Roman and Byzantine periods During the
Roman period,
Herod the Great,
client king of
Judaea, established a new city in the
Jordan Valley north of Jericho, which he named
Phasaelis (,
Phasaēlís), in dedication to his elder brother
Phasael. The remains of Phasaelis were identified in the 19th century with the ruins field called by local Arabs
Khirbet Fasayil, with a
tell (mound) called Tell Fasayil possibly corresponding to a
Byzantine monastery. Jewish historian and commander in the
First Jewish-Roman War, Flavius
Josephus, writes about the establishment of Phasaelis south of
Archelais and describes it as part of a
toparchy ruled by Herod's sister,
Salome I. The city is also found on the 6th-century
Madaba Map, surrounded by
date palms.
Crusader period It was mentioned by a monk named Brocardus in the 13th century as being a small village called Pheselch and in the 14th century by
Marino Sanuto as being a small village by the name of Fasaelis. In 1874, the
PEF's
Survey of Western Palestine expedition visited and described the extensive ruins there.
After 1967 Since the
Six-Day War in 1967, Fasayil has been under
Israeli occupation. ==Village sections, inhabitants and administration==