Isfiya was built on the ruins of an ancient settlement. A building, dating from the second–fourth centuries CE has been excavated, together with ceramics and coins dating from the period. A rock-cut burial cave containing pottery coffins, eight
ossuaries, numerous
oil lamps, as well as pottery, glass vessels, and several bronze objects was unearthed on HaHoresh Street. One of the ossuaries bears a
Greek inscription indicating it belongs to Maia, the daughter or wife of a man named Saul.
Roman and Byzantine Empire In 1930, remains of a 5th-century
Jewish town, Husifah or Huseifa, were unearthed in Isfiya. Among the finds are a
synagogue with a
mosaic floor bearing Jewish symbols and the inscription "Peace upon Israel". A cache of 4,500 gold coins were found dating from the
Roman period.
Middle Ages Crusader remnants have been found in the village.
Ottoman Empire The Druze came to the village in the early eighteenth century. The inhabitants made their living from olive oil, honey and grapes. In 1859, the English consul Rogers estimated the population to be 400, who cultivated 20 feddans of land. In 1863,
H.B. Tristram visited the village, which he described as Druze and Christian, with a Christian
sheikh. Tristam noted that the women's clothing in this village were much like those of
al-Bassa, being either "plain, patched or embroidered in the most fantastic and grotesque shapes". In 1870, the French explorer
Victor Guérin found that the village had six hundred inhabitants, almost all Druze, with the exception of sixty, who belonged to the
"Schismatic Greeks". Gardens were grown all around the village. Some houses seemed very old and dated, Guérin surmised, from the Middle Ages or even earlier, from the time of the Crusades. In 1881 the
Palestine Exploration Fund's
Survey of Western Palestine described it as standing "on the highest part of the Carmel
watershed, and the highest house was therefore the trigonometrical station on the ridge. It is a moderate-sized village of stone houses, with a well on the south-west. The inhabitants are all Druses. [..] Corn-land and olives surround the land." A population list from about 1887 showed that Isfiya had about 555 inhabitants; 480 Druze and 75 Catholic Christians. When a Jewish
moshava was established at Mutallah (
Metula) north of Safed in 1896, the Druze population resisted eviction until receiving a reasonable compensation in 1904; some relocated to Isfiya, including the Wahb family.
British Mandate In the
1922 census of Palestine conducted by the
British Mandate authorities, Isfiya had a population of 733; 590 Druze, 17 Muslims and 126 Christians; the Christians broken down by denomination were six Orthodox, six
Roman Catholics, 107 Greek Catholics (
Melkites), and seven
Maronites. At the time of the
1931 census, Isfiya had 251 occupied houses and a population of 742 Druzes, 187 Christians, and 176 Muslims; a total of 1,105. These counts included the smaller localities
Damun Farm, Shallala Farm and
al-Jalama. In the
1945 statistics the population of Isfiya consisted of 1,790; 180 Muslims, 300 Christians and 1,310 classified as "others", that is, Druze, while the land area was 46,905
dunams, according to an official land and population survey. Of this, 1,103 dunams were designated for plantations and irrigable land, 17,357 for cereals, while 74 dunams were built-up (urban) areas. During the
1936-39 Arab revolt in Palestine, the villagers initially supported a local rebel group led by
Yusuf Abu Durra. However, after local leaders were abducted and murdered, the notables turned to the British, who destroyed the group. A Druze self-defense force was established that received arms from the British and sometimes coordinated its activities with local Jewish forces.
Israel Volunteers from Isfiya fought in the IDF during the War of 1948. Since 1956 conscription of Druze men became mandatory. Isfiya was connected to water in 1960 and to electricity in 1963. In 2022, the area of Isfiya was increased from 7,000 to 10,900 dunam. ==Climate==