Ottoman rule (1517–1917) of
Herod's Temple, 1870s. The
Scroll of Ahimaaz (1050 CE) mentions the location as a Jewish prayer site. In around 1560,
Suleiman the Magnificent gave official recognition of the right of Jews to pray there. in Safed. Founded in the 1570s, it was rebuilt in 1857 following an earthquake. neighborhood of Jerusalem in the mid-19th century Palestine was conquered by Turkish Sultan
Selim II in 1516–17, and became part of the
province of Syria for the next four centuries. At the onset of Ottoman rule in 1517, there were an estimated 5,000 Jews, comprising about 1,000 Jewish families, in Palestine. Jews mainly lived in Jerusalem, Nablus, Hebron, Gaza, Safed, and villages in the Galilee. The Jewish community was composed of both descendants of Jews who had never left the land and Jewish migrants from the diaspora. In 1534, Spanish refugee
Jacob Berab settled in
Safed. He believed the time was ripe to reintroduce the old "
semikhah" (ordination) which would create for Jews worldwide a recognised central authority. In 1538, an assembly of twenty-five Safed rabbis ordained Berab, a step which they hoped would instigate the formation of a new
Sanhedrin. But the plan faltered upon a strong and concerted protest by the chief rabbi of Jerusalem,
Levi ben Jacob ibn Habib. Some of the most celebrated hymns were written in Safed by poets such as
Israel Najara and
Solomon Alkabetz. The town was also a centre of Jewish mysticism; notable kabbalists included
Moses Cordovero and the German-born Naphtali Hertz ben Jacob Elhanan. A new method of understanding the
kabbalah was developed by Palestinian mystic
Isaac Luria and espoused by his student
Chaim Vital. In Safed, the Jews developed a number of branches of trade, especially in grain, spices, textiles and dyeing. In 1577, a
Hebrew printing press was established in Safed. The 8,000 or 10,000 Jews in Safed in 1555 grew to 20,000 or 30,000 by the end of the century. In around 1563,
Joseph Nasi secured permission from Sultan
Selim II to acquire Tiberias and seven surrounding villages to create a Jewish city-state. He hoped that large numbers of Jewish refugees and Marranos would settle there, free from fear and oppression; indeed, the persecuted Jews of Cori, Italy, numbering about 200, decided to emigrate to Tiberias. Nasi had the walls of the town rebuilt by 1564 and attempted to turn it into a self-sufficient textile manufacturing center by planting
mulberry trees for the cultivation of
silk. Nevertheless, a number of factors during the following years contributed to the plan's ultimate failure. Nasi's aunt, Doña
Gracia Mendes Nasi supported a
yeshiva in the town for many years until her death in 1569. In 1567, a Yemenite scholar and Rabbi,
Zechariah Dhahiri, visited Safed and wrote of his experiences in a book entitled
Sefer Ha-Musar.
His vivid descriptions of the town Safed and of Rabbi Joseph Karo's
yeshiva are of primary importance to historians, seeing that they are a first-hand account of these places, and the only extant account which describes the
yeshiva of the great Sephardic Rabbi, Joseph Karo. In 1576, the Jewish community of Safed faced an expulsion order: 1,000 prosperous families were to be deported to Cyprus, "for the good of the said island", with another 500 the following year. The order was later rescinded due to the realisation of the financial gains of Jewish rental income. In 1586, the Jews of Istanbul agreed to build a fortified
khan to provide a refuge for Safed's Jews against "night bandits and armed thieves." It became the main synagogue of the Sephardic Jews, the place where their chief rabbi was invested. The adjacent study hall which had been added by 1625 later became the
Synagogue of Elijah the Prophet. The 17th century saw a steep decline in the Jewish population of Palestine due to the unstable security situation, natural catastrophes, and abandonment of urban areas, which turned Palestine into a remote and desolate part of the Ottoman Empire. The Ottoman central government became feeble and corrupt, and the Jewish community was harassed by local rulers, janissaries, guilds, Bedouins, and bandits. The Jewish community was also caught between feuding local chieftains who extorted and oppressed the Jews. The Jewish communities of the Galilee heavily depended on the changing fortunes of a banking family close to the ruling pashas in Acre. As a result, the Jewish population significantly shrank. In 1700, about 500 to 1,000 European Jewish followers of
Judah HeHasid immigrated to Palestine and settled in Jerusalem. They were forced to give the Turkish authorities financial guarantees in the name of Jerusalem's Jewish community in exchange for permission to enter the Ottoman Empire. At the time approximately 200 Ashkenazi Jews and 1,000 Sephardi Jews lived in the city, most of them reliant on charity from the diaspora. The sudden influx of so many Ashkenazi immigrants produced a crisis. The local community was unable to help so many people and suspected some of the new arrivals of being
Sabbateans, whom they viewed with hostility. The newcomers built the
Hurva Synagogue and incurred debts doing so. In 1720, due to failure to repay the debts, Arab creditors broke into the synagogue, set it on fire, and took over the area. The Ottoman authorities held both HeHasid's group and the pre-existing Ashkenazi community collectively responsible and expelled all Ashkenazi Jews from Jerusalem. In 1714, Dutch researcher
Adriaan Reland published an account of his visit to Palestine, and noted the existence of significant Jewish population centers throughout the country, particularly Jerusalem, Safed, Tiberias, and Gaza. Hebron also had a significant Jewish community at the time. The 18th century saw the Jewish population slightly recover. In 1740, Rabbi Haim Abulafia, the rabbi of
İzmir, renewed Jewish settlement in Tiberias and the surrounding area under the patronage of local governor
Zahir al-Umar. In 1742, a group of Jewish immigrants from Morocco and Italy led by Moroccan rabbi
Chaim ibn Attar arrived in Palestine, and most settled in Jerusalem. At the time, the vast majority of Jews in Palestine were Sephardi or
Mizrahi Jews, with only a small number of Ashkenazi Jews. The Ottoman authorities restricted the number of Jews permitted to live in Jerusalem. The
Near East earthquake of 1759 destroyed much of Safed, killing 2,000 people with 190 Jews among the dead, and also destroyed Tiberias. In 1777, a group of about 300 Hasidic Jews from Lithuania led by Rabbi
Menachem Mendel of Vitebsk immigrated to Palestine. This was the first group of Jewish immigrants in some time that maintained contact with its country of origin. They had considered settling in Safed but due to the opposition this aroused most settled in Tiberias and some settled in
Peki'in instead. They augmented the Jewish presence in the Galilee and extended the Ashkenazi presence to places outside Safed, where it had been concentrated until then. In 1800, there were about 6,500 Jews living in Palestine. Throughout the 19th century up to the 1880s, Ashkenazi Jews from Eastern Europe as well as groups of Sephardi Jews from Turkey, Bulgaria, and North Africa immigrated to Palestine. Jerusalem's Jewish population grew particularly fast as a result of Jewish migration from within the Land of Israel and abroad. In the aftermath of the
Galilee earthquake of 1837, some Jewish residents of Safed and Tiberias, which had been hit hard by the earthquake, further expanded the population. As a result, the Jewish Quarter became overcrowded and squalid and Jews who moved to other parts of the city paid exorbitant rents to non-Jewish landlords. The
Rothschild family attempted to ease the overcrowding by financing a set of apartments for Jews called the Batei Hamahse in the 1850s, but this proved inadequate. With the
expansion of Jerusalem beyond the traditional Old City walls, Jews began settling outside of the Old City. In 1855, the
Kerem Avraham district, which contained a vineyard and soap factory, was founded by
James Finn, the British Consul in Jerusalem, to provide the Jews of Jerusalem employment so they would not have to subsist on donations from abroad. The first Jewish neighborhood built outside of the Old City walls was
Mishkenot Sha'ananim, established in 1860.
Mahane Israel, the second Jewish neighborhood built outside the Old City walls, was founded in 1867 as a settlement for
Maghrebi Jews. The third Jewish neighborhood built outside the Old City was
Nahalat Shiv'a, which was founded in 1869 as a cooperative effort by seven families who pooled their funds to purchase the land and build homes. In 1875, the Jewish neighborhood of
Kirya Ne'emana and the first of the Jewish neighborhoods that would make up the
Nachlaot district were founded. Jewish settlement activities also began to take place outside Jerusalem in the 1870s. In 1870,
Mikveh Israel was established as a Jewish agricultural school and the first new Jewish settlement in Palestine in modern times. In 1878, Jews from Safed founded the village of Gei Oni, later
Rosh Pinna, and religious Jewish pioneers who had immigrated from Europe founded the settlement of
Petah Tikva. The Jewish population of
Haifa was also bolstered by immigration from Morocco and Turkey in the 1870s. In 1880, the Jewish population of Palestine numbered around 20,000 to 25,000, of whom two-thirds lived in Jerusalem. The Jewish population, known as the
Old Yishuv, was divided into two predominant clusters. The oldest group consisted of the
Ladino-speaking Sephardic Jewish communities which had been established in the late
Mamluk and early Ottoman periods and the Arabic-speaking communities who had already been living there since before the coming of Islam and had been culturally and linguistically Arabized. The Sephardic community traced its origins to not only Sephardim who settled in Palestine, but local Arabized Jews who had intermarried into the Sephardic community and
Mizrahi Jews who had migrated from other parts of the Middle East and integrated into the Sephardic community. The second group was the
Ashkenazi community, composed of primarily
Haredi Jews who had migrated from Europe to settle in Palestine in the 18th and 19th centuries. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, tens of thousands of Jewish immigrants began arriving in Palestine and establishing new Jewish settlements. These immigrants were largely motivated by nationalism and a desire to live in the land of their ancestors as
Zionism, or support for founding a new Jewish state, emerged. The first major such wave was the
First Aliyah, which took place between 1881 and 1903. About 25,000 to 35,000 Jews immigrated to Palestine, mostly from Eastern Europe and Yemen, though about half subsequently left. About 28 significant Jewish settlements were established, and about 90,000 acres of land were purchased by Jews. During this period, the
revival of the Hebrew language in Palestine began. A Hebrew school system was established and new words were coined to make Hebrew more practical for modern use. The effort was largely spearheaded by
Eliezer Ben-Yehuda. As a result, Hebrew became an everyday spoken language again and gradually became the primary language of the Jewish population of Palestine. The
Second Aliyah took place from 1904 to 1914 and saw around 35,000 Jews immigrate to Palestine. The majority of the Jewish immigrants came from the
Russian Empire, though some also came from Yemen. Further Jewish settlements were established and in 1909,
Tel Aviv was founded as the first modern Jewish city. The growth of the Jewish community of Palestine, which was known as the
Yishuv, was disrupted by the outbreak of
World War I in 1914. During the war, many Jews were expelled from Palestine by the Ottoman authorities as enemy nationals, since they had immigrated from countries now at war with the Ottoman Empire. In 1917, the Ottoman authorities carried out the
Tel Aviv and Jaffa deportation, expelling the entire Jewish civilian populations of Tel Aviv and Jaffa. Many deportees subsequently died from hunger and disease.
British Mandate (1917–1948) In 1917, towards the end of World War I, following the defeat of the Ottoman Empire, Palestine was occupied by British forces. The United Kingdom was granted control of the area west of the River Jordan now comprising the
State of Israel, the
West Bank and the
Gaza Strip (
Mandatory Palestine), and on the east bank of what later became
Jordan (as a separate mandate) by the
Versailles Peace Conference which established the
League of Nations in 1919.
Herbert Samuel, a former
Postmaster General in the
British cabinet, who was instrumental in drafting the
Balfour Declaration was appointed the first
High Commissioner of Mandatory Palestine, generally simply known as Palestine. During World War I the British had made two promises regarding territory in the Middle East. Britain had promised the local Arabs, through
Lawrence of Arabia, independence for a united Arab country covering most of the Arab Middle East, in exchange for their supporting the British; and Britain had promised to create and foster a Jewish national home as laid out in the Balfour Declaration, 1917. With the British conquest, Jews who had been expelled by the Ottomans were able to return, and Jewish immigration picked up again. The
Third Aliyah saw about 40,000 Jewish immigrants arrive in Palestine from 1919 to the start of an economic crisis in Palestine in 1923, and between 1924 and 1928, the
Fourth Aliyah saw about 80,000 more Jewish immigrants arrive in Palestine and the
Fifth Aliyah, which took place between 1929 and 1939, saw the arrival of an estimated 225,000 to 300,000 Jewish immigrants. During this time, land continued to be purchased by Jews, many new Jewish settlements were established and existing Jewish communities in urban areas continued to grow. Tel Aviv in particular saw large-scale development and became a major city. It was home to over a third of the Jewish population by 1939. During this time, tensions with the Arabs increased over Jewish immigration. The
1921 Jaffa riots and
1929 Palestine riots saw Arab mobs violently attack Jewish population centers, and the tensions culminated in the
1936-1939 Arab revolt in Palestine, which saw the Arabs launch widespread attacks against both Jews and the British. In 1947, there were approximately 630,000 Jews living alongside approximately 1.2 million Arabs in Palestine. Following increasing levels of violence, the British government expressed a wish to withdraw from Palestine that year. The proposed
plan of partition would have split Palestine into two states, an Arab state and a Jewish state, and the City of Jerusalem, giving slightly more than half the land area to the proposed Jewish state. Immediately following the adoption by the
United Nations General Assembly of a resolution recommending the adoption and implementation of the
Partition Plan (Resolution 181(II) ), and its subsequent acceptance by the Jewish leadership
civil war broke out between the Arab community and the Jewish community, as armies of the
Arab League, which rejected the Partition Plan which Israel accepted, sought to squelch the new Jewish state. On 14 May 1948, one day before the end of the British Mandate, the leaders of the Jewish community in Palestine led by the future prime minister
David Ben-Gurion,
declared the establishment of a Jewish state in Eretz-Israel, to be known as the State of Israel.
State of Israel (1948–present) in Jerusalem The armies of
Egypt,
Lebanon,
Syria,
Jordan, and
Iraq marched into the territory of what had just ceased to be the British Mandate, thus starting the
1948 Arab–Israeli War. The nascent
Israel Defense Forces repulsed the Arab armies, and extended Israel's borders beyond the original Resolution 181(II) boundaries for the proposed Jewish state. By December 1948, Israel controlled most of the portion of Mandate Palestine west of the
Jordan River. The remainder of the Mandate came to be called the
West Bank (controlled by Jordan), and the
Gaza Strip (controlled by Egypt). Prior to and during this conflict, 711,000
Palestinians Arabs were expelled or fled their homes to become
Palestinian refugees. One third went to the West Bank and one third to the Gaza Strip, occupied by Jordan and Egypt respectively, and the rest to Jordan, Syria, Lebanon and other countries. After the establishment of Israel, immigration of
Holocaust survivors from Europe and a large influx of
Jewish refugees from Arab countries had doubled Israel's population within one year of its independence. Overall, during the following years approximately 850,000
Sephardi and
Mizrahi Jews fled or were expelled from Arab countries,
Iran and
Afghanistan. Of these, about 680,000 settled in Israel. Israel's Jewish population continued to grow at a very high rate for years, fed by waves of
Jewish immigration from round the world, including the massive immigration wave of Soviet Jews, who arrived in Israel in the early 1990s, according to the
Law of Return. Some 380,000 Jewish immigrants from the Soviet Union arrived in 1990–91 alone. Since 1948, Israel has been involved in a series of major military conflicts, including the 1956
Suez Crisis, 1967
Six-Day War, 1973
Yom Kippur War,
1982 Lebanon War, and
2006 Lebanon War, as well as a nearly constant series of other conflicts, among them the ongoing
Israeli–Palestinian conflict. Despite the constant security threats, Israel—a majorly Jewish state—has thrived economically. Throughout the 1980s and the 1990s there were numerous liberalization measures: in monetary policy, in domestic capital markets, and in various instruments of governmental interference in economic activity. The role of government in the economy was considerably decreased. On the other hand, some governmental economic functions were increased: a national health insurance system was introduced, though private health providers continued to provide health services within the national system. Social welfare payments, such as unemployment benefits, child allowances, old age pensions and minimum income support, were expanded continuously, until they formed a major budgetary expenditure. These transfer payments compensated, to a large extent, for the continuous growth of income inequality, which had moved Israel from among the developed countries with the least income inequality to those with the most. ==See also==