Jaffa where, according to the
Bible,
Jonah set sail into the
Mediterranean Sea before being swallowed by a fish|left The
walled city of
Jaffa is modern-day Tel Aviv-Yafo's only urban centre that existed in early modern times. Jaffa was an important port city in the region for millennia. Archaeological evidence shows signs of human settlement there starting in roughly 7,500 BC. The city was established around 1,800 BC at the latest. Its natural harbour has been used since the
Bronze Age. By the time Tel Aviv was founded as a separate city during
Ottoman rule of the region, Jaffa had been ruled by the
Canaanites,
Egyptians,
Philistines,
Israelites,
Assyrians,
Babylonians,
Persians,
Phoenicians,
Ptolemies,
Seleucids,
Hasmoneans,
Romans,
Byzantines,
the early Islamic caliphates,
Crusaders,
Ayyubids, and
Mamluks before coming under Ottoman rule in 1515. It had been fought over numerous times. The city is mentioned in ancient Egyptian documents, as well as the
Hebrew Bible. Other ancient sites in Tel Aviv include:
Tell Qasile,
Tel Gerisa,
Abattoir Hill,
Tel Hashash, and
Tell Qudadi. During the
First Aliyah in the 1880s, when Jewish immigrants began arriving in the region in significant numbers, new Jewish neighborhoods were founded outside Jaffa on the current territory of Tel Aviv. The first was
Neve Tzedek, founded in 1887 by
Mizrahi Jews due to overcrowding in Jaffa and built on lands owned by
Aharon Chelouche. The urban planning for the new city was influenced by the
garden city movement. The first 60 plots were purchased in Kerem Djebali (Karm al-Jabali) near Jaffa by
Jacobus Kann, a Dutch citizen, who registered them in his name to circumvent the Turkish prohibition on Jewish land acquisition.
Meir Dizengoff, later Tel Aviv's first
mayor, also joined the Ahuzat Bayit society. His vision for Tel Aviv involved peaceful co-existence with Arabs. On 11 April 1909, 66 Jewish families gathered on a desolate sand dune to parcel out the land by lottery using seashells. This gathering is considered the official date of the establishment of Tel Aviv. The lottery was organised by
Akiva Aryeh Weiss, president of the building society. Weiss collected 120 sea shells on the beach, half of them white and half of them grey. The members' names were written on the white shells and the plot numbers on the grey shells. A boy drew names from one box of shells and a girl drew plot numbers from the second box. A photographer, Abraham Soskin (b. 1881 in Russia, made
aliyah 1906), documented the event. The first water well was later dug at this site, located on what is today
Rothschild Boulevard, across from Dizengoff House. Within a year,
Herzl,
Ahad Ha'am,
Yehuda Halevi,
Lilienblum, and Rothschild streets were built; a water system was installed; and 66 houses (including some on six subdivided plots) were completed. By 1914, Tel Aviv had grown to more than . However, growth halted in 1917 when the
Ottoman authorities
expelled the residents of Jaffa and Tel Aviv as a wartime measure. Jews were free to return to their homes in Tel Aviv at the end of the following year when, with the end of World War I and the defeat of the Ottomans, the British took control of Palestine. The town had rapidly become an attraction to immigrants, with a local activist writing:
British administration (1917–1934) map, showing urban boundaries of Jaffa (green) and the Tel Aviv township (blue) within the Jaffa Municipality (red) The population of Tel Aviv had increased to around 34,000 by 1925. The
1931 census recorded Tel Aviv as having a population of 46,101 (45,564 Jews, 288 with no religion, 143 Christians, and 106 Muslims) in 12,545 houses. With increasing Jewish immigration during the
British administration, friction between Arabs and Jews in Palestine increased. On 1 May 1921, the
Jaffa riots resulted in the deaths of 48 Arabs and 47 Jews and injuries to 146 Jews and 73 Arabs. In the wake of this violence, many Jews left Jaffa for Tel Aviv. Tel Aviv began to develop as a commercial center. In 1923, Tel Aviv was the first town to be wired to electricity in Palestine, followed by Jaffa later in the same year. The opening ceremony of the Jaffa Electric Company powerhouse, on 10 June 1923, celebrated the lighting of the two main streets of Tel Aviv. In 1925, the Scottish biologist, sociologist, philanthropist and pioneering town planner
Patrick Geddes drew up the
Geddes Plan for Tel Aviv, a
master plan for Tel Aviv which was adopted by the city council led by
Meir Dizengoff. Geddes's plan for developing the northern part of the township was based on
Ebenezer Howard's
garden city movement. The plan consisted of four main features: a hierarchical system of streets laid out in a grid, large blocks consisting of small-scale domestic dwellings, the organization of these blocks around central open spaces, and the concentration of cultural institutions to form a civic center. While most of the northern area of Tel Aviv was built according to this plan, the
influx of European refugees in the 1930s necessitated the construction of taller apartment buildings on a larger footprint in the city. According to the
Jewish Virtual Library, the Jewish population of Tel Aviv had risen to 150,000 by 1937, compared to Jaffa's mainly Arab 69,000 residents, and by 1939 rose to 160,000, which was over a third of Palestine's total Jewish population. Many
German Jewish architects trained at the
Bauhaus, the
Modernist school of architecture in Germany, and left Germany during the 1930s. Some, like
Arieh Sharon, came to Palestine and adapted the architectural outlook of the Bauhaus and similar schools to the local conditions there, creating what is recognized as the largest concentration of buildings in the International Style in the world. During World War II, Tel Aviv was
hit by Italian airstrikes on 9 September 1940, which killed 137 people in the city. The
village statistics of 1945 listed Tel Aviv's population as 166,660, consisting of 166,000 Jews, 300 "other", 230 Christians, and 130 Muslims. During the
Jewish insurgency in Mandatory Palestine, Jewish
Irgun and
Lehi guerrillas launched repeated attacks against British military, police, and government targets in the city. In 1946, following the
King David Hotel bombing, the British carried out
Operation Shark, in which the entire city was searched for Jewish militants and most of the residents questioned, during which the entire city was placed under curfew. During the
March 1947 martial law in Mandatory Palestine, Tel Aviv was placed under martial law by the British authorities for 15 days, with the residents kept under curfew for all but three hours a day as British forces scoured the city for militants. In spite of this, Jewish guerrilla attacks continued in Tel Aviv and other areas under martial law in Palestine. According to the
1947 UN Partition Plan for dividing Palestine into Jewish and Arab states, Tel Aviv was to be included in the proposed
Jewish state. Jaffa with, as of 1945, a population of 101,580 people—53,930 Muslims, 30,820 Jews and 16,800 Christians—was designated as part of the Arab state.
Civil War broke out in the country and in particular between the neighbouring cities of Tel Aviv and Jaffa, which had been assigned to the Jewish and Arab states respectively. After several months of fighting, on 13 May 1948, Jaffa came under Israeli control. Most of the Arab population left during or after the fighting, amid a wider regional conflict following Arab rejection of the UN Partition Plan.
Israel 1940s and 1950s ) to witness the proclamation and signing of Israel's Declaration of Independence in 1948 After Israel
declared Independence on 14 May 1948, Tel Aviv was the temporary government center of the State of Israel. The city was repeatedly bombed by Egyptian warplanes and shelled by Egyptian warships during the
Israeli War of Independence, killing around 150 people. The most significant attack was the
bombing of the central bus station, in which 42 people were killed. On 3 June 1948, the
Israeli Air Force scored its first aerial victory over Tel Aviv when Israeli fighter pilot
Modi Alon shot down two Egyptian bombers during a raid. The city was also the scene of fighting between the
Israel Defense Forces and
Irgun during the
Altalena Affair, in which the IDF stopped an Irgun attempt to import arms for its own use. In December 1949, the Israeli government relocated to
Jerusalem. Due to the international dispute over the
status of Jerusalem, most embassies remained in or near Tel Aviv. The boundaries of Tel Aviv and Jaffa became a matter of contention between the Tel Aviv municipality and the Israeli government in 1948. The former wished to incorporate only the northern Jewish suburbs of Jaffa, while the latter wanted a more complete unification.
1960s and 1970s In the 1960s, some of the older buildings were demolished, making way for the country's first high-rises. The historic
Herzliya Hebrew Gymnasium was controversially demolished, to make way for the
Shalom Meir Tower, which was completed in 1965, and remained
Israel's tallest building until 1999. Tel Aviv's population peaked in the early 1960s at 390,000, representing 16 percent of the country's total. By the early 1970s, the population of Tel Aviv began to decline, followed by a period of
urban decay. By 1981, Tel Aviv had entered not just natural population decline, but an absolute population decline as well. In the late 1980s the city had an aging population of 317,000. as Tel Aviv's population fell 20%. By the late 1980s, attitudes to the city's future had become markedly more optimistic. It had also become a center of nightlife and discotheques for Israelis who lived in the suburbs and adjoining cities. By 1989, Tel Aviv had acquired the nickname "Nonstop City", as a reflection of the growing recognition of its nightlife and 24/7 culture, and "Nonstop City" had to some extent replaced the former moniker of "First Hebrew City". The largest project built in this era was the
Dizengoff Center, Israel's first shopping mall, which was completed in 1983. Other notable projects included the construction of
Marganit Tower in 1987, the opening of the
Suzanne Dellal Center for Dance and Theater in 1989, and the
Tel Aviv Cinematheque (opened in 1973 and located to the current building in 1989). hangs in the
Carmel Market in Tel Aviv, 1995
1980s and 1990s In the early 1980s, 13 embassies in Jerusalem moved to Tel Aviv as part of the
UN's measures responding to Israel's 1980
Jerusalem Law. Today, most national embassies are located in Tel Aviv or environs. In the 1990s, the decline in Tel Aviv's population began to be reversed and stabilized, at first temporarily due to a wave of immigrants from the
former Soviet Union. In this period, the number of engineers in the city doubled. Tel Aviv soon began to emerge as a global high-tech center. However, the city's municipality struggled to cope with an influx of new immigrants. Tel Aviv's tax base had been shrinking for many years, as a result of its preceding long term population decline, and this meant there was little money available at the time to invest in the city's deteriorating infrastructure and housing. In 1998, Tel Aviv was on the "verge of bankruptcy". Economic difficulties would then be compounded by a wave of Palestinian suicide bombings in the city from the mid-1990s, to the end of the Second Intifada, as well as the
dot-com bubble, which affected the city's rapidly growing hi-tech sector. On 4 November 1995, Israel's prime minister,
Yitzhak Rabin,
was assassinated at a rally in Tel Aviv in support of the Oslo peace accord. The outdoor plaza where this occurred, formerly known as Kikar Malchei Yisrael, was renamed
Rabin Square. being launched to intercept an Iraqi
Scud missile during the
Gulf War in 1991 In the
Gulf War in 1991, Tel Aviv was attacked by
Scud missiles from Iraq. Iraq hoped to provoke an Israeli military response, which could have destroyed the US–Arab alliance. The
United States pressured Israel not to retaliate, and after Israel acquiesced, the US and
Netherlands rushed
Patriot missiles to defend against the attacks, but they proved largely ineffective. Tel Aviv and other Israeli cities continued to be hit by Scuds throughout the war, and every city in the Tel Aviv area except for
Bnei Brak was hit. A total of 74 Israelis died as a result of the Iraqi attacks, mostly from suffocation and heart attacks, while approximately 230 Israelis were injured. Extensive property damage was also caused, and some 4,000 Israelis were left homeless. It was feared that Iraq would fire missiles filled with
nerve agents or
sarin. As a result, the Israeli government issued
gas masks to its citizens. When the first Iraqi missiles hit Israel, some people injected themselves with an antidote for nerve gas. The inhabitants of the southeastern suburb of Hatikva erected an angel-monument as a sign of their gratitude that "it was through a great miracle, that many people were preserved from being killed by a direct hit of a Scud rocket." after the
bombing of 1996 Since the
First Intifada, Tel Aviv has suffered from
Palestinian political violence. The first
suicide attack in Tel Aviv occurred on 19 October 1994, on the
Line 5 bus, when a bomber killed 22 civilians and injured 50 as part of a
Hamas suicide campaign. On 6 March 1996, another Hamas suicide bomber killed 13 people (12 civilians and 1 soldier), many of them children, in the
Dizengoff Center suicide bombing. Three women were killed by a Hamas terrorist in the
Café Apropo bombing on 27 March 1997. , in which 21 Israelis, mostly teenagers, were killed
2000s and 2010s The demographic profile of the city changed in the 2000s, as it began to attract a higher proportion of young residents. By 2012, 28 percent of the city's population was aged between 20 and 34 years old. Between 2007 and 2012, the city's population growth averaged 6.29 percent. As a result of its population recovery and industrial transition, the city's finances were transformed, and by 2012 it was running a budget surplus and maintained a credit rating of AAA+. In the 2000s and early 2010s, Tel Aviv received tens of thousands of illegal immigrants, primarily from
Sudan and
Eritrea, changing the demographic profile of areas of the city. In 2009, Tel Aviv celebrated its official centennial. In addition to city- and country-wide celebrations, digital collections of historical materials were assembled. These include the History section of the official Tel Aviv-Yafo Centennial Year website; and
Stanford University's Eliasaf Robinson Tel Aviv Collection, documenting the history of the city. Today, the city is regarded as a strong candidate for
global city status. Over the past 60 years, Tel Aviv had developed into a
secular, liberal-minded center with a vibrant nightlife and café culture. Another Hamas suicide bomber killed six civilians and injured 70 in the
Allenby Street bus bombing. Twenty-three civilians were killed and over 100 injured in the
Tel Aviv central bus station massacre.
Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed responsibility for the attack. In the
Mike's Place suicide bombing, an attack on a bar by a
British Muslim suicide bomber resulted in the deaths of three civilians and wounded over 50. Hamas and Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed joint responsibility. An Islamic Jihad bomber killed five and wounded over 50 on 25 February 2005
Stage Club bombing. The most recent suicide attack in the city occurred on 17 April 2006, when 11 people were killed and at least 70 wounded in a
suicide bombing near the old central bus station. Another attack took place on 29 August 2011 in which a Palestinian attacker stole an Israeli taxi cab and rammed it into a police checkpoint guarding the popular
Haoman 17 nightclub in Tel Aviv which was filled with 2,000
Israeli teenagers. After crashing, the assailant went on a stabbing spree, injuring eight people.
F-16I Sufas over Tel Aviv On 21 November 2012, during
Operation Pillar of Defense, the Tel Aviv area was targeted by rockets, and air raid sirens were sounded in the city for the first time since the
Gulf War. All of the rockets either missed populated areas or were shot down by an
Iron Dome rocket defense battery stationed near the city. During the operation, a bomb blast on a bus wounded at least 28 civilians, three seriously. This was described as a terrorist attack by Israel, Russia, and the United States and was condemned by the United Nations, United States, United Kingdom, France and Russia, whilst Hamas spokesman
Sami Abu Zuhri declared that the organisation "blesses" the attack. More than 300 rockets were fired towards the Tel Aviv Metropolitan area in the
2021 Israel–Palestine crisis. New laws were introduced to protect Modernist buildings, and efforts to preserve them were aided by
UNESCO recognition of Tel Aviv's White City as a world heritage site in 2003. In the early 2000s, Tel Aviv municipality focused on attracting more young residents to the city. It made significant investment in major boulevards, to create attractive pedestrian corridors. Former industrial areas like the city's previously derelict Northern
Tel Aviv Port and the
Jaffa railway station, were upgraded and transformed into leisure areas. A process of gentrification began in some of the poor neighborhoods of southern Tel Aviv and many older buildings began to be renovated. ==Geography==