To distinguish the city from the city of
Bethlehem near
Jerusalem, it was initially known as
Bethlehem of Zebulun, (Joshua 19:15) while the town near Jerusalem was called "Bethlehem of Judea" (Ruth 1:1). In the
Jerusalem Talmud it is referred to as
Beth Lehem Zoria, as it was part of the
kingdom of Tyre (Ṣūr) at the time. According to the
Book of Judges, one of the so-called "
Minor Judges" of early settlement Israel,
Ibzan, came from Bethlehem and was buried there. The
Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges suggests that the Bethlehem referred to in this passage is Bethlehem of Galilee "rather than the more famous Bethlehem in the Tribe of Judah". Until the late 19th century, and even the 1921 visit by
Gustaf Dalman, the impressive remains of a
church and a
synagogue could be seen there. Archaeologist Ariel Berman discovered a
chalk vessel industry from the
Early Roman period as well as a huge
wine press. although others at this institution reject it. Remains of large
Byzantine-period buildings as well as pottery (4th–5th century) from the same period have been found here, together with walls and objects from the
Umayyad,
Abbasid (eighth century) and
Mamluk periods (14th–15th centuries).
Ottoman period Arab village In 1517, the village was included in the
Ottoman Empire, and in the 1596
tax-records it appeared as
Bayt Lahm, located in the
Nahiya of
Tabariyya of the
Liwa of
Safad. The population was 27 households and two bachelors, all
Muslim. They paid a tax rate of 25% on agricultural products, which included wheat, barley, cotton, vegetable and fruit gardens, occasional revenues, goats and beehives; a total of 1200
Akçe. In 1859, the British consul Rogers stated that the population was 110, and the tillage at sixteen
feddans. In 1875
Victor Guérin visited and noted that Bethlehem was a small village, which had succeeded a town of the same name. He further noted the ruins of two buildings; one, completely destroyed, had been constructed of good cut stones; the entrance was at the south façade. He thought, from its orientation north and south, that it was a synagogue. The other building, which lay east and west, may have been a Christian church. On its site were seen a few shafts, four of which were still
in situ and half covered up. In 1882, the
Palestine Exploration Fund's
Survey of Western Palestine described it as "The ancient Bethlehem of Zebulon. A village principally built of
adobe on high ground in the border of the wooded country. The nearest water is in
Wady el Melek, on the north (Ras el 'Ain), and at the springs near Muwarah on the south."
Templer village In 1906
Templers from the
German Colony in
Haifa established a colony in Galilee, naming it for the ancient city of Bethlehem.
British Mandate period In the
1922 census of Palestine conducted by the
British authorities, Bait Lam had a population of 224; 111 Christians and 113 Muslims. Of the Christians, 95 were
Protestant and 16 were Greek Catholics (
Melkites). This had increased slightly by the
1931 census to a population of 235; 135 Muslim, 99 Christians and 1 Jew, in a total of 51 inhabited houses. In 1932 the
Nazi Party gained its first two members in Palestine; Karl Ruff and Walter Aberle from the Templer colony in Haifa. In the course of the 1930s, Bethlehemites also joined the party, indicating the fading affinity to the Templers' original ideals. By August 1939, 17% of all German Christians in Palestine were members of the Nazi Party. After the
Nazi takeover in Germany, all international schools of German language subsidized or fully financed by government funds were obliged to employ teachers aligned to the Nazi Party. In 1933, Templer functionaries appealed to
Paul von Hindenburg and the Foreign Office not to use swastika symbols for German institutions in Palestine and voiced opposition to the boycott of German Jewish shops. Later, this opposition subsided. On 20 August 1939 the German government called on German Christians in Palestine to join the
Wehrmacht and 350 men enlisted. After the start of
World War II, all Germans in Palestine were declared
enemy aliens. The British authorities sent them to
Sarona, Bethlehem (Galilee), Waldheim (today's
Allonei Abba) and
Wilhelma. In summer 1941, 665 German internees, mostly young families with children, were deported to
Australia, leaving those who were too old or sick. In December 1941 and in the course of 1942 another 400 German internees, mostly wives and children of men who had enlisted in the Wehrmacht, were released - via Turkey - to Germany for the purpose of
family reunification. In the
1945 statistics the population of
Beit Lam consisted of 370 people; 210 Muslims and 160 Christians, and the total land area was 7,526
dunams according to an official land and population survey. 6 dunams of land were designated for citrus and bananas, 278 dunams for plantations and irrigable land, 4,796 for cereals, while 51 dunams were built-up areas. In 1945 the Italian and Hungarian internees were released but the Britons refused to repatriate the remaining German internees to the British zone in Germany. In 1947, they were allowed to emigrate to Australia.
Israel On 17 April 1948 the
Haganah captured the village, and it was subsequently depopulated. By 14 May 1948, when Israel declared independence, only 50 Templers remained in the country. It was resettled by Jewish farmers, becoming a moshav. Much of the original Templer architecture survives, and is similar in style to the homes built by the Templers in other parts of the country, such as
Sarona in
Tel Aviv, Wilhelma (today
Bnei Atarot) and the
German colonies of
Haifa and
Jerusalem. In recent years, tourism has replaced agriculture as the main economic branch. A dairy, an herb farm, restaurants and country-style accommodation are among the tourist-oriented businesses in the village today. ==References==