This is a non-comprehsive list of continuous Jewish settlements in Israel.
External links
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c d https://embassies.gov.il/MFA/AboutIsrael/Maps/Pages/Jewish%20Communities%20in%20the%20Land%20of%20Israel%20-7th-11th.aspx "Jews in the Land of Israel (636-1880 CE)"
- ^ https://elibrary.law.psu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1722&context=psilr "Jews inhabited Hebron continually for millennia"
- ^ a b c https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/vie-hebron "Hebron is revered as one of the four holiest places in Judaism (along with Jerusalem, Safed and Tiberias) and Jews had lived continously there for centuries."
- ^ "Top Ten Biblical Tour Sites in Israel | the Hebron Fund". 18 July 2019.
- ^ a b c https://www.monmouth.edu/news/documents/the-holy-land-confederation-as-a-facilitator-for-the-two-state-solution-english.pdf/ "Indigenous Jews, living mostly in the four cities of Jerusalem, Hebron, Tiberias, and Safed"
- ^ Researchers race to document vanishing Jewish heritage of Galilee Druze village, Eli Ashkenaz, 25 July 2012, Haaretz, "Zinati, who was born in 1931, is the last link in the chain of a Jewish community that apparently maintained a continuous presence in Peki'in since the time of the Second Temple, when three families from the ranks of the kohenim, the priestly caste that served in the Temple, moved there. Since then, the only known break in the Jewish presence was during two years in the late 1930s, when the town's Jews fled the Arab riots of 1936–39. Most of them went to what they called the Hadera diaspora. But one family, Zinati's, returned home in 1940."
- ^ Jews and Muslims in the Arab World: Haunted by Pasts Real and Imagined, Jacob Lassner, Rowman & Littlefield, 2007, p.314, "...the small community of Peki'in in the mountains of the Galilee, not far from Safed, whose present-day residents could demonstrate that they were direct descendants of inhabitants of the village who had never gone into exile."
- ^ https://ejournals.bc.edu/index.php/levantine/article/download/9158/8253/15670 |title="The Levantine Review Volume 4 Number 2 (Winter 2015)"