The Knesset first convened on 14 February 1949 in
Jerusalem following the
20 January elections, replacing the
Provisional State Council which acted as Israel's official legislature from its date of independence on 14 May 1948 and succeeding the
Assembly of Representatives that had functioned as the
Jewish community's representative body during the
Mandate era. Before the construction of its current location, the Knesset met in Tel Aviv, The
Knesset building sits on a hilltop in western Jerusalem in a district known as
Sheikh Badr before the
1948 Arab–Israeli War, now
Givat Ram. The main building was financed by
James de Rothschild as a gift to the State of Israel in his will and was completed in 1966. It was built on land leased from the
Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Jerusalem, later purchased in the 1990s. Over the years, significant additions to the structure were constructed, however, these were built at levels below and behind the main 1966 structure as not to detract from the original assembly building's appearance. Despite numerous
motions of no confidence being tabled in the Knesset, a government has only been defeated by one once, when
Yitzhak Shamir's
government was brought down on 15 March 1990 as part of a plot that became known as "
the dirty trick". However, several governments have resigned as a result of no-confidence motions, even when they were not defeated. These include the
fifth government, which fell after Prime Minister
Moshe Sharett resigned in June 1955 following the abstention of the
General Zionists (part of the governing coalition) during a vote of no-confidence; the
ninth government, which fell after Prime Minister Ben-Gurion resigned in January 1961 over a motion of no-confidence on the
Lavon Affair; and the
seventeenth government, which resigned in December 1976 after the
National Religious Party (part of the governing coalition) abstained in a motion of no-confidence against the government.
Timeline • 14 February 1949: First meeting of the Constituent Assembly,
Jewish Agency, Jerusalem • 16 February 1949: Name "Knesset" approved for the Constituent Assembly; number of members fixed at 120; the Knesset starts convening in
Tel Aviv (first as at what is now the
Opera Tower, later at the San Remo Hotel in Tel Aviv) • 26 December 1949 – 8 March 1950: Knesset moved to Jerusalem; first convened at the Jewish Agency building • 13 March 1950: Knesset moved to the
Froumine House, in
King George Street, Jerusalem • 1950–1955: Israeli government holds architectural competitions for the permanent Knesset building.
Ossip Klarwein's original design won the competition • 1955: Government approves plans to build the Knesset in its current location • 1957:
James de Rothschild informs Prime Minister
David Ben-Gurion of his desire to finance the construction of the building • 14 October 1958: Cornerstone-laying for new Knesset building • 30 August 1966: Dedication of new building (during the sixth Knesset) • 1981: Construction of new wing begins • 1992: New wing opens • 2001: Construction starts on a large new wing that essentially doubles the overall floorspace of the Knesset compound. • 2007: New large wing opens , King George St., Jerusalem ==Government duties==