Origins and early demographics According to local tradition, Beit Sahour was uninhabited until the 14th century when a number of Muslim and Christian families from
Wadi Musa near
Petra (today in
Jordan) settled in caves on the site of the modern village. Another Christian family of Wadi Musa, from the remnants of the
Ghassanids, arrived in the 17th century. Further immigration in the 18th century from
Rashda in
Upper Egypt,
Shobak in
Transjordan and
Al-Kukaliya in
Syria cemented the Christian character of the village. In spite of the influx of Christian families, they remained in the minority all until 1839, when Muslims from Palestine fought in the armies led by
Ibrahim Pasha of Egypt in his
war against the Turkish Sultan. By 1553/34 (AH 961), 13 Christian and 21 Muslim households were noted, and in 1562/63 (AH 970), 9 Christian and 17 Muslim households were counted. The Franciscans ceased holding religious services at the shrine by Shepherd's Field around 1820. In 1864 a new Roman Catholic church and school were completed. In 1896 the population of Beit Sahour was estimated to be about 861 persons. A construction text, dating to 1897, engraved in the
lintel of a door on Municipality Street has been examined, and was found to be a poem in 19th century Christian
naskhi script. increasing in the
1931 census to 1,942; 395 Muslims and 1,547 Christians, in a total of 454 houses. In the
1945 statistics the population of Beit Sahour was 2,770; 370 Muslims and 2,400 Christians, who owned 6,946 (rural) and 138 (urban)
dunams of land, according to an official land and population survey. 1,031 dunams were plantations and irrigable land, 3,641 for cereals, while 100 dunams were built-up (urban) land.
Jordanian annexation In the wake of the
1948 Arab–Israeli War and after the
1949 Armistice Agreements, Beit Sahur
was annexed by Jordan along with the rest of the West Bank. In 1961, the population of Beit Sahur was 5,316.
Israeli occupation Since the
Six-Day War in 1967, Beit Sahour has been under
Israeli occupation. The population in the 1967 census was 5,380. According to
ARIJ, 52.8% of the village land is classified as being in
Area A, while the remaining 47.2% is in
Area C. From 1997 and onwards, Israel has confiscated hundred of dunams of village land for the construction of the
Israeli settlement of
Har Homa. 'Ush Ghurab, a hill occupied by a military base until 2006, became the site of a development project. A restaurant, a climbing tower, a football field and a park were built on the hillside. The municipality of Beit Sahour also had plans for a hospital and a sports center. The mainly Christian Palestinian inhabitants are being pressured by encroaching Israeli settlements, with one housing development being ruled as illegal by an Israeli court in the early 2000s and, as of 2013, standing under threat of demolition. ==Economy==