Antiquity Archeological evidence shows that in the biblical period, the site encompassed small agricultural villages along routes north from Jerusalem to
Nablus and the
Galilee. The villages made use of varied water-catchment strategies and served the needs of Israelite Jerusalem, including as a major producer of wine and oil for use in the
Temple in Jerusalem. Three ritual baths from the
Second Temple period have been excavated in Pisgat Ze'ev. The
Byzantine period saw the villages' primary use shift from agriculture to service religious functions, such as churches and monasteries. A large monastery from the period was located at the site's highest point, Ras at-Tawill. The monastery was likely active from the end of the 5th century to the close of the 8th century, and included a mosaic-floored chapel above a burial cave, as well as an
oil press and a cloth bag of 200 coins. Overlooking the neighborhood is
Tell el-Ful, believed to be the capital of the
Tribe of Judah and site of the Israelite King
Saul's palace. King
Hussein of Jordan began
constructing a palace there in the mid-1960s.
Modern era In the 1930s, plots of land were purchased near
Hizme by European Jews for the establishment of a Jewish farming cooperative, Havatzelet Binyamin. Most of the landowners died in the
Holocaust. The land was later expropriated along with Palestinian land to build Pisgat Ze'ev. Palestinian refugee camp, bordered by the
Israeli West Bank barrier, 2023 Pisgat Ze'ev was established in 1982 on land
annexed to Israel after the 1967
Six-Day War as one of the city's five
Ring Neighborhoods, meant to create a contiguous Jewish link with
Neve Yaakov in the city's north, which had been isolated from other Jewish areas. The original name proposal was "Pisgat Tal," based on the Arabic name of the hilltop where construction was to begin,
Ras at-Tawill, but the final choice was Pisgat Ze'ev, after the
Revisionist Zionist leader,
Ze'ev Jabotinsky. According to
ARIJ, Israel
confiscated land from several surrounding
Palestinian communities in order to construct Pisgat Ze'ev: • 1,458
dunams from
Beit Hanina, • 686 dunams from
Beit Hanina for the Pisgat Amir neighbourhood in Pisgat Ze'ev, • 89 dunams from
Hizma. running through Pisgat Ze'ev In May 2003, a public bus leaving the Pisgat Ze'ev terminus was blown up by a Palestinian
suicide bomber. Seven people were killed in the attack and dozens were wounded. The police said the bomber boarded the bus disguised as a religious Jew, wearing a
kippa and a
prayer shawl. One of the victims was a resident of the Shuafat refugee camp, on his way to work at the
Hadassah Medical Center in
Ein Kerem. ==Geography==