Neolithic settlement In 2013, archaeological excavations conducted by the
Israel Antiquities Authority near discovered the oldest structure ever found in the
Shfela region of the
Judean Hills, dating back to the first permanent human settlement in the area some
10,000 years ago. Excavations at the site continued into 2014, led by A. Yaroshevich on behalf of the Israel Antiquities Authority.
Modern Eshtaol Eshtaol was founded on the lands of the depopulated
Arab villages of and after the
1948 Arab–Israeli War. It was part of a plan to establish villages in the
Jerusalem corridor to create a contiguous bloc between the coastal plain and
Jerusalem. The first residents were Jewish
immigrants from
Yemen, who settled there in December 1949. They worked in land reclamation and forestry. The
Jewish National Fund (JNF) established a 45-
dunam nursery in to supply saplings for JNF forests. Later, the moshav branched out into poultry and other agricultural enterprises. At the end of the 1990s, the moshav absorbed 100 new families. ==References==