'' of 1769–1772 Jebel was first mentioned in papal tithes in 1334 under the name
Zephel. In 1401, the local nobleman Nicolae Trentul had a fortress here, which had to be demolished later, and in 1425 the fortress was rebuilt in the nearby forest. Turkish traveler
Evliya Çelebi, who has passed through Asia, Africa and Europe, noted various information related to the journeys he had made, describing it in ten volumes. In 1660, he, together with Ali, the Turk in charge of Timișoara region, visits Jebel and describes the village as being inhabited by Christian Romanians, as all the villages of Banat. The Jebel area, under the Turkish occupation, is represented as having large reserves of grain, livestock, forests and vast stretches of fruit trees. In 1717, after the conquest of
Banat by the Austrians, the first census was organized, the village of
Schebell being registered with 200 houses. Under the new administration the locality developed, and in 1761 it also had a post office. During the
Revolutions of 1848, the Serbs rebel and cause serious damage to the village. As a result, the inhabitants of Jebel rose against the Serbs, joining the hosts of
Lajos Kossuth. In 1863, due to a severe
drought, the village suffered from famine. In 1869, it experienced heavy flooding for several days. On 4 June 1920, Banat was divided into three parts as a result of the
Treaty of Trianon. The largest, eastern part, to which Jebel also belongs, fell to the
Kingdom of Romania. In the context of
World War II, on 19 September 1939, the talks between the Romanian Foreign Minister
Grigore Gafencu and his Yugoslav counterpart
Aleksandar Cincar-Marković on the establishment of a neutral zone in the
Balkans were held in a carriage at the Jebel train station. == Demographics ==