During the late eighteenth century, a family known as
al-Ghul built the religious complex and shrine known as the
Maqam an-Nabi Yusha' (biblical
Joshua), which included a
mosque and a building for visitors, as an act of devotion. This family, also called the "servants of the shrine," numbered about fifty and were the first to settle the site. They cultivated the surrounding land, and the place subsequently evolved into a village. In 1851/1852
van de Velde noted the
wali at Al-Nabi Yusha, with an old
terebinth tree. In 1875
Victor Guérin arrived at the
Maqam (shrine) after walking up on a very steep and difficult path from the east. He described the shrine, dedicated by the local
Muslims to
Nabi Yusha', as a building surmounted with two small
cupolas. In 1881, the
PEF's
Survey of Western Palestine (SWP) noted that the "
Metawali" from nearby
Qadas came to Al-Nabi Yusha' to venerate the name of Joshua. Pottery from
Rachaya Al Foukhar have been found in the village.
British Mandate era At the end of World War I it was under French control, and the 1920
boundary agreement between Britain and French placed it in Lebanon. However the Boundary Commission established by the 1920 agreement shifted the border, leaving the village in Palestine. During the
Mandate period, the British built
a police station in the village. growing to 70 in the
1945 statistics, while 16 dunams was built-up (urban) area.
1948 war, and aftermath Al-Nabi Yusha' was depopulated on May 16, in the
1948 Arab-Israeli War during
Operation Yiftach led by Israeli army officer
Yigal Allon who later became a key Israeli figure. An early attempt to take the village by
Haganah forces during the operation ended in the deaths of 22 Haganah fighters, who had their corpses reportedly
decapitated by the Arab forces. Most of its residents ended up in refugee camps in Lebanon and Syria. In 1998, the descendants of al-Nabi Yusha' refugees were estimated at 499. The Israeli moshav
Ramot Naftali was established in 1945 south of the village, and since 1948 includes Al-Nabi Yusha' land. It is located close to the border between Al-Nabi Yusha' and the lands of
Mallaha. The Palestinian historian
Walid Khalidi described the village remains in 1992 as: "The site has been fenced in with barbed wire and is buried under rubble, making access difficult. However, some evidence of the village remains: fragments of houses, tombs in the village's cemetery, and the shrine of al-Nabi Yusha'. The two domes and arched entrance of the main part of the shrine are still intact, but the thick stone walls of the rooms attached to it are broken and the entire complex of buildings is neglected; weeds sprouts from the roof. The village site is surrounded by fig trees and cactuses. The flat lands around the site are planted by Israeli farmers with apple trees, while the sloping parts are wooded or used as pasture." ==The Nabi Yusha shrine==