Ancient Modi'in During classical antiquity, a town named
Modi'in (,
Mōdeeim) existed in the general area of the modern city. It was the place of origin of the
Maccabees, a group of Jewish rebel warriors who started and led the
Jewish revolt against the
Seleucid rule over Judea and the
Hellenisation of its Jewish population. The revolt succeeded in driving out the Selucids, and the rededication of the
Second Temple at the end of the revolt is commemorated by the Jewish holiday of
Hanukkah. After expelling the Selucids, the Maccabees formed the
Hasmonean dynasty, which ruled Judea in the 2nd and 1st centuries
BCE. Archaeologists discovered what one of them suggested might be an orderly numismatic collection of 16 silver
tetradrachms and
didrachms (
shekels and
half-shekels) minted in the city of
Tyre during the reign of two Seleucid kings. and
Khirbet el-Burj (Titura/Horbat Tittora).
Umm el-Umdan Umm el-Umdan is an archaeological hilltop site near the southern Moriah (Buchman) neighbourhood of Maccabim Reut, towards Latrun Junction. The six main settlement strata excavated date to the
Persian,
Hellenistic,
Roman,
Byzantine, and
Early Muslim periods. However, the main findings are from a rural settlement from the
Hasmonean through to the Early Roman periods. It contains the remains of a synagogue dated to the end of the 2nd-beginning of the 1st century BCE (Hasmonean period), in use until 132 CE (
Bar Kokhba revolt). It has a 1st-century CE
mikveh standing next to it. , 1926
Titura/Horbat Tittora Horbat Tittora, located on a hill at Modi'in, shows signs of habitation from the
Chalcolithic to the
Ottoman period, with continuous habitation from the
Iron Age II in the
First Temple period through to the
Byzantine period and some traces from the
Early Muslim,
Mamluk and Ottoman periods.
Preservation efforts Lack of interest in archaeological sites during the construction of the new city led to the loss of important archaeological vestiges. Through the effort of several individual citizens, similar destruction was averted at Titura and Umm el-Umdan, with authorities taking over the preservation of the surviving sites, while the public actively included the Hasmonean antiquities into their annual Hanukkah rituals. The project of founding nearby Re'ut, led by an association of Israeli army officers, started in 1987. The towns were united into Maccabim-Re'ut in 1990. According to
ARIJ, Israel confiscated land from two Palestinian villages for the construction of Maccabim, presently part of Modi'in-Maccabim-Re'ut: 1,499
dunams from
Beit Sira and 471 dunams from
Saffa. The cornerstone of Modi'in was laid in 1993. It was built as a modern
planned city with high standards of urban planning. Environmental issues and future growth were taken into consideration from the early design stages. Large
greenspaces were incorporated into the city's layout and comprise 50% of the area within the city limits. The city was opened for residency in 1996. In 2003, the Israeli
Ministry of Interior unified Modi'in and Maccabim-Re'ut into a single city. ==Demography==