284 S2CID 162644246 The phenomenon was most prominent in Judea and can be explained by the demographic changes that this region underwent after the second Jewish revolt of 132 135 C E The expulsion of Jews from the area of Jerusalem following the suppression of the revolt in combination with the penetration of pagan populations into the same region created the conditions for the diffusion of Christians into that area during the fifth and sixth centuries This regional population originally pagan and during the Byzantine period gradually adopting Christianity was one of the main reasons that the monks chose to settle there They erected their monasteries near local villages that during this period reached their climax in size and wealth thus providing fertile ground for the planting of new ideas David Goodblatt The political and social history of the Jewish community in the Land of Israel in William David Davies Louis Finkelstein Steven T Katz eds The Cambridge History of Judaism Volume 4 The Late Roman Rabbinic Period Cambridge University Press 2006 pp 404 430 p 406 Mor Menahem 2016 04 18 The Second Jewish Revolt BRILL pp 483 484 doi 10 1163 9789004314634 ISBN 978 90 04 31463 4 Land confiscation in Judaea was part of the suppression of the revolt policy of the Romans and punishment for the rebels But the very claim that the sikarikon laws were annulled for settlement purposes seems to indicate that Jews continued to reside in Judaea even after the Second Revolt There is no doubt that this area suffered the severest damage from the suppression of the revolt Settlements in Judaea such as Herodion and Bethar had already been destroyed during the course of the revolt and Jews were expelled from the districts of Gophna Herodion and Aqraba However it should not be claimed that the region of Judaea was completely destroyed Jews continued to live in areas such as Lod Lydda south of the Hebron Mountain and the coastal regions In other areas of the Land of Israel that did not have any direct connection with the Second Revolt no settlement changes can be identified as resulting from it a b Shahin 2005 p 8 Thomas A Idniopulos 1998 Weathered by Miracles A History of Palestine From Bonaparte and Muhammad Ali to Ben Gurion and the Mufti The New York Times Retrieved 2007 08 11 Roman Arabia Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on 2007 10 11 Retrieved 2007 08 11 H H Ben Sasson A History of the Jewish People Harvard University Press 1976 ISBN 0 674 39731 2 p 351 Ronnie Ellenblum 2010 Frankish Rural Settlement in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem Cambridge University Press pp 225 229 ISBN 978 0 511 58534 0 OCLC 958547332 a b Ehrlich Michael 2022 Judea and Jerusalem The Islamization of the Holy Land 634 1800 Leeds Arc Humanities Press pp 111 112 ISBN 978 1 64189 222 3 OCLC 1310046222 Spolsky Bernard 2014 03 27 The Languages of the Jews A Sociolinguistic History Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 05544 5 Brand Chad Mitchell Eric Staff Holman Reference Editorial 2015 Holman Illustrated Bible Dictionary B amp H Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 8054 9935 3 Josephus The Jewish War 3 3 1External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Judea Judea and civil war The subjugation of Judea Judaea 6 66 CE Archived 2015 05 03 at the Wayback Machine Judea photos The Jewish History Resource Center Project of the Dinur Center for Research in Jewish History Hebrew University of Jerusalem Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Judea 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