British Mandate Romema was founded on a hill outside the village of
Lifta in 1921. The initiator of the project was attorney Yom-Tov Hamon, an expert in
Ottoman law and land-ownership issues, who arbitrated disputes among Arab landowners in the region and opened sales of the land to Jews. The original building plan called for 24 houses surrounding a central square. , 1948 Extant architecture shows the area's original affluence, wealth, and diversity. These include the three-story residence of Arab Haj Muhammad, who owned quarries in nearby Lifta and was a judge in the city's Muslim courts; the elegant home of Jewish hotelier and businessman Yehiel Amdurski, and the home of Rabbi
Yehuda Fishman-Maimon.
State of Israel After the establishment of the State of Israel, Romema became a center of light industry for many decades, home to a large number of garages, foundries, carpentry workshops and factories. From 1950 to 1991, Romema was the home of the
Jerusalem Biblical Zoo, after access to the zoo on
Mount Scopus was blocked in 1949. In 2007, as businesses closed and properties were bought up by developers, a master plan was commissioned for the neighborhood. ==Landmarks==