Tiberias

Tiberias

Infobox Israel municipality
name=Tiberias


imgsize=110px
caption=


imgsize3=250
caption3=Aerial photo of Tiberias
hebname=Hebrew|טְבֶרְיָה
arname=طبرية
meaning=Spring Hill
founded=18 AD
type=city
typefrom=1948
stdHeb=
altOffSp=
altUnoSp=
district=north
population=40,000
popyear=2006
area_dunam=10000
mayor=Zohar Oved
website= [http://www.tiberias.muni.il/ www.tiberias.muni.il]
pushpin_

pushpin_mapsize=120
pushpin_map_caption=Location within Israel's North District
latd=32 |latm=47 |lats=23 |latNS=N
longd=35 |longm=31 |longs=29 |longEW=E

Tiberias (British English: IPA|/taɪˈbɪəriæs, -əs/; American English: IPA|/taɪˈbɪriəs/; _he. טְבֶרְיָה, "Tverya"; _ar. طبرية, "Unicode|Ṭabariyyah") is a town on the western shore of the Sea of Galilee, Lower Galilee, Israel. It was named in honour of the emperor Tiberius.Josephus, "Antiquities of the Jews" ]

History

Antiquity

Tiberias was established in around AD 20 by Herod Antipas, the son of Herod the Great, it became the capital of his realm in Galilee. It was named in honor of Antipas' patron, the Roman Emperor Tiberius. There is a myth that the site was of the destroyed village of Rakkat. [ [http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=205&letter=T Jewish Encyclopedia] During the persecutions in the reigns of the emperors Constantius and Gallus the Tiberian scholars decided to intercalate a month in the calendar for the year 353; but fear of the Romans led to the substitution of "Rakkath" (Josh. xix. 35) for "Tiberias"] Josephus describes the building of Tiberias by Herod Antipas near a village called Emmaus.

Tiberias's name in the Roman Empire (and consequently the form most used in English) was its Greek form, Τιβεριάς ("Tiberiás", Modern Greek Τιβεριάδα "Tiveriáda"), an adaptation of the taw-suffixed Semitic form that preserved its feminine grammatical gender.

During Herod's time, the Jews refused to settle there; the presence of a cemetery rendered the site ritually unclean. However, Antipas forcibly settled people there from rural Galilee in order to populate his new capital. The most famous personage from Tiberias was Saint Peter, the chief apostle of Christ and his most loved disciple. During the First Jewish–Roman War when most other cities in Palestine were razed, Tiberias was spared as its inhabitants remained loyal to Rome. [The Land and the Book: Or, Biblical Illustrations Drawn from the Manners and Customs, the Scenes and Scenery, of the Holy Land By William McClure Thomson Published by Harper & brothers, (1860) p 72] The Sanhedrin, the Jewish court, fled from Jerusalem during the Great Jewish Revolt against the Roman Empire, and after several stations eventually settled in Tiberias. It was in fact its final meeting place before its disbandment in the early Byzantine period. Following the expulsion of all Jews from Jerusalem after 135, Tiberias and its neighbor Sepphoris became the major centers of Jewish culture. The Mishnah, which grew into the Jerusalem Talmud, may have begun to have been written here.

In 613 it was the site where during the final Jewish revolt against the Byzantine Empire the Jewish population supported the Persian invaders. Following the Umayyad conquest, the Caliphate allowed 70 Jewish families from Tiberias to form the core of a renewed Jewish presence in Jerusalem. The caliphs of the Umayyad Dynasty also built one of its series of square-plan palaces (the most impressive of which is Hisham's Palace near Jericho) on the waterfront to the north of Tiberias, at Khirbet al-Minya.

Middle Ages

Under Byzantine and Arab rule, the city declined and was devastated by wars and earthquakes in the Middle Ages including the largest earthquake, in 749, which destroyed many synagogues. Despite this decline, the community of masoretic scholars flourished at Tiberias from the beginning of the 8th century to the end of the 10th. These scholars created a systematic written form of the vocalization of ancient Hebrew, which is still used by all streams of Judaism. The apogee of the Tiberian masoretic scholarly community is personified in Aaron ben Moses ben Asher, who refined the vocalization system now know as Tiberian Hebrew and is also credited with putting the finishing touches on the Aleppo Codex, the oldest existing manuscript of the Hebrew scriptures, another indication of Tiberias' centrality to Hebrew scholarship and medieval Judaism as a whole.

The Arab geographer al-Muqaddasi writing in 985 AD, recounts that Tabariyyah is "the capital of Jordan Province, and a city in the Valley of Canaan..The town is narrow, hot in summer and unhealthy. [ ] There are here eight natural hot baths, where no fuel need be used, and numberless basins besides of boiling water. The mosque is large and fine, and stands in the market-place. Its floor is laid in pebbles, set on stone drums, places close one to another." Muqaddesi further describes that those who suffers from scab, or ulcers, and other such-like diseases come to Tiberias to bath in the hot springs for three days. Afterwards they dip in another spring which is cold, wherupon [ ] they become cured. [Muk. p.161 and 185, quoted in Le Strange, Guy: "Palestine under the Moslems." London, 1890. p. 334-7]

Nasir-i Khusrou visited in 1047, and describes a city with a "strong wall" which begin at the border of the lake and goes all around the town except on the water-side. Furthermore, he describes:"numberless buildings erected in the very water, for the bed of the lake in this part is rock; and they have built pleasure houses that are supported on columns of marble, rising up out of the water. The lake is very full of fish. [] The Friday Mosque is in the midst of the town. At the gate of the mosque is a spring, over which they have built a hot bath. [] On the western side of the town is a mosque known as the Jasmine Mosque (Masjid-i-Yasmin). It is a fine building and in the middle part rises a great platform (dukkan), where they have their Mihrabs (or prayer-niches). All round those they have set jasmine-shrubs, from which the mosque derives its name." [Le Strange, Guy: "Palestine under the Moslems." London, 1890. p. 336-7]

During the crusades it was occupied by the Franks, soon after the capture of Jerusalem and it was given in fief to Tancred who made it his capital of the Principality of Galilee in the Kingdom of Jerusalem; the region was sometimes called the Principality of Tiberias, or the Tiberiad. ["The Crusades c. 1071-c 1291" Jean Richard, Cambridge University Press ISBN 0-521-62369-3 p 71] Saladin besieged it during his invasion of the kingdom in 1187, and in October of that year defeated the crusaders at the Battle of Hattin outside the city. Around this time the original site of the city was abandoned, and settlement shifted north to the present location.

Rabbi Moshe ben Maimon, known in English as Moses Maimonides, a leading Jewish legal scholar, philosopher and physician of his period, died in 1204 and was buried in Tiberias, creating one of the city's important pilgrimage sites.

Yakut, writing in the 1220s, described Tiberias as a small town, long and narrow. He also describes the "hot salt springs, over which they have built Hammams which use no fuel. Tabariyyah was first conquered by (the Arab commander) Shurahbil in the year 13 (634 AD) by capitulation; one half of the houses and churches were to belong to the Muslims, the other half to the Christians." [Le Strange, Guy: "Palestine under the Moslems." London, 1890. p. 340]

Ottoman to contemporary

In 1558, Doña Gracia, a former marrano Jew, was given the site and its surrounding villages as a gift from Suleiman the Magnificent. She restored the city walls, built a yeshiva and encouraged Sephardi Jews fleeing the Inquisition to settle in the city. Tiberias flourished again for a hundred years. It was devastated again, and again resettled by Hasidic Jews.Fact|date=October 2008 The last Jew died in 1620 at the passing of Quaresimus.

In the early 18. century, Tiberias was under the rule of the Arab-Bedouin ruler Dhaher al-Omar. Around 1730, Dhaher and his brother Youssef settled in Tiberias. He fortified the town and made agreement with the neighbouring Bedouin tribes to prevent their looting raids. Accounts from that time tell of the great admiration which the people had for Dhaher, especially for his war against bandits on the roads. Richard Pococke, who visited Tiberias in 1727, witnessed the building of a fort to the north of the city, and the strengthening of the old walls, and attributed it to a disagreement with the pasha (ruler) of Damascus. [ Richard Pococke: [http://books.google.com/books?id=wY4qAAAAMAAJ&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_summary_r&cad=0#PPA460,M1 A Description of the East and Some other Countries] , p. 460 ] it was under Dhaher's patronage that Jewish families were encouraged to settle in Tiberias around 1742. [Moammar, Tawfiq (1990), "Zahir Al Omar", Al Hakim Printing Press, Nazareth, page 70]

In 1746, rabbi Moshe Chaim Luzzatto, a leading ethicist and kabbalist of his generation, died of the plague in the nearby Mediterranean port city of Akko and was buried overlooking Tiberias, next to a site traditionally venerated as the grave of Rabbi Akiva.

In the 18th and 19th centuries Tiberias received an influx of rabbis who established the city as a center for Jewish learning.Fact|date=October 2008 During this time Tiberias became recognized as one of the Jewish Four Holy Cities, along with Jerusalem, Hebron, and Safed.Fact|date=October 2008

In 1938, Arab militants murdered 20 Jews in Tiberias as part of the 1936–1939 Arab revolt in Palestine. [cite web |url=http://www.indiana.edu/~league/1938.htm |title=United Nations Information System on the Question of Palestine |accessdate=2007-11-29 |format=.jpg|work=United Nations Information System on the Question of Palestine] In 1948, 9 Jews were massacred in Tiberias, and many Jewish families fled their homes for fear of more slaughter.Fact|date=October 2008

Between the 8 and 9 April sporadic shooting broke out between Palestinian Jewish and Palestinian Arab neighbourhoods of Teberias. On 10 April 1948, the Haganah, launched a violent mortar barrage against the Palestinian Arab residents. [Benny Morris (2004) p183] The British Mandatory authorities demanded that the entire Jewish population of Tiberias immediately remove itself from Tiberias or be prepared to suffer British shelling in support of the Arab attack. The Haganah counterattacked the “Arab Liberation Army” commanded by Fawzi al-Qawuqji, and captured Arab villages and neighborhoods which were deemed hostile. They razed these Arab villages to the ground and partly caused the exodus, under British military protection, of the entire Arab population. As a result of these conflicts, Tiberias and Safed, where the population had been mixed, became all-Jewish cities. [cite web |url=http://www.rosenblit.com/Law.htm |title=The Rosenblits' Website |accessdate=2007-11-29 |format=.jpg|work=The Rosenblits' Website ]

Today, Tiberias is Israel's most popular holiday resort in the northern part of the country.

In October 2004, a controversial group of rabbis claiming to represent varied communities in Israel undertook a ceremony in Tiberias, claiming to have established a new Sanhedrin. [ [http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/70349 Sanhedrin Launched In Tiberias] Israel National News, 13 October 2004]

port

Hapoel Tiberias represented the city in the top division of football for several seasons in the 1960s and 1980s, but eventually dropped into the regional leagues and folded due to financial difficulties.

Following Hapoel's demise, a new club, Ironi Tiberias, was established, which currently plays in Liga Alef.

Twin cities

Tiberias is twinned with:
*flagicon|Argentina Córdoba, Argentina
*Flagicon|France Montpellier, France, since 1983
*Flagicon|Germany Worms, Germany, since 1986
*Flagicon|Spain Tudela, Navarre, Spain
*Flagicon|USA flagicon|PennsylvaniaAllentown, Pennsylvania, United States, since 1996
*Flagicon|USA flagicon|Wisconsin Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States
*Flagicon|USA flagicon|Oklahoma Tulsa, Oklahoma, United States
*Flagicon|USA flagicon| New York Great Neck Plaza, New York, United States, since 2002
*Flagicon|China Wuxi, People's Republic of China, since 2007
*Flagicon|France Saint-Raphael, France, since 2007

Gallery

References

ee also

*Balady citron

External links

* [http://www.tiberias.muni.il City council website] he icon
* [http://www.tiberiasexcavation.com/ Tiberias - City of Treasures: The official website of the Tiberias Excavation Project]
* [http://www.lib.uchicago.edu/e/su/mideast/photo/Palestine.html Three early photos of Tiberias] University of Chicago
* [http://www.mfa.gov.il/MFA/Israel+beyond+politics/Coin%20of%20Jesus%20found%20in%20Ancient%20Tiberias%20Excavation%20Nov%202004 Israeli Ministry of Foreign affairs] Jesus coins
* [http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/967796.html Ha'aretz] Tiberias


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • TIBERIAS — (Heb. טְבֶרְיָה), city on the western shore of Lake Kinneret (the Sea of Galilee), and the largest settlement in the Jordan Valley. The name usually appears in the Jerusalem Talmud as Tivveryah, and in the Babylonian Talmud as Teverya. The city… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Tiberias — Tiberias …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Tiberias — • Titular see, suffragan of Scythopolis, in Palaestina Secunda Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Tiberias     Tiberias     † …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • Tiberias — Tiberias,   Stadt in Israel, 212 m unter dem Meeresspiegel 245 m über dem Meeresspiegel, am Westufer des Sees Genezareth (See von Tiberias), 37 600 Einwohner; Zentrum des am stärksten landwirtschaftlich genutzten Gebietes von Israel, das Bananen …   Universal-Lexikon

  • TIBERIAS — vulgo Tabarie nunc, teste Nigrô, urbs insignis Palaestinae cum lacu cognomine in Galilaea a Nazareth supra 10. mill. pasl. in Ortum inter Scythopolin ad Meridiem et Capharnaum ad Boream. Erat in tribu Zabulon, in agro opimo, et ora Occidentali… …   Hofmann J. Lexicon universale

  • Tiberĭas — Tiberĭas, Stadt in Galiläa, am westlichen Ufer des Sees Genesareth (See von T.), Herodes Antipas erbaute sie dem Kaiser Tiberius zu Ehren u. versah sie mit Rennbahn u. Amphitheater, konnte ahernur mit Mühe, u. zwar blos Heiden u. Gesindel als… …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

  • Tiberĭas — Tiberĭas, Stadt in Palästina (Galiläa), am Westufer des Sees Genezareth, der daher auch See von T. heißt, gewöhnliche Residenz des Herodes Antipas, der ihr dem Kaiser Tiberius zu Ehren den Namen gab, war im römisch griechischen Geschmack erbaul,… …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • Tiberias — Tiberĭas (arab. Tabarije), Stadt in Galiläa [Tafel: Bilder zur Biblischen Geschichte, 4], Wilajet Beirut, westl. am See Genezareth (See von T.), 7400 E.; um 25 n. Chr. von Herodes Antipas gegründet; hier 6. Juli 1187 Sieg Saladins über die… …   Kleines Konversations-Lexikon

  • Tiberias — Tiberias, s. Tabarieh …   Herders Conversations-Lexikon

  • Tiberias — [tī bir′ē əs] Sea of GALILEE Sea of …   English World dictionary

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