Roman and Byzantine periods The Hebrew name, Kochav Hayarden, meaning 'Star of the Jordan', preserves the name of Kochava – a Jewish village which existed nearby during the
Roman and
Byzantine periods. In the Crusader church, there is a repurposed basalt stone that bears an
Aramaic donation inscription using the
Jewish script. It originally adorned a synagogue lintel.
Crusader period The
Knights Hospitaller purchased the site from Velos, a French nobleman, in 1168. The castle of Belvoir served as a major obstacle to the
Muslim goal of invading the Crusader
Kingdom of Jerusalem from the east. It withstood an attack by Muslim forces in 1180. During the campaign of 1182, the
Battle of Belvoir Castle was fought nearby between King
Baldwin IV of Jerusalem and
Saladin. Following
Saladin's victory over the Crusaders at the
Battle of Hattin, Belvoir was besieged. The siege lasted a year and a half, until the defenders surrendered on 5 January 1189. An Arab governor occupied it until 1219 when the Ayyubid ruler in Damascus had it
slighted. In 1241 Belvoir was ceded to the Franks, who controlled it until 1263.
Ottoman and British Mandate periods During the Ottoman period it became an Arab village,
Kawkab al-Hawa, whose inhabitants fled the village in anticipation of an advancement of the Israeli forces during the
1947–48 civil war phase of the
First Arab–Israeli war.
Israel Excavations were carried out at Belvoir Castle between 2013 and 2016. ==Architecture==