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Lajjun

Lajjun (Arabic: اللجّون, al-Lajjūn) was a large Palestinian Arab village located 16 kilometers (9.9 mi) northwest of Jenin and 1 kilometer (0.62 mi) south of the remains of the biblical city of Megiddo. The Israeli kibbutz of Megiddo, Israel was built 600 metres north-east of the depopulated village on the hill called Dhahrat ed Dar from 1949.

Lajjun
اللجّون
Legio, al-Lajjun, el-Lejjun
Lajjun, 1924. Roman or Byzantine columns and modern huts (Rockefeller Museum).
1870s map
1940s map
modern map
1940s with modern overlay map
A series of historical maps of the area around Lajjun (click the buttons)
Lajjun
Location within Mandatory Palestine
Coordinates: 32°34′29″N 35°10′40″E / 32.57472°N 35.17778°E / 32.57472; 35.17778
Palestine grid167/220
Geopolitical entityMandatory Palestine
SubdistrictJenin
Date of depopulationMay 30, 1948[1]
Area
 • Total77,242 dunams (77.242 km2 or 29.823 sq mi)
Population
 (1948)
 • Total1,280
Cause(s) of depopulationMilitary assault by Yishuv forces
Current LocalitiesKibbutz Megiddo[2]

Named after an early Roman legion camp in Syria Palaestina province called "Legio", predating the village at that location, Lajjun's history of habitation spanned some 2,000 years. Under Abbasid rule it was the capital of a subdistrict, during Mamluk rule it served as an important station in the postal route, and during Ottoman rule it was the capital of a district that bore its name. After the collapse of the Ottoman Empire towards the end of World War I, Lajjun and all of Palestine was placed under the administration of the British Mandate. The village was depopulated during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, when it was captured by Israel. Most of its residents subsequently fled and settled in the nearby town of Umm al-Fahm.

Etymology edit

The name Lajjun derives from the Roman name Legio, referring to the Roman legion stationed there. In the 3rd century, the town was renamed Maximianopolis ("City of Maximian") by Diocletian in honor of Maximian, his co-emperor,[3] but the inhabitants continued to use the old name. Under the Caliphate, the name was Arabicized into al-Lajjûn or el-Lejjûn,[4] which was used until the Crusaders conquered Palestine in 1099. The Crusaders restored the Roman name Legio, and introduced new names such as Ligum and le Lyon, but after the town was reconquered by the Muslims in 1187,[5] al-Lajjun once again became its name.

Geography edit

Modern Lajjun was built on the slopes of three hills, roughly 135–175 meters above sea level,[6] located on the southwestern edge of the Jezreel Valley (Marj ibn Amer). Jenin, the entire valley, and Nazareth range are visible from it. The village was located on both the banks of a stream, a tributary of Kishon River. The stream flows to the north and then east over 6 kilometres (3.7 mi) before arriving at Lajjun. That section is called Wadi es-Sitt (valley of the lady) in Arabic,[7] The northern quarter was built in close proximity to a number of springs, including 'Ayn al Khalil, 'Ayn Nasir, 'Ayn Sitt Leila, and 'Ayn Jumma, collectively known as 'Uyun Seil Lajjun.[8] The eastern quarter was next to 'Ayn al Hajja.[9] From Lajjun onward the stream is called Wadi al-Lajjun in Arabic.[10][11] In Hebrew, the Israeli Government Naming Committee decided in 1958 to use the name Nahal Qeni (Hebrew: נַחַל קֵינִי) for the entire length of the stream, based on its ancient identification (see below).[12] Lajjun is bordered by Tall al-Mutsallem to the northeast, and by Tall al-Asmar to the northwest. Lajjun, which was linked by secondary roads to the Jenin-Haifa road, and the road that led southwest to the town of Umm al-Fahm, laid close to the junctions of the two highways.[13]

Nearby localities included, the destroyed village of Ayn al-Mansi to the northwest, and the surviving villages of Zalafa to the south, Bayada and Musheirifa to the southwest, and Zububa (part of the Palestinian territories) to the southeast. The largest town near al-Lajjun was Umm al-Fahm, to the south.[14]

History edit

Bronze and Iron Ages edit

Lajjun is about 1 kilometer (0.62 mi) south of Tel Megiddo, also called Tell al-Mutasallim, which is identified with ancient Megiddo.[5] During the rule of the Canaanites and then the Israelites, Megiddo, located on the military road leading from Asia to Egypt and in a commanding situation, was heavily fortified by both peoples.

Lajjun stream has been identified with the brook Kina, or Qina, which is mentioned in the Egyptian descriptions of Thutmose III's Battle of Megiddo. According to the reconstruction of Harold Hayden Nelson, the entire battle was fought in the valley, between the three quarters of modern Lajjun.[15] However, both Na'aman[16] and Zertal[17][18] suggested alternative locations for Qina. Some biblical scholars proposed that this stream is also the battle site referred to as "Waters of Megiddo" in the Song of Deborah, while others maintain that any part of the Kishon river system is equally likely.[19] In the same context, Judges 4 attests to the presence of a branch of the Kenite clan somewhere in the area; relating this name to Thutmose's Annals, scholars like Shmuel Yeivin theorized that the name Qina derives from qyni (Hebrew: קיני).[20] Donald B. Redford noted that the Egyptian transliteration might be of "qayin".[21]

Roman era edit

Modern-day historical geographers have placed the Second Temple period village of Kefar ʿUthnai (Hebrew: כפר עותנאי) in the confines of the Arab village, and which place-name underwent a change after a Roman Legion had camped there.[22][23] It appears in Latin characters under its old name Caporcotani in the Tabula Peutingeriana Map, and lay along the Roman road from Caesarea to Scythopolis (Beit Shean).[24][25][26] Ptolemy (Geography V, 15: 3) also mentions the site in the second century CE, referring to the place under its Latin appellation, Caporcotani, and where he mentions it as one of the four cities of the Galilee, with Sepphoris, Julias and Tiberias.[27] Among the village's famous personalities was Rabban Gamliel.[28] After the Bar Kochba Revolt—a Jewish uprising against the Roman Empire—had been suppressed in 135 CE, the Roman emperor Hadrian ordered a second Roman legion, Legio VI Ferrata (6th "Ironclad" Legion), to be stationed in the north of the country to guard the Wadi Ara region, a crucial line of communication between the coastal plain of Palestine and the Jezreel Valley.[5][29] The place where it established its camp was known as Legio.

In the 3rd century CE, when the army was removed, Legio became a city and its name was augmented with the adjectival Maximianopolis.[3][29] Eusebius mentions the village in his Onomasticon, under the name Legio.

Early Muslim period edit

Some Muslim historians believe the site of the Battle of Ajnadayn between the Muslim Arabs and the Byzantines in 634 CE was at Lajjun. Following the Muslim victory, Lajjun, along with most of Palestine, and southern Syria were incorporated into the Caliphate.[30] According to medieval geographers Estakhri and Ibn Hawqal, Lajjun was the northernmost town of Jund Filastin (military district of Palestine).[31]

A hoard of dinars dating from the Umayyad era have been found at Lajjun.[32]

The 10th-century Persian geographer Ibn al-Faqih wrote of a local legend related by the people of Lajjun regarding the source of the abundant spring used as the town's primary water source over the ages:

there is just outside al-Lajjun a large stone of round form, over which is built a dome, which they call the Mosque of Abraham. A copious stream of water flows from under the stone and it is reported that Abraham struck the stone with his staff, and there immediately flowed from it water enough to suffice for the supply of the people of the town, and also to water their lands. The spring continues to flow down to the present day.[33]

In 940, Ibn Ra'iq, during his conflict over control of Syria with the Ikhshidids of Egypt, fought against them in an indecisive battle at Lajjun. During the battle, Abu Nasr al-Husayn—the Ikhshidid general and brother of the Ikhshidid ruler, Muhammad ibn Tughj—was killed. Ibn Ra'iq was remorseful at the sight of Husayn's dead body and offered his seventeen-year-old son, Abu'l-Fath Muzahim, to Ibn Tughj "to do with him whatever they saw fit". Ibn Tughj was honored by Ibn Ra'iq's gesture; instead of executing Muzahim, he gave the latter several gifts and robes, then married him to his daughter Fatima.[34]

In 945, the Hamdanids of Aleppo and the Ikhshidids fought a battle in Lajjun. It resulted in an Ikhshidid victory putting a halt to Hamdanid expansion southward under the leadership of Sayf al-Dawla.[13] The Jerusalemite geographer, al-Muqaddasi, wrote in 985 that Lajjun was "a city on the frontier of Palestine, and in the mountain country ... it is well situated and is a pleasant place".[35] Moreover, it was the center of a nahiya (subdistrict) of Jund al-Urdunn ( (military district of Jordan),[36] which also included the towns of Nazareth and Jenin.[37][38]

Crusader, Ayyubid and Mamluk periods edit

When the Crusaders invaded and conquered the Levant from the Fatimids in 1099, al-Lajjun's Roman name, Legio, was restored and the town formed a part of the lordship of Caesarea. During this time, Christian settlement in Legio grew significantly. John of Ibelin records that the community "owed the service of 100 sergeants". Bernard, the archbishop of Nazareth granted some of the tithes of Legio to the hospital of the monastery of St. Mary in 1115, then in 1121, he extended the grant to include all of Legio, including its church as well as the nearby village of Ti'inik. By 1147, the de Lyon family controlled Legio, but by 1168, the town was held by Payen, the lord of Haifa. Legio had markets, a town oven and held other economic activities during this era. In 1182, the Ayyubids raided Legio, and in 1187, it was captured by them under the leadership of Saladin's nephew Husam ad-Din 'Amr and consequently its Arabic name, Lajjun, was restored.[5]

In 1226, Arab geographer Yaqut al-Hamawi writes of the Mosque of Abraham in Lajjun, the town's "copious stream", and that it was a "part of the Jordan Province".[39] A number of Muslim kings and prominent persons passed through the village, including Ayyubid sultan al-Kamil, who gave his daughter 'Ashura' in marriage to his nephew while visiting the town in 1231.[40] The Ayyubids ceded Lajjun to the Crusaders in 1241, but it fell to the Mamluks under Baibars in 1263. A year later, a party of Templars and Hospitallers raided Lajjun and took 300 men and women captives to Acre. In the treaty between Sultan Qalawun and the Crusaders on 4 June 1283, Lajjun was listed as the Mamluk territory.[5]

By 1300, the Levant was entirely in Mamluk hands and divided into several provinces. Lajjun became the center of an ʿAmal (subdistrict) in the Mamlaka of Safad (ultimately becoming one of sixteen[41]). In the 14th century members of a Yamani tribe lived there.[42] Shams al-Din al-'Uthmani, writing probably in the 1370s, reported it was the seat of Marj ibn Amer, and had a great khan for travellers, a "terrace of the sultan" and the Maqam (shrine) of Abraham.[43] The Mamluks fortified it in the 15th century and the town became a major staging post on the postal route (braid) between Egypt and Damascus.[5]

Ottoman era edit

Early rule and the Tarabay family edit

The Ottoman Empire conquered most of Palestine from the Mamluks after the Battle of Marj Dabiq in 1517.

As the army of Sultan Selim I moved south towards Egypt,[44] Tarabay ibn Qaraja, chieftain of the Bani Hareth, a Bedouin tribe from the Hejaz, supported them by contributing guides and scouts.[45] When the Mamluks were completely uprooted and Selim returned to Istanbul, the Tarabays were granted the territory of Lajjun. The town eventually became the capital of the Sanjak ("District") of Lajjun, which was a part of the province of Damascus, and encompassed the Jezreel Valley, northern Samaria, and a part of the north-central coastline of Palestine as its territory.[46][47][48]It was composed of four nahiyas ("sub-districts") (Jinin, Sahel Atlit, Sa'ra, and Shafa), and encompassed a total of 55 villages, including Haifa, Jenin, and Baysan.[49]

After a short period in which the Tarabays were in a state of rebellion, tensions suddenly died down and the Ottomans appointed Ali ibn Tarabay as the governor of Lajjun in 1559. His son Assaf Tarabay ruled Lajjun from 1571 to 1583. During his reign, he extended Tarabay power and influence to Sanjak Nablus.[44] In 1579, Assaf, referred to as the "Sanjaqbey of al-Lajjun," is mentioned as the builder of a mosque in the nearby village of al-Tira.[50] Assaf was deposed and banished in 1583 to the island of Rhodes. Six years later, in 1589, he was pardoned and resettled in the town. At the time, an impostor also named Assaf, had attempted to seize control of Sanjak Lajjun. Known later as Assaf al-Kadhab ("Assaf the Liar"), he was arrested and executed in Damascus where he traveled in attempt to confirm his appointment as governor of the district.[44] In 1596, Lajjun was a part of the nahiya of Sha'ra and paid taxes on a number of crops, including wheat, barley, as well as goats, beehives and water buffaloes.[51]

Assaf Tarabay was not reinstated as governor, but Lajjun remained in Tarabay hands, under the rule of Governor Tarabay ibn Ali who was succeeded upon his death by his son Ahmad in 1601, who also ruled until his death in 1657. Ahmad, known for his courage and hospitality,[44] helped the Ottomans defeat the rebel Ali Janbulad and gave shelter to Yusuf Sayfa—Janbulad's principal rival. Ahmad, in coordination with the governors of Gaza (the Ridwan family) and Jerusalem (the Farrukh family), also fought against Fakhr ad-Din II in a prolonged series of battles,[44] which ended with the victory of the Tarabay-Ridwan-Farrukh alliance after their forces routed Fakhr ad-Din's army at the al-Auja river in central Palestine in 1623.[52]

The Ottoman authorities of Damascus expanded Ahmad's fief as a token of gratitude. Ahmad's son Zayn Tarabay ruled Lajjun for a brief period until his death in 1660. He was succeeded by Ahmad's brother Muhammad Tarabay, who—according to his French secretary—had good intentions for governing Lajjun, but was addicted to opium and as a result had been a weak leader. After his death in 1671, other members of the Tarabay family ruled Lajjun until 1677 when the Ottomans replaced them with a government officer.[45] The main reason behind the Ottoman abandonment of the Tarabays was that their larger tribe, the Bani Hareth, migrated east of Lajjun to the eastern banks of the Jordan River.[53] Later during this century, Sheikh Ziben, ancestor to the Arrabah-based Abd al-Hadi clan, became the leader of Sanjak Lajjun.[49] When Henry Maundrell visited in 1697, he described the place as "an old village near which was a good khan".[54]

Later Ottoman rule edit

 
Drawing of the remains of the khan and old bridge at Lajjun, 1870s[55]

Much of the Lajjun district territories were actually taxed by the stronger families of Sanjak Nablus by 1723. Later in the 18th century, Lajjun was replaced by Jenin as the administrative capital of the sanjak which now included the Sanjak of Ajlun. By the 19th century it was renamed Sanjak Jenin, although 'Ajlun was separated from it.[56] Zahir al-Umar, who became the effective ruler of the Galilee for a short period during the second half of the 18th century, was reported to have used cannons against Lajjun in the course of his campaign between 1771–1773 to capture Nablus.[57] It is possible that this attack led to the village's decline in the years that followed.[58] By that time, Lajjun's influence was diminished by the increasing strength of Acre's political power and Nablus's economic muscle.[56]

 
Old bridge of Lajjun, picture taken between 1903 and 1905[59]

Edward Robinson visited in 1838, and noted that the khan, which Maundrell commented on, was for the accommodation of the caravans passing on the great road between Egypt and Damascus which comes from the western plain along the coast, over the hills to Lajjun, and enters the plain of Esdraelon.[60] When the British consul James Finn visited the area in the mid-19th century, he did not see a village.[61] The authors of the Survey of Western Palestine also noticed a khan, south of the ruins of Lajjun in the early 1880s.[62] Gottlieb Schumacher saw caravans resting at the Lajjun stream in the early 1900s.[63]

 
A herd of camels near a stream in Lajjun, 1908[63]

Andrew Petersen, inspecting the place in 1993, noted that the principal extant buildings at the site are the khan and a bridge. The bridge, which crosses a major tributary of the Kishon River, is approximately 4 meters (13 ft) wide and 16 meters (52 ft) to 20 meters (66 ft) long. It is carried on three arches, the north side has been robbed of its outer face, while the south side is heavily overgrown with vegetation. According to Petersen, the bridge was already in ruins when drawn by Charles William Wilson in the 1870s. The khan is located on a low hill 150 meters (490 ft) to the southwest of the bridge. It is a square enclosure measuring approximately 30 meters (98 ft) per side with a central courtyard. The ruins are covered with vegetation, and only the remains of one room is visible.[64]

The modern village of Lajjun was a satellite village Umm al-Fahm. During its existence it came to eclipse its mother settlement in infrastructure and economic importance.[65] Originally, in the late 19th century, Arabs from Umm al-Fahm started to make use of the Lajjun farmland, settling for the season.[13][40][66] Gradually, they settled in the village, building their houses around the springs. In 1903–1905, Schumacher excavated Tell al-Mutasallim (ancient Megiddo) and some spots in Lajjun. Schumacher wrote that Lajjun ("el-Leddschōn") is properly the name of the stream and surrounding farmlands,[67] and calls the village along the stream Ain es-Sitt. Which, he noted, "consists of only nine shabby huts in the midst of ruins and heaps of dung." and a few more fellahin huts south of the stream.[68] By 1925 some of the inhabitants of Lajjun reused stones from the ancient structure that had been unearthed to build new housing.[69] At some point in the early 20th century the four hamulas ("clans") of Umm al-Fahm divided the land among themselves: al-Mahajina, al-Ghubariyya, al-Jabbarin and al-Mahamid clans.[70][71] Lajjun thus transformed into three ‘Lajjuns’, or administratively separate neighbourhoods  reflecting the Hebronite/Khalīlī settlement pattern of its founders.[72]

Taken more broadly, Lajjun was one of the settlements of the so-called "Fahmawi Commonwealth", a network of interspersed communities connected by ties of kinship, and socially, economically and politically affiliated with Umm al Fahm. The Commonwealth dominated vast sections of Bilad al-Ruha/Ramot Menashe, Wadi 'Ara and Marj Ibn 'Amir/Jezreel Valley during that time.[72]

 
Map of Tel Megiddo and Lajjun in 1905. The village is at the dark knee of the stream
 
Aerial photo with Lajjun and Tel Megiddo, 1944
Notice the changes such as a new quarter in the bottom left corner, the roads and the British police station near the intersection.

British Mandate period edit

More people moved to Lajjun during the British mandate period, particularly in the late thirties, due to the British crackdown on participants in the 1936–1939 Arab revolt in Palestine.[58] The tomb of Yusuf Hamdan, a local leader of the revolt, is located in the village.[73] Others moved in as they came to understand that the Mandate authorities planned to turn Lajjun into a county seat.[74] During 1940–1941, a police station belonging to the Tegart forts system was constructed at the road intersection outside Lajjun by the British Mandate government.[75]

Lajjun's economy grew rapidly as a result of the influx of the additional population.[58] As the village expanded, it was divided into three quarters, one to the east, one to the west, and the older one in the north. Each quarter was inhabited by one or more hamula ("clan").[66]

 
Survey of Palestine map of Lajjun, 1946

Lajjun had a school that was founded in 1937 and that had an enrollment of 83 in 1944. It was located in the quarter belonging to the al-Mahajina al-Fawqa clan, that is, in Khirbat al-Khan. In 1943, one of the large landowners in the village financed the construction of a mosque, built of white stone, in the al-Ghubariyya (eastern) quarter. Another mosque was also established in the al-Mahamid quarter during the same period, and was financed by the residents themselves.[66] It was a four-year elementary school for boys.[76]

In 1945, Lajjun, Umm al-Fahm and seven hamlets had a total land area of 77.24 square kilometres (29.82 sq mi), of which 68.3 square kilometres (26.4 sq mi) was Arab-owned, and the remainder being public property.[77][78] There was a total of 50 km2 (12,000 acres) of land that was cultivated; 4.3 km2 (1,100 acres) were used for plantations and irrigated, and 44.6 km2 (11,000 acres) were planted with cereals (wheat and barley).[79] The built-up area of the villages was 0.128 km2 (32 acres), most of it being in Umm al-Fahm and Lajjun.[80] Former villagers recall they grew wheat and corn in the fields, and irrigated crops such as eggplant, tomato, okra, cowpea and watermelon.[81] A survey map from 1946 shows most of the buildings in the eastern and western quarters as built from stone and mud,[9] but some used mud over wood.[82] Many houses had neighbouring small plots marked as "orchards".[9]

There was a small market place in the village, as well as six grain mills (powered by the numerous springs and wadis in the vicinity), and a health center.[66] The various quarters of Lajjun had many shops. A bus company was established in Lajjun by a villager from Umm al-Fahm; the bus line served Umm al-Fahm, Haifa, and a number of villages, such as Zir'in. In 1937, the line had seven buses. Subsequently, the company was licensed to serve Jenin also, and acquired the name of "al-Lajjun Bus Company".[83]

1948 War edit

Lajjun was allotted to the Arab state in the 1947 proposed United Nations Partition Plan. The village was defended by the Arab Liberation Army (ALA),[11] and was the logistical headquarters of the Iraqi army. It was first assaulted by the Haganah on April 13, during the battle around kibbutz Mishmar HaEmek. ALA commander Fawzi al-Qawuqji claimed Jewish forces ("Haganah") had attempted to reach the crossroads at Lajjun in an outflanking operation, but the attack failed. The New York Times reported that twelve Arabs were killed and fifteen wounded during that Haganah offensive.[84] Palmach units of the Haganah raided and blew up much of Lajjun on the night of April 15–16.[85]

On April 17, it was occupied by the Haganah. According to the newspaper, Lajjun was the "most important place taken by the Jews, whose offensive has carried them through ten villages south and east of Mishmar Ha'emek." The report added that women and children had been removed from the village and that 27 buildings in the village were blown up by the Haganah. However, al-Qawuqji states that attacks resumed on May 6, when ALA positions in the area of Lajjun were attacked by Haganah forces. The ALA's Yarmouk Battalion and other ALA units drove back their forces, but two days later, the ALA commander reported that the Haganah was "trying to cut off the Lajjun area from Tulkarm in preparation of seizing Lajjun and Jenin..."[86]

State of Israel edit

On May 30, 1948, in the first stage of the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, Lajjun was captured by Israel's Golani Brigade in Operation Gideon. The capture was particularly important for the Israelis because of its strategic location at the entrance of the Wadi Ara, which thus, brought their forces closer to Jenin.[87] During the second truce between Israel and the Arab coalition, in early September, a United Nations official fixed the permanent truce line in the area of Lajjun, according to press reports. A 500-yard strip was established on both sides of the line in which Arabs and Jews were allowed to harvest their crops.[13] Lajjun was used as transit place by the Israel Defense Forces to transfer 1,400 Arab women, children and elderly from Ijzim, who then were sent on foot to Jenin.[88]

Kibbutz Megiddo was built on some of Lajjun's village lands starting in 1949. Lajjun's buildings were demolished in the following months.[89]

In November 1953, 34.6 square kilometres (13.4 sq mi) of the lands of Umm al-Fahm were confiscated by the state, invoking the Land Acquisition (Validation of Acts and Compensation) Law, 5713-1953. These included much of the built-up area of Lajjun (at Block 20420, covering 0.2 square kilometres (0.077 sq mi)).[90] It was later planted with forest trees.

In 1992 Walid Khalidi described the remains: "Only the white stone mosque, one village mill, the village health center, and a few partially destroyed houses remain on the site. The mosque has been converted into a carpentry workshop and one of the houses has been made into a chicken coop. The health center and grain mill are deserted, and the school is gone. The cemetery remains, but it is in a neglected state; the tomb of Yusuf al-Hamdan, a prominent nationalist who fell in the 1936 revolt, is clearly visible. The surrounding lands are planted with almond trees, wheat, and barley; they also contain animal sheds, a fodder plant, and a pump installed on the spring of 'Ayn al-Hajja. The site is tightly fenced in and entry is blocked."[89] In 2000 Meron Benvenisti restated the information about the 1943 white mosque.[2] By 2007 it was evacuated and sealed up. [73]

In the 2000s, 486 families from Umm al-Fahm (formerly from Lajjun), through Adalah, motioned to nullify the confiscation of that particular block. The district court ruled against the plaintiffs in 2007,[73] and the supreme court held the decision in 2010.[91]

Lajjun is among the Palestinian villages for which commemorative Marches of Return have taken place, typically as part of Nakba Day, such as the demonstrations organized by the Association for the Defence of the Rights of the Internally Displaced.[92]

In 2013, architect Shadi Habib Allah presented a proposal for a Palestinian village to be rebuilt on Lajjun in areas that are currently a park and inhabited by descendants of its displaced residents. The presentation was made for the "From Truth to Redress" conference organized by Zochrot.[93]

Demographics edit

During early Ottoman rule, in 1596, Lajjun had a population of 226 people.[51] In the British Mandate census in 1922, there were 417 inhabitants.[94] In the 1931 census of Palestine, the population had more than doubled to 857, of which 829 were Muslims, 26 were Christians, as well as two Jews.[40][95] In that year, there were 162 houses in the village.[11][95] At the end of 1940, Lajjun had 1,103 inhabitants.

The prominent families of al-Lajjun were the Jabbarin, Ghubayriyya, Mahamid and the Mahajina. Around 80% of its inhabitants fled to Umm al-Fahm, where they currently live as Arab citizens of Israel and internally displaced Palestinians.[73]

Culture edit

Local tradition centered on 'Ayn al-Hajja, the spring of Lajjun, date back to the 10th century CE when the village was under Islamic rule. According to geographers of that century, as well as the 12th century, the legend was that under the Mosque of Abraham, a "copious stream flowed" which formed immediately after the prophet Abraham struck the stone with his staff.[33] Abraham had entered the town with his flock of sheep on his way towards Egypt, and the people of the village informed him that the village possessed only small quantities of water, thus Abraham should pass on the village to another. According to the legend, Abraham was commanded to strike the rock, resulting in water "bursting out copiously". From then, the village orchards and crops were well-irrigated and the people satisfied with a surplus of drinking water from the spring.[39]

In Lajjun there are tombs for two Mamluk-era Muslim relics who were from the village. The holy men were Ali Shafi'i who died in 1310 and Ali ibn Jalal who died in 1400.[13]

Archaeology edit

In 2001, archaeological excavations were conducted by the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) at sites of Kefar ‘Otnay and Legio west of Megiddo Junction. The results revealed artifacts dating back to the Roman and early Byzantine periods.[96] In 2004, further excavations were conducted by the IAA at Legio.[97]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Morris, 2004, p. xviii, village #147. Also gives the cause of depopulation
  2. ^ a b Benvenisti, 2000, p. 319
  3. ^ a b Tepper 2003
  4. ^ Cline, 2002, p.115
  5. ^ a b c d e f Pringle, 1998, p. 3
  6. ^ Survey of Palestine (1928–1947). Palestine (Map). 1:20,000. pp. 16/21 Umm al-Fahm, 16/22 Megiddo.
  7. ^ Palmer 1881, p. 156
  8. ^ State of Israel, Hydrographic list part 2, items no. 282-286,295.
  9. ^ a b c Survey of Palestine (1947). Lajjun (Map). 1:2,500. Village Surveys 1946 – via Israel State Archives.
  10. ^ Survey of Palestine (1928–1947). Palestine (Map). 1:20,000. pp. 16/21 Umm al-Fahm, 16/22 Megiddo, 17/22 Afula.
  11. ^ a b c Welcome to al-Lajjun Palestine Remembered.
  12. ^ State of Israel, Hydrographic list part 1, item no. 177 (in list and indices).
  13. ^ a b c d e Rami, S. al-Lajjun 2008-11-20 at the Wayback Machine Jerusalemites.
  14. ^ "Palestine Remembered: Satellite View of al-Lajjun - اللجون, Jinin-جنين". www.palestineremembered.com.
  15. ^ Nelson (1921) [1913]
  16. ^ Finkelstein; Na'aman (2005). "Shechem of the Amarna Period and the Rise of the Northern Kingdom of Israel". Israel Exploration Journal. 55 (2): 178. JSTOR 27927106.
  17. ^ Zertal, Adam (2011). "The Arunah Pass". Egypt, Canaan and Israel: History, Imperialism, Ideology and Literature. pp. 342–356. doi:10.1163/ej.9789004194939.i-370.122. ISBN 9789004210691.
  18. ^ Zertal, 2016, pp. 51-52, 74
  19. ^ Gass, Erasmus (2017). "The Deborah-Barak Composition (Jdg 4–5): Some Topographical Reflections". Palestine Exploration Quarterly. 149 (4): 326–335. doi:10.1080/00310328.2017.1386439. ISSN 0031-0328. S2CID 165369658.
  20. ^ Yeivin, Shmuel (1962). הערות טופוגראפיות ואתניות... חמשת בתי-האב הכושיים בכנען [Topographic and ethnic remarks II 5 : the five Cushite clans of Canaan]. Beit Mikra: Journal for the Study of the Bible and Its World (in Hebrew). 7 (2): 31. JSTOR 23499537.
  21. ^ Redford 2003, p. 109 note 26
  22. ^ Zissu, Boaz (2006). "Miqwaʾ ot at Kefar ʿOthnai near Legio". Israel Exploration Journal. 56 (1): 57–66. JSTOR 27927125.
  23. ^ Safrai (1980), p. 223 (note 5)
  24. ^ Tsafrir, Di Segni & Green, p. 170
  25. ^ B. Isaac & I. Roll 1982
  26. ^ Thomsen, p. 77
  27. ^ David Adan-Bayewitz, Martin (Szusz) Department of Land of Israel Studies and Archaeology, Bar-Ilan University, Question & Response 2019-04-02 at the Wayback Machine (2 December 2013)
  28. ^ Babylonian Talmud, Gittin 10b (Mishnah Gittin 1:5)
  29. ^ a b Khalidi, 1992, p. 334
  30. ^ Gil, 1997, p.42.
  31. ^ Estakhri and Ibn Hawqal quoted in le Strange, 1890, p.28.
  32. ^ Mayer, 1932, pp. 100–102
  33. ^ a b Ibn al-Faqih quoted in le Strange, 1890, p.492.
  34. ^ Gil, 1997, p.318.
  35. ^ al-Muqaddasi quoted in le Strange, 1890, p.492.
  36. ^ le Strange, 1890, p.39.
  37. ^ al-Muqaddasi quoted in le Strange, 1890, p.301.
  38. ^ Al-Muqaddasi, The Best Divisions for Knowledge of the Regions (Being a translation of "Ahsan al-Taqasim fi Maʿrifat al-Aqalim"), Reading 1994, p. 141 ISBN 1-873938-14-4
  39. ^ a b le Strange, 1890, p.493.
  40. ^ a b c Khalidi, 1992, p.335
  41. ^ Popper 1955, p. 16
  42. ^ Shams al-Dìn al-'Uthmànì cited in Drory 2004, p. 179
  43. ^ 'Uthmani, Ta'rikh Safad sec. X, in a partial reproduction of the Arabic text in Lewis, 1953 p. 483. Cf. a complete edition in Zakkār, 2009.
  44. ^ a b c d e Ze'evi, 1996, p. 42.
  45. ^ a b Ze'evi, 1996, p. 41.
  46. ^ Agmon, 2006, p. 65.
  47. ^ Marom, Roy; Tepper, Yotam; Adams, Matthew J. (2023-05-09). "Lajjun: Forgotten Provincial Capital in Ottoman Palestine". Levant.
  48. ^ al-Bakhīt, Muḥammad ʻAdnān; al-Ḥamūd, Nūfān Rajā (1989). "Daftar mufaṣṣal nāḥiyat Marj Banī ʻĀmir wa-tawābiʻihā wa-lawāḥiqihā allatī kānat fī taṣarruf al-Amīr Ṭarah Bāy sanat 945 ah". www.worldcat.org. Amman: Jordanian University. pp. 1–35. Retrieved 2023-05-15.
  49. ^ a b The Cultural Landscape of the Tell Jenin Region. Leiden University Open Access, p.29, p.32.
  50. ^ Heyd, 1960, 110 n.4. Cited in Petersen, 2002, p. 306
  51. ^ a b Hütteroth and Abdulfattah, 1977, p. 190. Quoted in Khalidi, 1992, p. 521.
  52. ^ Ze'evi, 1996, pp. 49-50.
  53. ^ Ze'evi, 1996, p. 94.
  54. ^ Maundrell, 1836, p. 97
  55. ^ Wilson, ed., 1881, vol 2, p. 24
  56. ^ a b Doumani, 1995, p. 39.
  57. ^ Abu Dayya, 1986:51, cited in Khalidi, 1992, p.335
  58. ^ a b c Kana´na and Mahamid 1987:7-9. Cited in Khalidi, 1992, p.335
  59. ^ Schumacher, 1908, p. 186
  60. ^ Robinson, p.328 f.f.
  61. ^ Finn 1868:229-30, also cited in Khalidi, 1992, p.335
  62. ^ Conder and Kitchener, 1882, SWPII pp. 64-66, cited in Khalidi, 1992, p.335.
  63. ^ a b Schumacher, 1908, p. 6
  64. ^ Petersen, 2001, p. 201
  65. ^ Marom, Roy; Tepper, Yotam; Adams, Matthew J. (2024-01-03). "Al-Lajjun: a Social and geographic account of a Palestinian Village during the British Mandate Period". British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies. doi:10.1080/13530194.2023.2279340.
  66. ^ a b c d Kana´na and Mahamid 1987:44. Cited in Khalidi, 1992, p. 335
  67. ^ Schumacher, 1908, p. 7
  68. ^ Schumacher, 1908, pp. 186-187
  69. ^ Fisher, 1929, The Excavation of Armageddon 2012-10-09 at the Wayback Machine, p. 18, cited in Khalidi, 1992, p.335
  70. ^ Kana´na and Mahamid 1987:44-45
  71. ^ Bronstein, 2004. pp. 7, 16
  72. ^ a b Marom, Roy; Tepper, Yotam; Adams, Matthew J. (2024-01-03). "Al-Lajjun: a Social and geographic account of a Palestinian Village during the British Mandate Period". British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies: 8–11. doi:10.1080/13530194.2023.2279340. ISSN 1353-0194.
  73. ^ a b c d Isabelle Humphries (Autumn 2007). . al-Majdal. No. 35. BADIL Resource Center for Palestinian Residency and Refugee Rights. Archived from the original on 2018-03-27. Retrieved 2018-03-26.
  74. ^ Bronstein 2004, pp. 8, 13
  75. ^ Zissu, Boaz; Tepper, Y.; Amit, David (2006). "Miqwa'ot at Kefar Othnai near Legio". Israel Exploration Journal. 56 (1): 57. JSTOR 27927125.
  76. ^ Bronstein 2004, pp. 6, 7
  77. ^ Department of Statistics, 1945, p. 17
  78. ^ Government of Palestine, Department of Statistics. Village Statistics, April, 1945. Quoted in Hadawi, 1970, p.55. The seven hamlets were Aqqada, Ein Ibrahim, Khirbet al-Buweishat, Mu'awiya, Musheirifa, al-Murtafi'a, and Musmus.
  79. ^ Government of Palestine, Department of Statistics. Village Statistics, April, 1945. Quoted in Hadawi, 1970, p.100.
  80. ^ Government of Palestine, Department of Statistics. Village Statistics, April, 1945. Quoted in Hadawi, 1970, p.150
  81. ^ Bronstein 2004, pp. 3, 6, 10-11, 12
  82. ^ Bronstein 2004, pp. 5-6
  83. ^ Kana´na and Mahamid 1987:48-49. Cited in Khalidi, 1992, p. 335
  84. ^ Schmidt, Dana Adams. British Repudiate Palestine Charge; Deny Obstructing U.N. Unit - Violence Flares as Big Evacuation Convoy Starts New York Times. 1948-04-14. The New York Times Company.
  85. ^ Morris, 2004, p. 242
  86. ^ Schmidt, Dana Adams. Jews press Arabs in Pitched Battle in North Palestine; Seize 10 Villages and 7 Guns in Mishmar Haemek Area - Repel Counter-Attacks UN Session Opens Today, Special Assembly to Gather at Flushing Meadow in Gloom - Zionist Rejects Truce Pitched Battle Rages in Palestine Jew Press Arabs in North Palestine New York Times. 1948-04-16. The New York Times Company.
  87. ^ Tal, 2004, p. 232.
  88. ^ Morris, 2004, p. 439
  89. ^ a b Khalidi, 1992, pp. 336-337
  90. ^ See GIS map by the Survey of Israel: [1].
  91. ^ "Israeli Supreme Court Rules that Lands Confiscated in Lajoun from 486 Arab Families in 1953 for "Settlement Needs" will not be Returned to Them". Adalah. 2010-01-12.
  92. ^ Charif, Maher. "Meanings of the Nakba". Interactive Encyclopedia of the Palestine Question – palquest. Retrieved 2023-12-05.
  93. ^ Pessah, Tom (2013-10-05). "At annual conference, Palestinians and Israelis turn 'return' into reality". +972 Magazine. Retrieved 2024-02-29.
  94. ^ Barron, 1923, Table IX, Sub-district of Jenin, p. 30
  95. ^ a b Mills, 1932, p. 69
  96. ^ IAA Report: Kefar ‘Otnay and Legio
  97. ^ Israel Antiquities Authority, Excavators and Excavations Permit for Year 2004, Survey Permit # A-4227

Bibliography edit

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External links edit

  • Welcome To al-Lajjun, palestineremembered.com
  • Lajjun, from Zochrot
  • Survey of Western Palestine, Map 8: Wikimedia commons
  • Al-Lajjon from Dr. Moslih Kanaaneh
  • Al- Lajjun from the Khalil Sakakini Cultural Center

lajjun, this, article, about, palestinian, village, nearby, archaeological, site, legio, confused, with, lejjun, archaeological, site, karak, governorate, jordan, arabic, اللج, ون, lajjūn, large, palestinian, arab, village, located, kilometers, northwest, jeni. This article is about the Palestinian village For the nearby archaeological site see Legio Not to be confused with the al Lajjun or el Lejjun archaeological site in Karak Governorate Jordan Lajjun Arabic اللج ون al Lajjun was a large Palestinian Arab village located 16 kilometers 9 9 mi northwest of Jenin and 1 kilometer 0 62 mi south of the remains of the biblical city of Megiddo The Israeli kibbutz of Megiddo Israel was built 600 metres north east of the depopulated village on the hill called Dhahrat ed Dar from 1949 Lajjun اللج ونLegio al Lajjun el LejjunLajjun 1924 Roman or Byzantine columns and modern huts Rockefeller Museum 1870s map 1940s map modern map 1940s with modern overlay mapA series of historical maps of the area around Lajjun click the buttons LajjunLocation within Mandatory PalestineCoordinates 32 34 29 N 35 10 40 E 32 57472 N 35 17778 E 32 57472 35 17778Palestine grid167 220Geopolitical entityMandatory PalestineSubdistrictJeninDate of depopulationMay 30 1948 1 Area Total77 242 dunams 77 242 km2 or 29 823 sq mi Population 1948 Total1 280Cause s of depopulationMilitary assault by Yishuv forcesCurrent LocalitiesKibbutz Megiddo 2 Named after an early Roman legion camp in Syria Palaestina province called Legio predating the village at that location Lajjun s history of habitation spanned some 2 000 years Under Abbasid rule it was the capital of a subdistrict during Mamluk rule it served as an important station in the postal route and during Ottoman rule it was the capital of a district that bore its name After the collapse of the Ottoman Empire towards the end of World War I Lajjun and all of Palestine was placed under the administration of the British Mandate The village was depopulated during the 1948 Arab Israeli War when it was captured by Israel Most of its residents subsequently fled and settled in the nearby town of Umm al Fahm Contents 1 Etymology 2 Geography 3 History 3 1 Bronze and Iron Ages 3 2 Roman era 3 3 Early Muslim period 3 4 Crusader Ayyubid and Mamluk periods 3 5 Ottoman era 3 5 1 Early rule and the Tarabay family 3 5 2 Later Ottoman rule 3 6 British Mandate period 3 6 1 1948 War 3 7 State of Israel 4 Demographics 5 Culture 6 Archaeology 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksEtymology editThe name Lajjun derives from the Roman name Legio referring to the Roman legion stationed there In the 3rd century the town was renamed Maximianopolis City of Maximian by Diocletian in honor of Maximian his co emperor 3 but the inhabitants continued to use the old name Under the Caliphate the name was Arabicized into al Lajjun or el Lejjun 4 which was used until the Crusaders conquered Palestine in 1099 The Crusaders restored the Roman name Legio and introduced new names such as Ligum and le Lyon but after the town was reconquered by the Muslims in 1187 5 al Lajjun once again became its name Geography editModern Lajjun was built on the slopes of three hills roughly 135 175 meters above sea level 6 located on the southwestern edge of the Jezreel Valley Marj ibn Amer Jenin the entire valley and Nazareth range are visible from it The village was located on both the banks of a stream a tributary of Kishon River The stream flows to the north and then east over 6 kilometres 3 7 mi before arriving at Lajjun That section is called Wadi es Sitt valley of the lady in Arabic 7 The northern quarter was built in close proximity to a number of springs including Ayn al Khalil Ayn Nasir Ayn Sitt Leila and Ayn Jumma collectively known as Uyun Seil Lajjun 8 The eastern quarter was next to Ayn al Hajja 9 From Lajjun onward the stream is called Wadi al Lajjun in Arabic 10 11 In Hebrew the Israeli Government Naming Committee decided in 1958 to use the name Nahal Qeni Hebrew נ ח ל ק ינ י for the entire length of the stream based on its ancient identification see below 12 Lajjun is bordered by Tall al Mutsallem to the northeast and by Tall al Asmar to the northwest Lajjun which was linked by secondary roads to the Jenin Haifa road and the road that led southwest to the town of Umm al Fahm laid close to the junctions of the two highways 13 Nearby localities included the destroyed village of Ayn al Mansi to the northwest and the surviving villages of Zalafa to the south Bayada and Musheirifa to the southwest and Zububa part of the Palestinian territories to the southeast The largest town near al Lajjun was Umm al Fahm to the south 14 History editBronze and Iron Ages edit Lajjun is about 1 kilometer 0 62 mi south of Tel Megiddo also called Tell al Mutasallim which is identified with ancient Megiddo 5 During the rule of the Canaanites and then the Israelites Megiddo located on the military road leading from Asia to Egypt and in a commanding situation was heavily fortified by both peoples Lajjun stream has been identified with the brook Kina or Qina which is mentioned in the Egyptian descriptions of Thutmose III s Battle of Megiddo According to the reconstruction of Harold Hayden Nelson the entire battle was fought in the valley between the three quarters of modern Lajjun 15 However both Na aman 16 and Zertal 17 18 suggested alternative locations for Qina Some biblical scholars proposed that this stream is also the battle site referred to as Waters of Megiddo in the Song of Deborah while others maintain that any part of the Kishon river system is equally likely 19 In the same context Judges 4 attests to the presence of a branch of the Kenite clan somewhere in the area relating this name to Thutmose s Annals scholars like Shmuel Yeivin theorized that the name Qina derives from qyni Hebrew קיני 20 Donald B Redford noted that the Egyptian transliteration might be of qayin 21 Roman era edit Modern day historical geographers have placed the Second Temple period village of Kefar ʿUthnai Hebrew כפר עותנאי in the confines of the Arab village and which place name underwent a change after a Roman Legion had camped there 22 23 It appears in Latin characters under its old name Caporcotani in the Tabula Peutingeriana Map and lay along the Roman road from Caesarea to Scythopolis Beit Shean 24 25 26 Ptolemy Geography V 15 3 also mentions the site in the second century CE referring to the place under its Latin appellation Caporcotani and where he mentions it as one of the four cities of the Galilee with Sepphoris Julias and Tiberias 27 Among the village s famous personalities was Rabban Gamliel 28 After the Bar Kochba Revolt a Jewish uprising against the Roman Empire had been suppressed in 135 CE the Roman emperor Hadrian ordered a second Roman legion Legio VI Ferrata 6th Ironclad Legion to be stationed in the north of the country to guard the Wadi Ara region a crucial line of communication between the coastal plain of Palestine and the Jezreel Valley 5 29 The place where it established its camp was known as Legio In the 3rd century CE when the army was removed Legio became a city and its name was augmented with the adjectival Maximianopolis 3 29 Eusebius mentions the village in his Onomasticon under the name Legio Early Muslim period edit Some Muslim historians believe the site of the Battle of Ajnadayn between the Muslim Arabs and the Byzantines in 634 CE was at Lajjun Following the Muslim victory Lajjun along with most of Palestine and southern Syria were incorporated into the Caliphate 30 According to medieval geographers Estakhri and Ibn Hawqal Lajjun was the northernmost town of Jund Filastin military district of Palestine 31 A hoard of dinars dating from the Umayyad era have been found at Lajjun 32 The 10th century Persian geographer Ibn al Faqih wrote of a local legend related by the people of Lajjun regarding the source of the abundant spring used as the town s primary water source over the ages there is just outside al Lajjun a large stone of round form over which is built a dome which they call the Mosque of Abraham A copious stream of water flows from under the stone and it is reported that Abraham struck the stone with his staff and there immediately flowed from it water enough to suffice for the supply of the people of the town and also to water their lands The spring continues to flow down to the present day 33 In 940 Ibn Ra iq during his conflict over control of Syria with the Ikhshidids of Egypt fought against them in an indecisive battle at Lajjun During the battle Abu Nasr al Husayn the Ikhshidid general and brother of the Ikhshidid ruler Muhammad ibn Tughj was killed Ibn Ra iq was remorseful at the sight of Husayn s dead body and offered his seventeen year old son Abu l Fath Muzahim to Ibn Tughj to do with him whatever they saw fit Ibn Tughj was honored by Ibn Ra iq s gesture instead of executing Muzahim he gave the latter several gifts and robes then married him to his daughter Fatima 34 In 945 the Hamdanids of Aleppo and the Ikhshidids fought a battle in Lajjun It resulted in an Ikhshidid victory putting a halt to Hamdanid expansion southward under the leadership of Sayf al Dawla 13 The Jerusalemite geographer al Muqaddasi wrote in 985 that Lajjun was a city on the frontier of Palestine and in the mountain country it is well situated and is a pleasant place 35 Moreover it was the center of a nahiya subdistrict of Jund al Urdunn military district of Jordan 36 which also included the towns of Nazareth and Jenin 37 38 Crusader Ayyubid and Mamluk periods edit When the Crusaders invaded and conquered the Levant from the Fatimids in 1099 al Lajjun s Roman name Legio was restored and the town formed a part of the lordship of Caesarea During this time Christian settlement in Legio grew significantly John of Ibelin records that the community owed the service of 100 sergeants Bernard the archbishop of Nazareth granted some of the tithes of Legio to the hospital of the monastery of St Mary in 1115 then in 1121 he extended the grant to include all of Legio including its church as well as the nearby village of Ti inik By 1147 the de Lyon family controlled Legio but by 1168 the town was held by Payen the lord of Haifa Legio had markets a town oven and held other economic activities during this era In 1182 the Ayyubids raided Legio and in 1187 it was captured by them under the leadership of Saladin s nephew Husam ad Din Amr and consequently its Arabic name Lajjun was restored 5 In 1226 Arab geographer Yaqut al Hamawi writes of the Mosque of Abraham in Lajjun the town s copious stream and that it was a part of the Jordan Province 39 A number of Muslim kings and prominent persons passed through the village including Ayyubid sultan al Kamil who gave his daughter Ashura in marriage to his nephew while visiting the town in 1231 40 The Ayyubids ceded Lajjun to the Crusaders in 1241 but it fell to the Mamluks under Baibars in 1263 A year later a party of Templars and Hospitallers raided Lajjun and took 300 men and women captives to Acre In the treaty between Sultan Qalawun and the Crusaders on 4 June 1283 Lajjun was listed as the Mamluk territory 5 By 1300 the Levant was entirely in Mamluk hands and divided into several provinces Lajjun became the center of an ʿAmal subdistrict in the Mamlaka of Safad ultimately becoming one of sixteen 41 In the 14th century members of a Yamani tribe lived there 42 Shams al Din al Uthmani writing probably in the 1370s reported it was the seat of Marj ibn Amer and had a great khan for travellers a terrace of the sultan and the Maqam shrine of Abraham 43 The Mamluks fortified it in the 15th century and the town became a major staging post on the postal route braid between Egypt and Damascus 5 Ottoman era edit Early rule and the Tarabay family edit The Ottoman Empire conquered most of Palestine from the Mamluks after the Battle of Marj Dabiq in 1517 As the army of Sultan Selim I moved south towards Egypt 44 Tarabay ibn Qaraja chieftain of the Bani Hareth a Bedouin tribe from the Hejaz supported them by contributing guides and scouts 45 When the Mamluks were completely uprooted and Selim returned to Istanbul the Tarabays were granted the territory of Lajjun The town eventually became the capital of the Sanjak District of Lajjun which was a part of the province of Damascus and encompassed the Jezreel Valley northern Samaria and a part of the north central coastline of Palestine as its territory 46 47 48 It was composed of four nahiyas sub districts Jinin Sahel Atlit Sa ra and Shafa and encompassed a total of 55 villages including Haifa Jenin and Baysan 49 After a short period in which the Tarabays were in a state of rebellion tensions suddenly died down and the Ottomans appointed Ali ibn Tarabay as the governor of Lajjun in 1559 His son Assaf Tarabay ruled Lajjun from 1571 to 1583 During his reign he extended Tarabay power and influence to Sanjak Nablus 44 In 1579 Assaf referred to as the Sanjaqbey of al Lajjun is mentioned as the builder of a mosque in the nearby village of al Tira 50 Assaf was deposed and banished in 1583 to the island of Rhodes Six years later in 1589 he was pardoned and resettled in the town At the time an impostor also named Assaf had attempted to seize control of Sanjak Lajjun Known later as Assaf al Kadhab Assaf the Liar he was arrested and executed in Damascus where he traveled in attempt to confirm his appointment as governor of the district 44 In 1596 Lajjun was a part of the nahiya of Sha ra and paid taxes on a number of crops including wheat barley as well as goats beehives and water buffaloes 51 Assaf Tarabay was not reinstated as governor but Lajjun remained in Tarabay hands under the rule of Governor Tarabay ibn Ali who was succeeded upon his death by his son Ahmad in 1601 who also ruled until his death in 1657 Ahmad known for his courage and hospitality 44 helped the Ottomans defeat the rebel Ali Janbulad and gave shelter to Yusuf Sayfa Janbulad s principal rival Ahmad in coordination with the governors of Gaza the Ridwan family and Jerusalem the Farrukh family also fought against Fakhr ad Din II in a prolonged series of battles 44 which ended with the victory of the Tarabay Ridwan Farrukh alliance after their forces routed Fakhr ad Din s army at the al Auja river in central Palestine in 1623 52 The Ottoman authorities of Damascus expanded Ahmad s fief as a token of gratitude Ahmad s son Zayn Tarabay ruled Lajjun for a brief period until his death in 1660 He was succeeded by Ahmad s brother Muhammad Tarabay who according to his French secretary had good intentions for governing Lajjun but was addicted to opium and as a result had been a weak leader After his death in 1671 other members of the Tarabay family ruled Lajjun until 1677 when the Ottomans replaced them with a government officer 45 The main reason behind the Ottoman abandonment of the Tarabays was that their larger tribe the Bani Hareth migrated east of Lajjun to the eastern banks of the Jordan River 53 Later during this century Sheikh Ziben ancestor to the Arrabah based Abd al Hadi clan became the leader of Sanjak Lajjun 49 When Henry Maundrell visited in 1697 he described the place as an old village near which was a good khan 54 Later Ottoman rule edit nbsp Drawing of the remains of the khan and old bridge at Lajjun 1870s 55 Much of the Lajjun district territories were actually taxed by the stronger families of Sanjak Nablus by 1723 Later in the 18th century Lajjun was replaced by Jenin as the administrative capital of the sanjak which now included the Sanjak of Ajlun By the 19th century it was renamed Sanjak Jenin although Ajlun was separated from it 56 Zahir al Umar who became the effective ruler of the Galilee for a short period during the second half of the 18th century was reported to have used cannons against Lajjun in the course of his campaign between 1771 1773 to capture Nablus 57 It is possible that this attack led to the village s decline in the years that followed 58 By that time Lajjun s influence was diminished by the increasing strength of Acre s political power and Nablus s economic muscle 56 nbsp Old bridge of Lajjun picture taken between 1903 and 1905 59 Edward Robinson visited in 1838 and noted that the khan which Maundrell commented on was for the accommodation of the caravans passing on the great road between Egypt and Damascus which comes from the western plain along the coast over the hills to Lajjun and enters the plain of Esdraelon 60 When the British consul James Finn visited the area in the mid 19th century he did not see a village 61 The authors of the Survey of Western Palestine also noticed a khan south of the ruins of Lajjun in the early 1880s 62 Gottlieb Schumacher saw caravans resting at the Lajjun stream in the early 1900s 63 nbsp A herd of camels near a stream in Lajjun 1908 63 Andrew Petersen inspecting the place in 1993 noted that the principal extant buildings at the site are the khan and a bridge The bridge which crosses a major tributary of the Kishon River is approximately 4 meters 13 ft wide and 16 meters 52 ft to 20 meters 66 ft long It is carried on three arches the north side has been robbed of its outer face while the south side is heavily overgrown with vegetation According to Petersen the bridge was already in ruins when drawn by Charles William Wilson in the 1870s The khan is located on a low hill 150 meters 490 ft to the southwest of the bridge It is a square enclosure measuring approximately 30 meters 98 ft per side with a central courtyard The ruins are covered with vegetation and only the remains of one room is visible 64 The modern village of Lajjun was a satellite village Umm al Fahm During its existence it came to eclipse its mother settlement in infrastructure and economic importance 65 Originally in the late 19th century Arabs from Umm al Fahm started to make use of the Lajjun farmland settling for the season 13 40 66 Gradually they settled in the village building their houses around the springs In 1903 1905 Schumacher excavated Tell al Mutasallim ancient Megiddo and some spots in Lajjun Schumacher wrote that Lajjun el Leddschōn is properly the name of the stream and surrounding farmlands 67 and calls the village along the stream Ain es Sitt Which he noted consists of only nine shabby huts in the midst of ruins and heaps of dung and a few more fellahin huts south of the stream 68 By 1925 some of the inhabitants of Lajjun reused stones from the ancient structure that had been unearthed to build new housing 69 At some point in the early 20th century the four hamulas clans of Umm al Fahm divided the land among themselves al Mahajina al Ghubariyya al Jabbarin and al Mahamid clans 70 71 Lajjun thus transformed into three Lajjuns or administratively separate neighbourhoods reflecting the Hebronite Khalili settlement pattern of its founders 72 Taken more broadly Lajjun was one of the settlements of the so called Fahmawi Commonwealth a network of interspersed communities connected by ties of kinship and socially economically and politically affiliated with Umm al Fahm The Commonwealth dominated vast sections of Bilad al Ruha Ramot Menashe Wadi Ara and Marj Ibn Amir Jezreel Valley during that time 72 nbsp Map of Tel Megiddo and Lajjun in 1905 The village is at the dark knee of the stream nbsp Aerial photo with Lajjun and Tel Megiddo 1944Notice the changes such as a new quarter in the bottom left corner the roads and the British police station near the intersection British Mandate period edit More people moved to Lajjun during the British mandate period particularly in the late thirties due to the British crackdown on participants in the 1936 1939 Arab revolt in Palestine 58 The tomb of Yusuf Hamdan a local leader of the revolt is located in the village 73 Others moved in as they came to understand that the Mandate authorities planned to turn Lajjun into a county seat 74 During 1940 1941 a police station belonging to the Tegart forts system was constructed at the road intersection outside Lajjun by the British Mandate government 75 Lajjun s economy grew rapidly as a result of the influx of the additional population 58 As the village expanded it was divided into three quarters one to the east one to the west and the older one in the north Each quarter was inhabited by one or more hamula clan 66 nbsp Survey of Palestine map of Lajjun 1946Lajjun had a school that was founded in 1937 and that had an enrollment of 83 in 1944 It was located in the quarter belonging to the al Mahajina al Fawqa clan that is in Khirbat al Khan In 1943 one of the large landowners in the village financed the construction of a mosque built of white stone in the al Ghubariyya eastern quarter Another mosque was also established in the al Mahamid quarter during the same period and was financed by the residents themselves 66 It was a four year elementary school for boys 76 In 1945 Lajjun Umm al Fahm and seven hamlets had a total land area of 77 24 square kilometres 29 82 sq mi of which 68 3 square kilometres 26 4 sq mi was Arab owned and the remainder being public property 77 78 There was a total of 50 km2 12 000 acres of land that was cultivated 4 3 km2 1 100 acres were used for plantations and irrigated and 44 6 km2 11 000 acres were planted with cereals wheat and barley 79 The built up area of the villages was 0 128 km2 32 acres most of it being in Umm al Fahm and Lajjun 80 Former villagers recall they grew wheat and corn in the fields and irrigated crops such as eggplant tomato okra cowpea and watermelon 81 A survey map from 1946 shows most of the buildings in the eastern and western quarters as built from stone and mud 9 but some used mud over wood 82 Many houses had neighbouring small plots marked as orchards 9 There was a small market place in the village as well as six grain mills powered by the numerous springs and wadis in the vicinity and a health center 66 The various quarters of Lajjun had many shops A bus company was established in Lajjun by a villager from Umm al Fahm the bus line served Umm al Fahm Haifa and a number of villages such as Zir in In 1937 the line had seven buses Subsequently the company was licensed to serve Jenin also and acquired the name of al Lajjun Bus Company 83 1948 War edit Lajjun was allotted to the Arab state in the 1947 proposed United Nations Partition Plan The village was defended by the Arab Liberation Army ALA 11 and was the logistical headquarters of the Iraqi army It was first assaulted by the Haganah on April 13 during the battle around kibbutz Mishmar HaEmek ALA commander Fawzi al Qawuqji claimed Jewish forces Haganah had attempted to reach the crossroads at Lajjun in an outflanking operation but the attack failed The New York Times reported that twelve Arabs were killed and fifteen wounded during that Haganah offensive 84 Palmach units of the Haganah raided and blew up much of Lajjun on the night of April 15 16 85 On April 17 it was occupied by the Haganah According to the newspaper Lajjun was the most important place taken by the Jews whose offensive has carried them through ten villages south and east of Mishmar Ha emek The report added that women and children had been removed from the village and that 27 buildings in the village were blown up by the Haganah However al Qawuqji states that attacks resumed on May 6 when ALA positions in the area of Lajjun were attacked by Haganah forces The ALA s Yarmouk Battalion and other ALA units drove back their forces but two days later the ALA commander reported that the Haganah was trying to cut off the Lajjun area from Tulkarm in preparation of seizing Lajjun and Jenin 86 State of Israel edit On May 30 1948 in the first stage of the 1948 Arab Israeli War Lajjun was captured by Israel s Golani Brigade in Operation Gideon The capture was particularly important for the Israelis because of its strategic location at the entrance of the Wadi Ara which thus brought their forces closer to Jenin 87 During the second truce between Israel and the Arab coalition in early September a United Nations official fixed the permanent truce line in the area of Lajjun according to press reports A 500 yard strip was established on both sides of the line in which Arabs and Jews were allowed to harvest their crops 13 Lajjun was used as transit place by the Israel Defense Forces to transfer 1 400 Arab women children and elderly from Ijzim who then were sent on foot to Jenin 88 Kibbutz Megiddo was built on some of Lajjun s village lands starting in 1949 Lajjun s buildings were demolished in the following months 89 In November 1953 34 6 square kilometres 13 4 sq mi of the lands of Umm al Fahm were confiscated by the state invoking the Land Acquisition Validation of Acts and Compensation Law 5713 1953 These included much of the built up area of Lajjun at Block 20420 covering 0 2 square kilometres 0 077 sq mi 90 It was later planted with forest trees In 1992 Walid Khalidi described the remains Only the white stone mosque one village mill the village health center and a few partially destroyed houses remain on the site The mosque has been converted into a carpentry workshop and one of the houses has been made into a chicken coop The health center and grain mill are deserted and the school is gone The cemetery remains but it is in a neglected state the tomb of Yusuf al Hamdan a prominent nationalist who fell in the 1936 revolt is clearly visible The surrounding lands are planted with almond trees wheat and barley they also contain animal sheds a fodder plant and a pump installed on the spring of Ayn al Hajja The site is tightly fenced in and entry is blocked 89 In 2000 Meron Benvenisti restated the information about the 1943 white mosque 2 By 2007 it was evacuated and sealed up 73 In the 2000s 486 families from Umm al Fahm formerly from Lajjun through Adalah motioned to nullify the confiscation of that particular block The district court ruled against the plaintiffs in 2007 73 and the supreme court held the decision in 2010 91 Lajjun is among the Palestinian villages for which commemorative Marches of Return have taken place typically as part of Nakba Day such as the demonstrations organized by the Association for the Defence of the Rights of the Internally Displaced 92 In 2013 architect Shadi Habib Allah presented a proposal for a Palestinian village to be rebuilt on Lajjun in areas that are currently a park and inhabited by descendants of its displaced residents The presentation was made for the From Truth to Redress conference organized by Zochrot 93 Demographics editDuring early Ottoman rule in 1596 Lajjun had a population of 226 people 51 In the British Mandate census in 1922 there were 417 inhabitants 94 In the 1931 census of Palestine the population had more than doubled to 857 of which 829 were Muslims 26 were Christians as well as two Jews 40 95 In that year there were 162 houses in the village 11 95 At the end of 1940 Lajjun had 1 103 inhabitants The prominent families of al Lajjun were the Jabbarin Ghubayriyya Mahamid and the Mahajina Around 80 of its inhabitants fled to Umm al Fahm where they currently live as Arab citizens of Israel and internally displaced Palestinians 73 Culture editLocal tradition centered on Ayn al Hajja the spring of Lajjun date back to the 10th century CE when the village was under Islamic rule According to geographers of that century as well as the 12th century the legend was that under the Mosque of Abraham a copious stream flowed which formed immediately after the prophet Abraham struck the stone with his staff 33 Abraham had entered the town with his flock of sheep on his way towards Egypt and the people of the village informed him that the village possessed only small quantities of water thus Abraham should pass on the village to another According to the legend Abraham was commanded to strike the rock resulting in water bursting out copiously From then the village orchards and crops were well irrigated and the people satisfied with a surplus of drinking water from the spring 39 In Lajjun there are tombs for two Mamluk era Muslim relics who were from the village The holy men were Ali Shafi i who died in 1310 and Ali ibn Jalal who died in 1400 13 Archaeology editIn 2001 archaeological excavations were conducted by the Israel Antiquities Authority IAA at sites of Kefar Otnay and Legio west of Megiddo Junction The results revealed artifacts dating back to the Roman and early Byzantine periods 96 In 2004 further excavations were conducted by the IAA at Legio 97 See also editHistory of Palestine Depopulated Palestinian locations in Israel List of villages depopulated during the Arab Israeli conflict Megiddo church possibly dating to the 3rd century and located at ancient LegioReferences edit Morris 2004 p xviii village 147 Also gives the cause of depopulation a b Benvenisti 2000 p 319 a b Tepper 2003 Cline 2002 p 115 a b c d e f Pringle 1998 p 3 Survey of Palestine 1928 1947 Palestine Map 1 20 000 pp 16 21 Umm al Fahm 16 22 Megiddo Palmer 1881 p 156 State of Israel Hydrographic list part 2 items no 282 286 295 a b c Survey of Palestine 1947 Lajjun Map 1 2 500 Village Surveys 1946 via Israel State Archives Survey of Palestine 1928 1947 Palestine Map 1 20 000 pp 16 21 Umm al Fahm 16 22 Megiddo 17 22 Afula a b c Welcome to al Lajjun Palestine Remembered State of Israel Hydrographic list part 1 item no 177 in list and indices a b c d e Rami S al Lajjun Archived 2008 11 20 at the Wayback Machine Jerusalemites Palestine Remembered Satellite View of al Lajjun اللجون Jinin جنين www palestineremembered com Nelson 1921 1913 Finkelstein Na aman 2005 Shechem of the Amarna Period and the Rise of the Northern Kingdom of Israel Israel Exploration Journal 55 2 178 JSTOR 27927106 Zertal Adam 2011 The Arunah Pass Egypt Canaan and Israel History Imperialism Ideology and Literature pp 342 356 doi 10 1163 ej 9789004194939 i 370 122 ISBN 9789004210691 Zertal 2016 pp 51 52 74 Gass Erasmus 2017 The Deborah Barak Composition Jdg 4 5 Some Topographical Reflections Palestine Exploration Quarterly 149 4 326 335 doi 10 1080 00310328 2017 1386439 ISSN 0031 0328 S2CID 165369658 Yeivin Shmuel 1962 הערות טופוגראפיות ואתניות חמשת בתי האב הכושיים בכנען Topographic and ethnic remarks II 5 the five Cushite clans of Canaan Beit Mikra Journal for the Study of the Bible and Its World in Hebrew 7 2 31 JSTOR 23499537 Redford 2003 p 109 note 26 Zissu Boaz 2006 Miqwaʾ ot at Kefar ʿOthnai near Legio Israel Exploration Journal 56 1 57 66 JSTOR 27927125 Safrai 1980 p 223 note 5 Tsafrir Di Segni amp Green p 170 B Isaac amp I Roll 1982 Thomsen p 77 David Adan Bayewitz Martin Szusz Department of Land of Israel Studies and Archaeology Bar Ilan University Question amp Response Archived 2019 04 02 at the Wayback Machine 2 December 2013 Babylonian Talmud Gittin 10b Mishnah Gittin 1 5 a b Khalidi 1992 p 334 Gil 1997 p 42 Estakhri and Ibn Hawqal quoted in le Strange 1890 p 28 Mayer 1932 pp 100 102 a b Ibn al Faqih quoted in le Strange 1890 p 492 Gil 1997 p 318 al Muqaddasi quoted in le Strange 1890 p 492 le Strange 1890 p 39 al Muqaddasi quoted in le Strange 1890 p 301 Al Muqaddasi The Best Divisions for Knowledge of the Regions Being a translation of Ahsan al Taqasim fi Maʿrifat al Aqalim Reading 1994 p 141 ISBN 1 873938 14 4 a b le Strange 1890 p 493 a b c Khalidi 1992 p 335 Popper 1955 p 16 Shams al Din al Uthmani cited in Drory 2004 p 179 Uthmani Ta rikh Safad sec X in a partial reproduction of the Arabic text in Lewis 1953 p 483 Cf a complete edition in Zakkar 2009 a b c d e Ze evi 1996 p 42 a b Ze evi 1996 p 41 Agmon 2006 p 65 Marom Roy Tepper Yotam Adams Matthew J 2023 05 09 Lajjun Forgotten Provincial Capital in Ottoman Palestine Levant al Bakhit Muḥammad ʻAdnan al Ḥamud Nufan Raja 1989 Daftar mufaṣṣal naḥiyat Marj Bani ʻAmir wa tawabiʻiha wa lawaḥiqiha allati kanat fi taṣarruf al Amir Ṭarah Bay sanat 945 ah www worldcat org Amman Jordanian University pp 1 35 Retrieved 2023 05 15 a b The Cultural Landscape of the Tell Jenin Region Leiden University Open Access p 29 p 32 Heyd 1960 110 n 4 Cited in Petersen 2002 p 306 a b Hutteroth and Abdulfattah 1977 p 190 Quoted in Khalidi 1992 p 521 Ze evi 1996 pp 49 50 Ze evi 1996 p 94 Maundrell 1836 p 97 Wilson ed 1881 vol 2 p 24 a b Doumani 1995 p 39 Abu Dayya 1986 51 cited in Khalidi 1992 p 335 a b c Kana na and Mahamid 1987 7 9 Cited in Khalidi 1992 p 335 Schumacher 1908 p 186 Robinson p 328 f f Finn 1868 229 30 also cited in Khalidi 1992 p 335 Conder and Kitchener 1882 SWPII pp 64 66 cited in Khalidi 1992 p 335 a b Schumacher 1908 p 6 Petersen 2001 p 201 Marom Roy Tepper Yotam Adams Matthew J 2024 01 03 Al Lajjun a Social and geographic account of a Palestinian Village during the British Mandate Period British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies doi 10 1080 13530194 2023 2279340 a b c d Kana na and Mahamid 1987 44 Cited in Khalidi 1992 p 335 Schumacher 1908 p 7 Schumacher 1908 pp 186 187 Fisher 1929 The Excavation of Armageddon Archived 2012 10 09 at the Wayback Machine p 18 cited in Khalidi 1992 p 335 Kana na and Mahamid 1987 44 45 Bronstein 2004 pp 7 16 a b Marom Roy Tepper Yotam Adams Matthew J 2024 01 03 Al Lajjun a Social and geographic account of a Palestinian Village during the British Mandate Period British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies 8 11 doi 10 1080 13530194 2023 2279340 ISSN 1353 0194 a b c d Isabelle Humphries Autumn 2007 Highlighting 1948 Dispossession in the Israeli Courts al Majdal No 35 BADIL Resource Center for Palestinian Residency and Refugee Rights Archived from the original on 2018 03 27 Retrieved 2018 03 26 Bronstein 2004 pp 8 13 Zissu Boaz Tepper Y Amit David 2006 Miqwa ot at Kefar Othnai near Legio Israel Exploration Journal 56 1 57 JSTOR 27927125 Bronstein 2004 pp 6 7 Department of Statistics 1945 p 17 Government of Palestine Department of Statistics Village Statistics April 1945 Quoted in Hadawi 1970 p 55 The seven hamlets were Aqqada Ein Ibrahim Khirbet al Buweishat Mu awiya Musheirifa al Murtafi a and Musmus Government of Palestine Department of Statistics Village Statistics April 1945 Quoted in Hadawi 1970 p 100 Government of Palestine Department of Statistics Village Statistics April 1945 Quoted in Hadawi 1970 p 150 Bronstein 2004 pp 3 6 10 11 12 Bronstein 2004 pp 5 6 Kana na and Mahamid 1987 48 49 Cited in Khalidi 1992 p 335 Schmidt Dana Adams British Repudiate Palestine Charge Deny Obstructing U N Unit Violence Flares as Big Evacuation Convoy Starts New York Times 1948 04 14 The New York Times Company Morris 2004 p 242 Schmidt Dana Adams Jews press Arabs in Pitched Battle in North Palestine Seize 10 Villages and 7 Guns in Mishmar Haemek Area Repel Counter Attacks UN Session Opens Today Special Assembly to Gather at Flushing Meadow in Gloom Zionist Rejects Truce Pitched Battle Rages in Palestine Jew Press Arabs in North Palestine New York Times 1948 04 16 The New York Times Company Tal 2004 p 232 Morris 2004 p 439 a b Khalidi 1992 pp 336 337 See GIS map by the Survey of Israel 1 Israeli Supreme Court Rules that Lands Confiscated in Lajoun from 486 Arab Families in 1953 for Settlement Needs will not be Returned to Them Adalah 2010 01 12 Charif Maher Meanings of the Nakba Interactive Encyclopedia of the Palestine Question palquest Retrieved 2023 12 05 Pessah Tom 2013 10 05 At annual conference Palestinians and Israelis turn return into reality 972 Magazine Retrieved 2024 02 29 Barron 1923 Table IX Sub district of Jenin p 30 a b Mills 1932 p 69 IAA Report Kefar Otnay and Legio Israel Antiquities Authority Excavators and Excavations Permit for Year 2004 Survey Permit A 4227Bibliography editAgmon Iris 2006 Family amp Court Legal Culture and Modernity in Late Ottoman Palestine Syracuse University Press ISBN 9780815630623 Barron J B ed 1923 Palestine Report and General Abstracts of the Census of 1922 Government of Palestine Benvenisti M 2000 Sacred landscape the buried history of the Holy Land since 1948 Illustrated ed University of California Press ISBN 0 520 21154 5 Bronstein Eitan ed 2004 Remembering al Lajjun in Arabic and Hebrew Zochrot Includes the recollections of six former villagers Cline E H 2002 The Battles of Armageddon Megiddo and the Jezreel Valley from the Bronze Age to the Nuclear Age University of Michigan Press ISBN 0 472 06739 7 Conder C R Kitchener H H 1882 The Survey of Western Palestine Memoirs of the Topography Orography Hydrography and Archaeology Vol 2 London Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund Doumani B 1995 Rediscovering Palestine Merchants and Peasants in Jabal Nablus 1700 1900 University of California Press ISBN 0 520 20370 4 Drory Joseph 2004 Founding a New Mamlaka Some Remarks Concerning Safed and the Organization of the Region in the Mamluk period In Michael Winter Amalia Levanoni eds The Mamluks in Egyptian and Syrian Politics and Society BRILL pp 163 187 ISBN 90 04 13286 4 Fisher C S 1929 The Excavation of Armageddon Archived 2012 10 09 at the Wayback Machine Oriental Institute Communications 4 University of Chicago Press Gil M 1997 A History of Palestine 634 1099 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 59984 9 Government of Palestine Department of Statistics 1945 Village Statistics April 1945 Hadawi S 1970 Village Statistics of 1945 A Classification of Land and Area ownership in Palestine Palestine Liberation Organization Research Center Heyd Uriel 1960 Ottoman Documents on Palestine 1552 1615 Oxford University Press Oxford Cited in Petersen 2002 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 Isaac B Roll I 1982 Roman Roads in Judaea vol 1 The Legio Scythopolis Road BAR International Series 141 Oxford a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Kana na Sharif Mahamid Umar 1987 القرى الفلسطينية المدمرة اللجون Destroyed Palestinian villages 6 Lajjun Destroyed Palestinian villages in Arabic Vol 6 Bir Zeit University Center for Research and Documentations hdl 20 500 11889 5221 Khalidi W 1992 All That Remains The Palestinian Villages Occupied and Depopulated by Israel in 1948 Washington D C Institute for Palestine Studies ISBN 0 88728 224 5 Le Strange G 1890 Palestine Under the Moslems A Description of Syria and the Holy Land from A D 650 to 1500 Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund Lewis B 2009 An Arabic Account of the Province of Safed I Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 15 3 Shams al Din al Utmani fl 1372 1378 477 488 doi 10 1017 S0041977X00111449 ISSN 0041 977X S2CID 162542040 Maundrell H 1836 A Journey from Aleppo to Jerusalem At Easter A D 1697 Boston S G Simkins Mayer L A 1932 A hoard of Umayyad Dinars from El Lajjun Quarterly of the Department of Antiquities in Palestine 4 100 103 Mills E ed 1932 Census of Palestine 1931 Population of Villages Towns and Administrative Areas Jerusalem Government of Palestine Morris B 2004 The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem Revisited Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 00967 6 Nelson Harold Hayden 1921 1913 The Battle of Megiddo Thesis Ph D University of Chicago Palmer E H 1881 The Survey of Western Palestine Arabic and English Name Lists Collected During the Survey by Lieutenants Conder and Kitchener R E Transliterated and Explained by E H Palmer Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund Petersen Andrew 2001 A Gazetteer of Buildings in Muslim Palestine British Academy Monographs in Archaeology Vol 1 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 727011 0 Popper William Ibn Taghribirdi 1955 Egypt and Syria under the Circassian sultans 1382 1468 A D systematic notes to Ibn Taghri Birdi s chronicles of Egypt University of California publications in Semitic philology University of California Press Pringle D 1998 The Churches of the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem L Z excluding Tyre Vol II Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 39037 0 Ptolemy 2001 Berggren J Lennart amp al ed Ptolemy s Geography Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 09259 1 al Qawuqji F 1972 Memoirs of al Qawuqji Fauziin Journal of Palestine Studies Memoirs 1948 Part I in 1 no 4 Sum 72 27 58 pdf file downloadable pdf file downloadable Redford D B 2003 The Wars in Syria and Palestine of Thutmose III Brill ISBN 9789004129894 Robinson E Smith E 1841 Biblical Researches in Palestine Mount Sinai and Arabia Petraea A Journal of Travels in the year 1838 Vol 2 Boston Crocker amp Brewster Safrai Z 1980 Boundaries and Government in the Land of Israel in Hebrew Tel Aviv a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Schumacher G Watzinger C c 2015 German original 1908 Tell El mutesellim Report of the Excavations Conducted From 1903 to 1905 With the Support of His Majesty the German Emperor and the Deutsche Orient gesellschaft From the Deutscher Verein Zur Erforschung Palastinas Translated by Martin Mario The Megiddo Expedition Institute of Archaeology Tel Aviv University The edition follows the same pagination the German publication at Tell el Mutesellim Bericht uber die 1903 bis 1905 Leipzig Haupt 1908 State of Israel Hydrographic list of the map of Israel Government Naming Committee decisions in Reshumot רשימון הידרוגרפי של מפת ישראל חלק ראשון רשימון הנחלים Hydrographic list of the map of Israel part 1 list of streams PDF Yalkut HaPirsumim May 20 1958 רשימון הידרוגרפי של מפת ישראל חלק שני רשימון המעינות Hydrographic list of the map of Israel part 2 list of springs PDF Yalkut HaPirsumim April 9 1959 Tal D 2004 War in Palestine 1948 Strategy and Diplomacy Routledge ISBN 0 7146 5275 X Tepper Y 2003 Survey of the Legio Area near Megiddo Historical and Geographical Research MA thesis Tel Aviv University Tel Aviv Thomsen Peter 1966 Loca Sancta Hildesheim Tsafrir Di Segni Green 1994 Tabula Imperii Romani Iudaea Palaestina Eretz Israel in the Hellenistic Roman and Byzantine Periods Maps and Gazetteer Jerusalem ISBN 965 208 107 8 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Wilson C W ed c 1881 Picturesque Palestine Sinai and Egypt Vol 2 New York D Appleton Zakkar Suhayl al Uthmani Muhammad ibn Abd al Rahman al Husayni 2009 تاريخ صفد مع ملاحق عربية ولاتينية مترجمة تنشر للمرة الأولى The history of Safad with Arabic and Latin supplements translated for the first time Damascus Dar al Talwin OCLC 776865590 via Rafed Ze evi Dror 1996 An Ottoman Century The District of Jerusalem in the 1600s SUNY Press ISBN 0 7914 2915 6 Zertal A 2016 The Manasseh Hill Country Survey Vol 3 Boston Brill doi 10 1163 ej 9789004194939 i 370 122 ISBN 9789004312302 External links editWelcome To al Lajjun palestineremembered com Lajjun from Zochrot Survey of Western Palestine Map 8 Wikimedia commons Al Lajjon from Dr Moslih Kanaaneh Al Lajjun from the Khalil Sakakini Cultural Center Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lajjun amp oldid 1211092670, wikipedia, wiki, 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