This is a total mess, as a fork from Tel Rumeida. Some of dozens of issues with the first draft. As it stood it deserved deletion, but in the meantime.

i.e. the editor labored under the impression that Judith Cohen visited two decades after her death.
  • Youtube is not a source
  • Hebron.com is not RS and its material is nall self-published material
  • Citing an amazon or bookseller source (e.g. abe books) (http://www.abebooks.com/Sefer-Chibat-Yerushalayim-Love-Jerusalem-hibat/1797987264/bd%7Ctitle=Sefer Chibat Yerushalayim [Love of Jerusalem] hibat yerushalaim by HOROWITZ, Haim [Chaim]: Press of Moshe and Yehudit, Jerusalem Hardcover, 1st Edition - Meir Turner|website=www.abebooks.com) is not acceptable.
  • Citing texts without reference to the precise page, and translation, denies verifiability, and is unacceptable.
  • Wikipedia is not RS for articles-
  • Arutz Sheva is not RS for articles on archaeological sites.
  • Oded Avisar, Sefer Hebron' etc. is not RS-
  • 'Some researchers believe the location may be a remnant of King David's palace, due to its strategic location on a hilltop overlooking the Tomb of Machpela with a panoramic view of the city.'
They aren't researchers. No archaeological excavation has ever turned up any evidence of a connection with some fantasy of King David's Hebron 'palace' at Tel Rumeida. Nishidani (talk) 20:34, 8 March 2016 (UTC)Reply
Besides the "small fact" that the editor who started this mess (CarlSerafino) has less than 200 edits and should no be editing the area. As of now, I think it should be a AfD, what do others think? Huldra (talk) 22:03, 8 March 2016 (UTC)Reply
I don't know the technicalities. This is a fork of an ARBPIA page Tel Rumeida, so of course it immediately falls under that regime, though in building it the editor did not post an ARBPIA notice. From the edit record he had no right to do so, but, some might say, 'was he notified'. The page is more or less, as you can see from the original sourcing, a Hebron community construction of an alternative narrative to the one at Tel Rumeida. A significant amount of sourcing was taken from Tel Rumeida and Susya after a sockpuppet argued for strict observance of WP:RS, but the 'new' editor here is asking that WP:RS be ignored to make this new page. I don't have any view about AfD as yet, but the elements on this page that are well sourced are so few that they could be removed to the Tel Rumeida subsection. Nishidani (talk) 08:19, 9 March 2016 (UTC)Reply
Clearly the editor knows nothing about the subject, having restored everything in the face of the policy objections listed here without deigning to address them. I.e., no talk page justication and reintroducing pure nonsense that shows the editor is pastintg in stuff he/she doesn't understand. I.e.'Lady Judith Montefiore wrote in 1885'. I noted above that she died in 1862 (from memory) and her Private Notes quoted here were drafted ion 1828.
At the least, then, the page should be reverted to the form it had in my last edit, and the editor be asked to propose his building blocks one by one for examination of their adequacy to WP:RS. It all looks at the moment like WP:SYNTH.Nishidani (talk) 08:24, 9 March 2016 (UTC)Reply
Well, I have nominated it for deletion, as a POV-fork. Note that they use hebron.com (=the settler mouth-piece) as a WP:RS... Huldra (talk) 20:06, 9 March 2016 (UTC)Reply

"The Italian Jewish traveler Meshulam de Volterra visited the site during his travels which began in 1481."

edit

The source (Adler, p187) says "a place ten miles from Hebron", which is nowhere near Tel Rumeida. Zerotalk 03:36, 19 March 2016 (UTC)Reply

Well, that means only one thing. Whoever did that edit was misleading, so I've removed it. The text is:

The Italian Jewish traveler Meshulam de Volterra visited the site during his travels which began in 1481.[1] His journal has been reprinted in Elkan Nathan Adler's book Jewish Travellers in the Middle Ages: 19 Firsthand Accounts [citation needed] Nishidani (talk) 08:06, 19 March 2016 (UTC)

  1. ^ Adler, Elkan Nathan, ed. (2011-11-30). Jewish Travellers in the Middle Ages: 19 Firsthand Accounts. Dover Publications. ISBN 9780486253978.[page needed]

This undersourced mess only really deals with settlers' synagogue

edit

Either fix it, or delete it. Arminden (talk) 12:56, 18 December 2018 (UTC)Reply