32°33′02″N 35°21′25″E / 32.5506°N 35.3569°E / 32.5506; 35.3569

Ain Jalut in the 1870s PEF Survey of Palestine, surrounded by Zerin to the northwest, Qumya to the northeast, and Nuris and Rihaniyeh to the southeast
Ma'ayan Harod, 2017

Ma'ayan Harod (Hebrew: מעיין חרוד, lit.'Harod's spring') or Ain Jalut (Arabic: عين جالوت ‘ayn Jālūt, or عين جالود ‘ayn Jālūd,[1] and Hebrew: גילות, romanizedain djeluth[2]) is an all-year spring in the Harod Valley (the easternmost part of the Jezreel Valley) on the northwest corner of Mount Gilboa, that was the location of the 13th-century Battle of Ain Jalut.[3] This was a major turning point in world history that saw the Mamluks inflict the first of two defeats on the Mongols that ultimately halted their invasion of the Levant and Egypt.[4]

The traditional name of Ain Jalut has been used since the 12th century and is commonly believed to mean "Spring of Goliath". Alternative etymologies have suggested that it might be derived from the name Gilead, potentially an archaic name for Mount Gilboa. Other names given to the site include "En Harod" or "Ein Harod", a biblical place name that was associated with Ain Jalut in the 19th century; subsequent scholarship, specifically the work of Israel Finkelstein and Oded Lipschits, has refuted this connection. Other associations have also been suggested, including in the 1841 Biblical Researches in Palestine, which linked it to the "spring in Jezreel" where Saul pitched his tent before his final battle, but this was rejected in 1847 and has gained little traction since. The spring is still sometimes known as the "Fountain of Jezreel", as well as "Gideon's Fountain".[5]

According to the medieval chronicler Baha ad-Din ibn Shaddad, there was a prosperous village at the site in the Middle Ages. It was captured by the Crusaders and retaken by Saladin in 1183 CE (579 AH). A later Palestinian village was also established in the area in the late 19th century. In the 1920s, the Zionist activist Yehoshua Hankin purchased the surrounding area as part of the Sursock Purchases through the Palestine Land Development Company, and founded a kibbutz, which he called Ein Harod, near the spring. The site is today incorporated into the Ma'ayan Harod National Park, administered by the Israel Nature and Parks Authority.[6]

Geography

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Gideon Cave, from which the waters emerge

The spring is located in the Harod Valley, which is the eastern part of the Jezreel Valley. While the Jezreel Valley is drained via the Kishon River to the Mediterranean Sea, the Harod Valley is drained through the Harod Stream ("Wadi Jalud" in Arabic) to the Jordan River. It is the largest of the springs emerging on the northern slopes of Mount Gilboa.[7] The source of the spring as well as other springs in the Beit She'an Valley to the east, comes from fresh rainwater that percolate into the limestone hills of Samaria and collect in an underground water reservoir beneath the areas of the Palestinian cities of Nablus and Jenin. The water emerges from the hills as they incline north towards the valleys. At this valley the waters emerge from a natural cave known as "Gideon's Cave".[8][9] The spring's discharge rate is about 360 cubic meters per hour.[10] According to the PEF's Survey of Western Palestine in 1882, Victor Guérin stated that the rock from which the fountain springs has been artificially hollowed into a cavern.[11][12]

Names and identification

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The entry on the spring from the 1881 book Picturesque Palestine, Sinai, and Egypt edited by Charles William Wilson after the 1870s PEF Survey of Palestine

The spring is first recorded as Ain Jalut in the 12th century by Baha ad-Din ibn Shaddad in his biography of Saladin. In that work, the name is presumed to mean "Goliath's spring", alluding to the tale of David and Goliath, with "Jalut" presumed to be an Arabization of "Goliath".[13] This follows a longstanding tradition of narration in relation to the spring. An anonymous Christian traveler from Burdigala mentioned in the year 333/334, a place near the city of Jezreel where biblical David killed Goliath.[14] Kurdish-Jewish folklore similarly places the location of the battle as the "fields of Megiddo" in the Jezreel Valley.[15]

In the 14th century, the Jewish geographer Ishtori Haparchi identified Ain Jalut with the biblical "Spring which is in Jezreel", as well as where the Israelite king Saul prepared his army before the Battle of Gilboa, in which he and his son were ultimately killed.[16] Haparchi dismissed the connection of the spring to Goliath, suggesting that the biblical battle took place between Sokho and Azekah, in Judea, not the Jezreel Valley.[16]

In the 19th century, Arthur Penrhyn Stanley, in his 1856 book Sinai and Palestine, similarly associated Ain Jalut with the "Spring of Jezreel", and also suggested that this could be the same site as En Harod, a place mentioned in the story of Gideon's battle with the Midianites.[17] The name "Harod" translates literally as the "spring of trembling (or anxiety)",[17][18] a toponym thought to have been used "as a literary illusion to the fear and anxiety of the warriors" ahead of the battle.[18] Stanley noted that the then modern name, "Ain Jahlood" or "Spring of Goliath" may have originated, as observed by Carl Ritter in his 1866 geography of Palestine, from a confused recollection of the earlier stories, but "more probably arose from a false tradition in the 6th century".[17] He separately noted the suggestion by Rabbi Joseph Schwarz, in his 1850 Descriptive Geography of Palestine, that the name "Jalud" could instead be derived from the name "Gilead". Schwarz suggested that this might reminisce an older name for Mount Gilboa, and thus explain the cry of Gideon ahead of his battle: "Whoever is fearful and afraid, let him return, and depart early from Mount Gilead." Schwarz alternatively explains "Mount Gilead" as a "general phrase for the whole tribe" of Manasseh.[17] George Adam Smith, writing in 1920, also noted the similarity of "Jalud" with "Gilead".[19]

Little consensus has emerged regarding the association of either Biblical place name. The connection of Ain Jalut with the Jezreel spring was rejected by John Wilson in 1847, who identified the Jezreel spring as closer to the ancient city, known today as "Ein Jezreel".[20] In 1874, Victor Guérin countered that although there is a spring closer to the ancient city of Jezreel, the spring in Ain Jalut is much larger and is therefore more likely to be the spring where Saul set his military camp.[21] In 1920, George Adam Smith in 1920 identified the "fountain which is in Jezreel" in Ein Ganim (Jenin), on the other side of Mount Gilboa.[19] Smith suggested that "Jezreel" in that context was not the city, but the name of the district in which the biblical spring was located.[22][23]

In 1882, Claude Reignier Conder then identified the En Harod with "Ain el-Jemain", a spring in the nearby Beit She'an valley.[12] En Harod was associated with Ain Jalut again by the Encyclopaedia Biblica in 1903, and by Smith in 1920.[19] In 2017, Israel Finkelstein and Oded Lipschits also rejected a link between En Harod and Ain Jalut, asserting that the Battle of Gilboa actually took place near Shechem (modern day Nablus), after which the Israelites chased the Midianites to Succoth, which is east of the Jordan River. They noted that Josephus also located the battle next to the Jordan River in Antiquities of the Jews.[24]

History

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Medieval period

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The Itinerarium Burdigalense (586) notes "ibi est campus, ubi David Goliat occidit" in reference to a location just before Scythopolis.[14]

In the 12th century, a village or a town existed next to the spring and bore its name. Baha ad-Din ibn Shaddad, in his Life of Saladin, wrote that "The Sultan continued his march to el-Jalut, a prosperous village, near which there is a spring (ain), and here he pitched his camp".[25]

Yaqut al-Hamawi mentions Ain Jalut as "a small and pleasant town, lying between Nablus and Baisan, in the Filastin Province. The place was taken by the Rumi (Crusaders), and retaken by Saladin in 579 (1183 CE)."[26]

In the Battle of Ain Jalut in 1260, the Mamluks defeated the Mongol army of Hulagu Khan under the command of Kitbuqa. In that battle, the Mamluks used the terrain of Ain Jalut to their advantage, concealing their main army in the trees on adjacent hills before provoking the Mongols with a decoy force. When the Mongols had been lured into the ambush, the main Mamluk army attacked from all sides. Routed, the Mongols were forced to retreat to Beisan.[27]

20th century

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Ain Jalud at the turn of the 20th century

In the early 20th century the spring and the surrounding area were owned by the Sursock family from Beirut, who had bought the land from the Ottoman government in 1872 and established a small village in the area.[28][29]

The area was acquired by the Jewish community as part of the Sursock Purchase. In 1921, when the land was sold by the Sursocks, the nine families who lived here petitioned the new British administration for perpetual ownership, but were only offered a short lease with an option to buy.[30]

Kibbutz Ein Harod

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The settlement near the spring. Mount Gilboa can be seen in the background. (1920–1925)
 
1940s Survey of Palestine map of the area

The land, named the "Nuris Bloc" after a nearby Arab village, was instead bought by the Zionist activist Yehoshua Hankin, through the Palestine Land Development Company.[citation needed] Hankin founded a kibbutz, which he called Ein Harod, near the spring.

In 1921, Hankin sent members of Gdud HaAvoda, a Zionist work group, to settle in the territory. Shlomo Lavi, among the leaders of the Gdud, had envisioned the "Big Kvutza", a settlement consisting of several farms spread on vast terrain with both agriculture and industry. His plan was approved by the World Zionist Organization, but with some limitations on his detailed vision. The Gdud began this settlement near the Ain Jalut which was known to Jews as Ein Harod. Yehuda Kopolevitz Almog, one of the Gdud's leaders, describes that in the first day the settlers set up tents and began enclosing their camp with barbwire and defensive trenches.[31][32]

The first 74 members pioneers were split into two groups. One of the Second Aliyah, former members of Hashomer and Kvutzat Kinneret, and the other from the Third Aliyah. In the first months, the settlers sowed fields, planted a eucalyptus grove, paved roads and dried swamps. An Ulpan, a school for learning Hebrew was set up in the camp. In December 1921, a second farm called Tel Yosef (after Joseph Trumpeldor) was established by members of the Gdud on the hill of Qumya. Disagreements on funds and internal politics have led Ein Harod and Tel Yosef to part ways in 1923, with many members leaving the former for the latter. The group that remained in Ein Harod included 110 members and was headed by Lavi, Yitzhak Tabenkin, Aharon Zisling and David Maletz. The group at Ein Harod continued to get little support from the Zionist organizations and after the 1929 Palestine riots, the members chose to move their camp from the area of the spring to the hill of Qumya, next to Tel Yosef and thus the settlement at the spring was abandoned.[32][33][34]

The spring continued to be used as a camp site for the pioneers of Beit HaShita and Dovrat before their departure to their permanent locations.[35][36] In 1949 a village named Gidona was established next to the spring for Jewish immigratns from Yemen.[37]

In 1952, the Ein Harod community split into two separate entities, Ein Harod (Ihud) and Ein Harod (Meuhad).

21st century

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National park

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Ma'ayan Harod National Park

The spring is now part of a national park called the Ma'ayan Harod National Park, which features a recreational swimming pool fed by the spring's waters. The park also contains the house built at the site by the Hankins, which has become a museum. Adjacent to this there is a war memorial for residents of the valley who died in Israel's wars.[38]

The park has been described as "well maintained", but visitors to the site "have absolutely no way of knowing that one of the climactic battles of the Middle Ages was fought in it".[3]

Archaeology

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An archaeological survey conducted in the 20th century found flour mills and the remains of an aqueduct dated to Islamic times (either before or after the Crusades) in the immediate vicinity of the spring. The surveyors also found a burial tomb and the remains of an oil press.[7] Settlement remains were discovered at the adjacent Gidona and the nearby Giv'at Yehonatan ("Jonathan's Hill").[7]

Legacy of Ain Jalut

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One of the three original brigades of the Palestine Liberation Army was named "Ain Jalut", after the battle.[39] In July 1970, Yasser Arafat referred to the modern area in the context of the historical battle:[40][non-primary source needed]

This will not be the first time that our people has vanquished its enemies. The Mongols came and swept away the Abbasid caliphate, then they came to Ain Jalut in our land – in the same region where we are today fighting the Zionists – and they were defeated at Ain Jalut.

References

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  1. ^ Palmer 1881, p. 157.
  2. ^ Leopold Zunz (1841). 429 The itinerary of Rabbi Benjamin of Tudela: Dr Zunz on the Geography of Palestine. A. Asher & Company. pp. 429–430. {{cite book}}: Check |url= value (help)
  3. ^ a b Silver, M. M. (2021). The History of Galilee, 47 BCE to 1260 CE: From Josephus and Jesus to the Crusades. Lexington Books. pp. 308. ISBN 9781793649461.
  4. ^ J. J. Saunders (2001). The History of the Mongol Conquests. University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 115–. ISBN 0-8122-1766-7.
  5. ^ "'Ain Jalûd, the Fountain of Jezreel, known also as Gideon's Fountain. It flows from a cavernous recess in the base of Jebel Fukû'a (Mount Gilboa), and spreads out at once into a fine limpid pool forty or fifty feet in diameter". The New York Public Library.
  6. ^ "Ma'ayan Harod National Park". Israel Nature and Parks Authority.
  7. ^ a b c "Maʽayan Harod". The Archaeological Survey of Israel.
  8. ^ Baretz 2015, p. 37.
  9. ^ "Meet Ma'ayan Harod National Park: Geography and Geology". Israel Nature and Parks Authority.
  10. ^ "Welcome to Ma'ayan Harod National Park" (PDF). Israel Nature and Parks Authority. 2018.
  11. ^ Guérin, 1874, pp. 308-310
  12. ^ a b Conder & Kitchener 1882, p. 101
  13. ^ Le Strange 1890, p. 386.
  14. ^ a b Robinson & Smith 1841, p. 168.
  15. ^ Vilnay 1978, p. 81.
  16. ^ a b Haparchi, Ishtori (1957–1958). Blumenfeld, Joseph (ed.). Knob and the Flower (in Hebrew). New York: Hadar Linotyping & Publishing co. pp. 417.
  17. ^ a b c d Stanley 1856, p. 337-338
  18. ^ a b Finkelstein & Lipschits 2017, p. 14–15.
  19. ^ a b c Smith 1920, p. 397
  20. ^ John Wilson (1847). Lands Of The Bible. Vol. 2. Edinburgh: William Whyte And Co, National Digital Library of India. pp. 88.
  21. ^ Guérin 1874, p. 308-310.
  22. ^ Smith 1920, p. 402.
  23. ^ Smith 1920, p. 397.
  24. ^ Israel Finkelstein and Oded Lipschits (7 March 2017). "Geographical and Historical Observations on the old North Israelite Gideon tale in Judges". Zeitschrift für die alttestamentliche Wissenschaft. 129 (1): 14–15, 17. doi:10.1515/zaw-2017-0005. S2CID 171934110.
  25. ^ Wilson, Charles William; Conder, Claude Reignier, eds. (1897). The Life of Saladin. By Behâ Ed-Dîn. 1137-1193 A.D. Translated by Conder, C.R. pp. 89.
  26. ^ Le Strange 1890, p. 386.
  27. ^ "Battle of Ayn Jalut | Summary | Britannica". www.britannica.com.
  28. ^ Ruth Kark (2017). "Consequences of the Ottoman Land Law: Agrarian and Privatization Processes in Palestine, 1858–1918". In Raghubir Chand, Etienne Nel and Stanko Pelc (ed.). Societies, Social Inequalities and Marginalization. Perspectives on Geographical Marginality. Springer International Publishing. pp. 101–119. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-50998-3_8. ISBN 978-3-319-50997-6.
  29. ^ Seth Frantzman (2010). The Arab settlement of Late Ottoman and Mandatory Palestine: New Village Formation and Settlement Fixation, 1871-1948. PhD Thesis, Hebrew University of Jerusalem. pp. 155, 185.
  30. ^ Arieh Avneri (1984). The Claim of Dispossession. Transaction Books. p. 118. ISBN 9780878559640.
  31. ^ Kenneth W. Stein (1980). "Legal Protection and Circumvention of Rights for Cultivators in Mandatory Palestine". Palestinian Society and Politics. Princeton University Press. p. 260. JSTOR j.ctt7zts44.21.
  32. ^ a b Aner, Zeev, ed. (1998). Sipurei Kibbutzim (in Hebrew). Israel: Ministry of Defensive. pp. 176–177. ISBN 965-05-0946-1.
  33. ^ Leslie Stein (2003). The Hope Fulfilled: The Rise of Modern Israel. United States: Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 176. ISBN 0-275-97141-4.
  34. ^ Freddy Kahana (2011). Neither Town Nor Village - the Architecture of the Kibbutz 1910-1990 (in Hebrew). Israel: Yad Yitzhak Tabenkin. p. 101. ISBN 978-965-282-107-2.
  35. ^ Buchman, Yossi; Gal, Yitzhak, eds. (2001). New Israel Guide: The Valleys. Israel: Keter Publishing House, Ministry of Defense, Yedioth Aharonoth. p. 107. ISBN 965-07-0894-4.
  36. ^ Israel - Sites and Places. Israel: Ministry of Defense. 2005. p. 202. ISBN 965-220-263-0.
  37. ^ "Labour village on the foothills of Gilboa". Al HaMishmar (in Hebrew). 1 December 1949.
  38. ^ Aviva and Shmuel Bar-Am (18 January 2014). "118 steps to a pioneer's house". The Times of Israel.
  39. ^ Gabriel Ben-Dor; Universiṭat Ḥefah. Makhon le-ḥeḳer ṿe-limud ha-Mizraḥ ha-tikhon (1978). The Palestinians and the Middle East conflict: an international conference held at the Institute of Middle Eastern Studies, University of Haifa, April 1976. Turtledove Pub. pp. 179, 187. ISBN 978-965-200-001-9.
  40. ^ International Documents on Palestine. Institute for Palestine Studies. 1973. p. 877, quoting "Radio Interview Statements by Central Committee Chairman Arafat of the PLO on the Efforts Being Made to Reach a Peaceful Settlement," 25 July 1970. Also in Paul T. Chamberlin, Preparing for Dawn: The United States and the Global Politics of Palestinian Resistance 1967-1975, Ohio State University, 2009

Bibliography

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