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Hamama

Coordinates: 31°41′35″N 34°35′32″E / 31.69306°N 34.59222°E / 31.69306; 34.59222
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Hamama
حمامة
Hamameh[1]
People of Hamama with governor Aref al Aref and Julian Asquith, in 1943
People of Hamama with governor Aref al Aref and Julian Asquith, in 1943
Etymology: "dove"[2]
1870s map
1940s map
modern map
1940s with modern overlay map
A series of historical maps of the area around Hamama (click the buttons)
Hamama is located in Mandatory Palestine
Hamama
Hamama
Location within Mandatory Palestine
Coordinates: 31°41′35″N 34°35′32″E / 31.69306°N 34.59222°E / 31.69306; 34.59222
Palestine grid111/122
Geopolitical entityMandatory Palestine
SubdistrictGaza
Date of depopulation4 November 1948[5]
Area
 • Total
41,366 dunams (41.4 km2 or 16.0 sq mi)
Population
 (1945)
 • Total
5,070[3][4]
Cause(s) of depopulationMilitary assault by Yishuv forces
Current LocalitiesNitzanim,[6] Beit Ezra,[6] Eshkolot[6]

Hamama (Arabic: حمامة; also known in Byzantine times as Peleia) was a Palestinian town of over 5,000 inhabitants that was depopulated during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.[3][4] It was located 24 kilometers north of Gaza. It was continuously inhabited from the Mamluk period (in the 13th century) until 1948.[7][8]

Its ruins are today in the north of the Israeli city of Ashkelon.

Etymology

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Hamama's earliest recorded name is Peleia, dating to the Roman period. It translates as "dove", and when the Arabs conquered it through the Rashidun Caliphate in the seventh century, the town received its Arabic name Hamama meaning "dove", reflecting its Byzantine roots.

Underlying Hamama's Late Ottoman and British Mandate toponymy, is a limited stratum of pre-Ottoman village names. To this pre-existing stratum, residents added new place names referring in cases to families living in or around the village. The great importance of land as the main means of production in Hamama’s agrarian society, is reflected by many place names relating to the soil and its characteristics.[9]

History

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In the fifth century CE, the site consisted of the Byzantine town of Peleia.[10]

Remains from the fifth and sixth century CE have been found here, together with Byzantine ceramics.[11] A fragment of a Greek stone inscription was discovered at this site and is currently held at the Louvre in Paris.[12]

Hamama was located near the site of a battle in 1099 between the Crusaders and the Fatimids, resulting in a Crusader victory.[10] Later Hamama passed into Muslim Mamluk hands.

During the Mandate time, the village was visited by inspectors from the Department of Antiquities who noted two mosques. One of these, known as Shaykh Ibrahim Abi Arqub, included marble columns and capitals in the iwan. The eponymous mosque was affiliated with a mujāhid and descendant of ʿUmar b. al-Khaṭṭāb.The other mosque, known as Shaykh Hamid, also incorporated marble fragments. Neither of these mosques have survived.[13] Mandatory archaeologists documented a marble slab (0.3x0.95 m) located on the western wall of the mosque of Ibrāhīm Abū ʿArqūb. This slab featured a nine-line Arabic inscription, now unfortunately lost, which was dated to 700 AH/1301 AD, and the content of which remains unrecorded.[7]

By 1333/4 CE (734 H.) some of the income from the village formed part of a waqf of the tomb (turba) and madrasa of Aqbugha b. Abd Allah in Cairo.[14] In 1432, it is reported that the Mamluk sultan Barsbay passed through the village. In this period, a renowned scholar and preacher at the al-Aqsa Mosque, Ahmad al-Shafi'i (1406–1465), was born there.[10]

Ottoman era

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Hamama, like the rest of Palestine, was incorporated into the Ottoman Empire in 1517. In first Ottoman tax register of 1526/7 the village had a population of 31 Muslim households and one bachelor, and it belonged to the nahiya of Gaza (Gaza Sanjak).[15] In the tax registers of 1596 it had a population of 84 Muslim households, an estimated 462 persons. The villagers paid taxes on goats and beehives, in addition to occasional revenues; a total of 6,800 akçe. All of the revenue went to a waqf.[16] Its residents came from various places, including the Hauran, and Egypt.[17]

The seventeenth-century traveller al-Nabulsi recorded that the tomb (qabr) of Shaykh Ibrahim Abi Arqub was located in the village,[13] while the Syrian Sufi teacher and traveller Mustafa al-Bakri al-Siddiqi (1688-1748/9) (ar) visited Hamama in the first half of the eighteenth century, after leaving al-Jura.[18]

Marom and Taxel have shown that during the seventeenth to eighteenth centuries, nomadic economic and security pressures led to settlement abandonment around Majdal ‘Asqalān, and the southern coastal plain in general. The population of abandoned villages moved to surviving settlements, while the lands of abandoned settlements continued to be cultivated by neighboring villages. Thus, Hamama absorbed the lands of Ṣandaḥanna, Mi‘ṣaba, and excluded the lands of Bashsha, an exclave of al-Majdal.[19]

Hamama appears on Jacotin's map drawn-up during Napoleon's invasion in 1799, though its position is interchanged with that of Majdal.[20][21] In 1838, Hamameh was noted as a Muslim village in the Gaza district.[22]

Local administrative restructuring began in the 1860s as tanzimat reforms were implemented at the district level. The construction of the "quarter system"—the partition of village land among groups of families—led to significant economic development, as evidenced by village land usage in the early twentieth century.[7]

In 1863, the French explorer Victor Guérin visited the village, and noted a mosque constructed with ancient materials. The village had a population of "at least eight hundred souls".[23] He further noted: "The gardens of Hamama are outstandingly fertile. They are divided by living fences of huge cactus pears, and are planted with olive, fig, pomegranate, mulberry and apricot trees. Here and there slender palm trees and broad treetops of sycamore trees rise above them."[24]

An official Ottoman village list from about 1870 showed that Hamame had 193 houses and a population of 635, although it only counted the men.[25][26]

British Mandate era

[edit]

Under the British Mandate in Palestine, a village council was established to administer local affairs, and Hamama had a mosque, and two primary schools for boys and girls established in 1921.[27] British Mandate Ḥamāma had pre-planned new communities erected around the original village nucleus, with crisscrossed pathways separating the new residential quarters.[7]

In the 1922 census of Palestine, conducted by the British Mandate authorities, Hamama had a population of 2,731; 2,722 Muslims and 9 Christians,[28] where all the Christians were Orthodox.[29] The population had increased in the 1931 census to 3,405; 3,401 Muslims and 4 Christians, in a total of 865 houses.[30]

Hamada 1930 1:20,000
Hamada 1945 1:250,000 (lower left)

In the 1945 statistics Hamama had a population of 5,070; 5,000 Muslims, 10 Christians and 60 Jews,[3] with a total of 41,366 dunams of land, according to an official land and population survey.[4] Of this, 1,356 dunams were used for citrus and bananas, 4,459 dunams were for plantations and irrigable land, 28,890 for cereals,[31] while 167 dunams were built-up (urban) land.[32]

In the 1940s, British officials paved the road to the village for year-round automobile access.[7]

In 1946, the boys' school had an enrollment of 338, and the girls' school an enrollment of 46. Its inhabitants engaged primarily in fishing and agriculture, cultivating grain, citrus, apricots, almonds, figs, olives, watermelons, and cantaloupes. Due to the existence of sand dunes in the north part of the town, trees were planted on parts of those lands to prevent soil erosion.[27]

In addition to agriculture, residents practiced animal husbandry which formed was an important source of income for the village. In 1943, they owned 405 heads of cattle, 310 sheep over a year old, 172 goats over a year old, 228 camels, 11 horses, 9 mules, 567 donkey, 2963 fowls, 454 pigeons.[7]

1948, and aftermath

[edit]

According to reports published by the newspaper Felesteen, Hamama was first drawn into the 1948 Arab-Israeli War after a group of workers from the town laboring in the adjacent fields were struck by Jewish residents from Nitzanim on January 22, 1948, leaving fifteen Arabs wounded.[33] Two days later, a unit from Nitzanim opened fire on Hamama residents, killing one, and on February 17, a group of workers waiting for a bus on the road between Isdud and the town were fired upon, wounding two.[27]

It was captured by Israel from the Egyptian Army in the first stage of Operation Yoav on October 28. By then several refugees from nearby towns were in Hamama, most of them, along with many of Hamama's residents, fled with the withdrawing Egyptian troops.[34]

At the end of November 1948, Coastal Plain District troops carried out sweeps of the villages around and to the south of Majdal. Hamama was one of the villages named in the orders to the IDF battalions and engineers platoon, that the villagers were to be expelled to Gaza, and the IDF troops were "to prevent their return by destroying their villages." The path leading to the village was to be mined. The IDF troops were ordered to carry out the operation "with determination, accuracy and energy".[35] The operation took place on 30 November. The troops found "not a living soul" in Hamama. However, the destruction of the villages was not completed immediately due to the dampness of the houses and the insufficient amount of explosives.[36]

Mohammed Dahlan's family is originally from Hamama.

In 1992 it was noted: "No traces of village houses or landmarks remain. The site is overgrown with wild vegetation, including tall grasses, weeds, and bushes. It also contains cactuses. The surrounding land is unused."[6]

References

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  1. ^ Conder and Kitchener, SWP II, 1882, p. 418
  2. ^ Palmer, 1881, p. 267
  3. ^ a b c Government of Palestine, Department of Statistics, 1945, p. 31
  4. ^ a b c Government of Palestine, Department of Statistics. Village Statistics, April, 1945. Quoted in Hadawi, 1970, p. 45
  5. ^ Morris, 2004, p. xix, village #286. Also gives the cause of depopulation.
  6. ^ a b c d Khalidi, 1992, p. 100
  7. ^ a b c d e f Marom, Roy; Taxel, Itamar (2024-10-10). "Hamama: The Palestinian Countryside in Bloom (1750–1948)". Journal of Islamic Archaeology. 11 (1): 83–110. doi:10.1558/jia.26586. ISSN 2051-9729.
  8. ^ Marom, Roy; Taxel, Itamar (2023-10-01). "Ḥamāma: The historical geography of settlement continuity and change in Majdal 'Asqalan's hinterland, 1270–1750 CE". Journal of Historical Geography. 82: 49–65. doi:10.1016/j.jhg.2023.08.003. ISSN 0305-7488.
  9. ^ Marom, Roy. "Arabic Toponymy around Ashkelon: The Village of Hamama as a Case Study". escholarship.org. Retrieved 2024-04-23.
  10. ^ a b c Khalidi, 1992, pp. 97-98
  11. ^ Dauphin, 1998, p. 869
  12. ^ "XIV. Hamama", Volume 3 South Coast: 2161-2648, De Gruyter, pp. 231–232, 2014-07-14, doi:10.1515/9783110337679.231, ISBN 978-3-11-033767-9, retrieved 2024-02-23
  13. ^ a b Petersen, 2001, p. 146
  14. ^ MPF, 10 No. 30. Cited in Petersen, 2001, p. 146
  15. ^ Marom, Roy; Taxel, Itamar (2023-10-01). "Ḥamāma: The historical geography of settlement continuity and change in Majdal 'Asqalan's hinterland, 1270–1750 CE". Journal of Historical Geography. 82: 49–65. doi:10.1016/j.jhg.2023.08.003. ISSN 0305-7488.
  16. ^ Hütteroth and Abdulfattah, 1977, p. 142. Cited in Khalidi, 1992, p. 98.
  17. ^ Grossman, D. (1986). "Oscillations in the Rural Settlement of Samaria and Judaea in the Ottoman Period". in Shomron studies. Dar, S., Safrai, S., (eds). Tel Aviv: Hakibbutz Hameuchad Publishing House. p. 382
  18. ^ Khalidi, 1992, p. 98.
  19. ^ Marom, Roy; Taxel, Itamar (2023-10-01). "Ḥamāma: The historical geography of settlement continuity and change in Majdal 'Asqalan's hinterland, 1270–1750 CE". Journal of Historical Geography. 82: 49–65. doi:10.1016/j.jhg.2023.08.003. ISSN 0305-7488.
  20. ^ Karmon, 1960, p. 173 Archived 2019-12-22 at the Wayback Machine
  21. ^ Palestine Exploration Quarterly Jan-Apr 1944. Jacotin's Map of Palestine. D.H.Kellner. p. 161.
  22. ^ Robinson and Smith, 1841, vol 3, 2nd appendix, p. 118
  23. ^ Guérin, 1869, pp. 129 -130
  24. ^ translated by Moshe Gilad, 'This Explorer Visited Israel in the 19th Century and Found It to Be Anything but Empty', 22 February 2022, Haaretz
  25. ^ Socin, 1879, p. 154
  26. ^ Hartmann, 1883, p. 131, noted 291 houses
  27. ^ a b c Khalidi, 1992, p. 99
  28. ^ Barron, 1923, Table V, Sub-district of Gaza, p. 8
  29. ^ Barron, 1923, Table XIII, p. 44
  30. ^ Mills, 1932, p. 3
  31. ^ Government of Palestine, Department of Statistics. Village Statistics, April, 1945. Quoted in Hadawi, 1970, p. 86
  32. ^ Government of Palestine, Department of Statistics. Village Statistics, April, 1945. Quoted in Hadawi, 1970, p. 136
  33. ^ Elhassani, Abdelkarim (2012). From Hamama to Montreal. Xlibris Corporation LLC. p. 32. ISBN 978-1-4797-4125-0.
  34. ^ Morris, 1987, p.220, quoted in Khalidi, 1992, p.99.
  35. ^ Coastal Plain District HQ to battalions 151 and ´1 Volunteers`, etc., 19:55 hours, 25 Nov. 1948, IDFA (=Israeli Defence Forces and Defence Ministry Archive) 6308\49\\141. Cited in Morris, 2004, p. 517
  36. ^ Coastal Plain HQ to Southern Front\Operations, 30 Nov. 1948, IDFA 1978\50\\1; and Southern Front\Operations to General Staff Divisions, 2. Dec. 1948, IDFA 922\75\\1025. Cited in Morris, 2004, p. 518

Bibliography

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