Al-Dalhamiyya

Al-Dalhamiyya (Arabic: الدلهمية) was a Palestinian Arab village in the Tiberias Subdistrict. It was depopulated during the 1947–1948 Civil War in Mandatory Palestine on April 15, 1948, under Operation Gideon. It was located 14 km south of Tiberias, on the north bank of the Yarmuk River, on the border between Mandatory Palestine and Transjordan.

Al-Dalhamiyya

الدلهمية
Village
Etymology: from a family name[1]
1870s map
1940s map
modern map
1940s with modern overlay map
A series of historical maps of the area around Al-Dalhamiyya (click the buttons)
Al-Dalhamiyya
Location within Mandatory Palestine
Coordinates: 32°39′38″N 35°35′52″E
Palestine grid204/230
Geopolitical entityMandatory Palestine
SubdistrictTiberias
Date of depopulationApril 15, 1948
Area
  Total2,852 dunams (2.852 km2 or 1.101 sq mi)
Population
 (1945)
  Total410[2][3]

History

Ottoman era

In 1838 Al-Dalhamiyya was pointed out to Edward Robinson during his travels in the area, as being located on the eastern bank, about half a mile above the mouth of the Yarmuk.[4]

In 1875 Victor Guérin noted that the houses of the village were built of adobe, and most were surmounted by reed huts.[5] The same year C. R. Conder called it a "miserable" adobe hamlet.[6][7] A population list from about 1887 showed ed Delhamiyeh wa ’Arab el Hanady to have about 650 inhabitants; all Muslims.[8]

Menachemya was founded by Zionist in 1902, close to the village, but not on village land.[9]

British Mandate era

At the time of the 1922 census of Palestine conducted by the British Mandate authorities, Delhamiyeh had a population of 352; 349 Muslims and 3 Jews,[10] decreasing to 240; 226 Muslims, 1 Jew and 13 Christians, living in 50 houses by the 1931 census.[11]

Ashdot Ya'aqov, southwest to the village site, and Ashdot Ya'aqov Me'uchad, west of the village site, were settled by Zionist in 1933, but none on village land.[9]

In the 1944/1945 statistics, the village had a population of 410; 390 Muslims and 20 Christians,[2] with a total of 2,852 dunams of land.[3] Of this, Arabs used 29 dunams for plantations and irrigable land, 1,709 dunams were used for cereals,[12] while a total of 442 dunams were un-cultivable.[13]

1948, aftermath

In 1992 the village site was described: "The village has been obliterated. There is a banana grove on the site that belongs to the nearby kibbutz, Ashdod Ya'aqov."[9]

gollark: Probably not, but yours relies on the majority of the environment too.
gollark: You know, this is much more complex than osmarkspythonbuildsystem™, and is it even concurrency?
gollark: Obviously dale should assimilate osmarkslisp™, but make it a lazily evaluated purely functional programming language.
gollark: Oh bee oh apioform. Tom Scott CANNOT be incorrect.
gollark: Under the FSG™ system, you have to explicitly register an idea, and when you do so it is erased entirely from everyone else's mind via our nanobot networks.

References

  1. Palmer, 1881, p. 160
  2. Department of Statistics, 1945, p. 12
  3. Government of Palestine, Department of Statistics. Village Statistics, April, 1945. Quoted in Hadawi, 1970, p. 72
  4. Robinson and Smith, 1841, vol. 3, p. 264
  5. Guérin, 1880, p. 284
  6. Conder, 1875, p. 74
  7. Conder and Kitchener, 1882, SWP II, p. 90
  8. Schumacher, 1888, p. 186
  9. Khalidi, 1992, p. 516
  10. Barron, 1923, Table XI, p. 39
  11. Mills, 1932, p.83
  12. Government of Palestine, Department of Statistics. Village Statistics, April, 1945. Quoted in Hadawi, 1970, p. 122
  13. Government of Palestine, Department of Statistics. Village Statistics, April, 1945. Quoted in Hadawi, 1970, p. 172

Bibliography


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.