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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Migdal Afek, 2011
Migdal Tsedek
Greek inscription over doorway

Migdal Afek (Hebrew: מגדל אפק), also Migdal Tsedek (Hebrew: מגדל צדק), is a national park on the southeastern edge of Rosh HaAyin, Israel. It is the site of the depopulated Palestinian village of Majdal Yaba.

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • Bar Ilan - Migdal Afek. Driving in the rain. Route 471. נסיעה בגשם. כביש 471 בר-אילן - מגדל אפק
  • כביש 444 מצומת מגדל אפק לצומת נווה ימין - Road 444 from Migdal Afeq Junction to Neve Yamin Junction
  • טיפים לנהיגה בצד שמאל - חלק א'
  • להציל את מגדל צדק
  • כביש 531

Transcription

History

Located in Migdal Afek are the ruins of Mirabel, a Crusader castle, built on the site of ancient Migdal Afek. It was described in Muslim sources in 1225 as a village with a fortress called Majdal Yaba.[1] In the 17th century, the village was taken over by the Rayyān family who arrived from Transjordan and built a two-story manor house.[1] The ruins of the manor house, among which remains of the Crusader castle can be seen, are today called Migdal Afek or Migdal Tsedek.[1]

The village was depopulated by the IDF in July 1948.[2][3]

Migdal Tsedek means "Tower of Sadek" in Hebrew, referring to the name of its Sheikh Sadek Al Rayyan.[citation needed]

A lintel over an entrance that was used by the local sheikh as a stable and fodder storage room bears the Greek inscription "Martyr Memorial Church of the Holy Herald."[4]

During World War I, Migdal Afek was the site of battles between the Central Powers (forces of the Ottoman, German and Austro-Hungarian empires) and the Egyptian Expeditionary Force.[5]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Tsvika Tsuk, Iosi Bordowicz and Itamar Taxel (2016). "Majdal Yābā: The History and Material Culture of a Fortified Village in Late Ottoman- and British Mandate-Palestine". Journal of Islamic Archaeology. 3 (1).
  2. ^ Benny Morris (2004). The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem Revisted. Cambridge University Press. p. xvi.
  3. ^ Sela, Rona. "Scouting Palestinian Territory, 1940-1948: Haganah Village Files, Aerial Photos, and Surveys" (PDF). Institute for Palestine Studies.
  4. ^ Byeways in Palestine, James Finn
  5. ^ Evidence of the World War I Battlefield was Exposed in Rosh Ha-Ayin, Israel Antiquities Authority

32°4′51″N 34°57′25″E / 32.08083°N 34.95694°E / 32.08083; 34.95694

This page was last edited on 31 December 2022, at 11:05
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