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Nazareth
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:''This is about the Middle East city of Nazareth. For other uses, see
Nazareth (disambiguation).''
'''Nazareth''' (
Arabic language Arabic '''الناصرة''' '''an-NÄ?á¹£irah''';
Hebrew language Hebrew '''× Ö¸×¦Ö°×¨Ö·×ª''',
Standard Hebrew '''Náẓərat''',
Tiberian Hebrew '''NÄ?ṣəraṯ''') is an ancient town in the
North District of Israel North District in
Israel.
Image:Miryam.jpg 250px|thumb|right|Mary's Spring - An ancient spring from the time of the Virgin Mary which is a symbol of Nazareth
Modern Nazareth
Nazareth is situated in the ridges of the Nazareth Mountains, on the steep slope of a hill, about 31 km from the
Sea of Galilee and about 9 km west from
Mount Tabor, at an elevation of 1150 feet (350 m). The modern city lies lower down upon the hill than the ancient one. The main road for traffic between
Egypt and the interior of
Asia passed by Nazareth near the foot of Tabor, and thence northward to
Damascus. It has a population of 60,000.
The majority of Nazarenes are
Israeli Arabs, about 35-40% of whom are
Christianity Christians and the rest
Islam Muslims.
In recent years, there has also been considerable controversy over plans to build a large mosque beside the
Church of the Annunciation Basilica of the Annunciation.
Nazareth in history and archaeology
Nazareth is not mentioned in the
Old Testament Hebrew Bible, nor in
Josephus, nor in the
Talmud.
Jerome in the
5th century says it was a ''viculus'' or mere village, and modern estimates of its size in the first century are in the low hundreds. It was a satellite village of
Sepphoris, a Hellenistic Roman city 6.5 km (4 miles) away.
In
1962 a
Hebrew language Hebrew inscription found in
Caesarea, dating to the late 3rd or early 4th century, mentions Nazareth as one of the places in which the priestly divisions were residing after the
Great Jewish Revolt. From the three fragments that have been found, it is possible to show that the inscription was a complete list of the twenty-four priestly courses (cf. 1 Chronicles 24:7-19; Nehemiah 24:1-21), with each course (or family) assigned its proper order and the name of each town or village in
Galilee where it settled.
Julius Africanus (around
200), cited by
Eusebius (''
Church History'' 1.7.14), speaks of Nazareth as a Jewish village, and in the same passage tells of ''
Desposyni desposunoi'', or relatives of Jesus, who came from Nazareth and nearby
Cochaba and kept the records of their descent with great care. Also, a martyr named Conon, who died in
Pamphylia under
Decius (249-251), declared at his trial: "I belong to the city of Nazareth in Galilee, and am a relative of Christ whom I serve, as my forefathers have done" (Clemens Kopp, ''Die heiligen Stätten der Evangelien'' [The Holy Places of the Gospels], Friedrich Pustet, Regensburg, 1959: page 90).
Epiphanius of Salamis Epiphanius, who died in
402, says (''
Panarion'' i. 136), based on a conversation with a Joseph who built churches in
Sepphoris and other towns, that until the time of
Constantine (
4th century), Nazareth was inhabited only by Jews. This may imply that in Epiphanius's own day some non-Jewish Christians lived there (and does not exclude Jewish believers in Christ living there previously); whether Joseph built any church at Nazareth or
Capernaum is uncertain. In the
6th century, legends about
Mary, the mother of Jesus Mary began to spark interest in the site among pilgrims, who founded the
Church of the Annunciation and associated a well with Mary. In 570, the
Anonymous of Piacenza reports travelling from Sepphoris to Nazareth and refers to the beauty of the Hebrew women there, who say that St. Mary was a relative of theirs, and records: "The house of St. Mary is a basilica" (P. Geyer, ''Itinera Hierosolymitana saeculi'', Lipsiae: G. Freytag, 1898: page 161).
Jack Finegan writes about the archaeology of Nazareth:
:The oldest known human life in the region of Nazareth is attested by the skull found in 1934 by R. Neuville in a cave about one and one-half miles southeast of the city, a skull which may be older than that of
Neandertal man. In Nazareth itself a complex of burial caves was found in the upper city in 1963, in which there was pottery of the first part of the Middle
Bronze Age (''Revue Biblique'' 70 [1963], p. 563; 72 [1965], p. 547). Down in the area of the Latin Church of the Annunciation there was certainly an ancient village of long continuance. Archeological investigation in and around this church was conducted by
Benedict Vlaminck in 1892, by
Prosper Viaud in 1889 and 1907-1909 and by
Bellarimo Bagatti in 1955 and thereafter when the previously standing eighteenth-century (1730) church was demolished to make way for the new and larger Basilica of the Annunciation (No. 49). The area under and around the church, as well as at the Church of St. Joseph not far away, was plainly that of an agricultural village. There were numerous grottoes, silos for grain, cisterns for water and oil; presses for raisins and olives, and millstones. While the silos are of a type found at
Tell Abu Matar as early as the
Chacolithic Age (''Israel Exploration Journal'' 5 [1955], p. 23) the earliest pottery found in them here at Nazareth is of
Iron II (900-600 B.C.).
Vardaman calls attention to the characteristic large jar with a small "funnel" beside the mouth; this appendage, though designed like a funnel, is simply attached to the shoulder, and does not actually pierce the wall of the jar (for an illustration of this jar, see Bagatti in ''DB'' Supplément VI, col. 323, Fig. 601). Other pottery of the site comprises a little of the Hellenistic period, more of the Roman, and most of all of the Byzantine period. Of the numerous grottoes at least several had served for domestic use and had even been modified architecturally for this purpose. One of these, where walls were built against a grotto to make a habitation, under the convent adjoining the Church of the Annunciation. Twenty-three tombs have also been found, most of them at a distance of something like 250 to 750 yards from Church of the Annunciation to the north, the west, and the south. Since these must have been outside of the village proper, their placement gives some idea of the limits of the settlement. Eighteen of the tombs are of the
kokim type, which was known in Palestine from about 200 B.C., and became virtually the standard type of Jewish tomb. Two of the tombs, one (PEFQS 1923, p. 90) only 60 yards from the other (QDAP 1 [1932], pp. 53-55) 450 yards southwest of the Church of the Annunciation, still contained objects such as pottery lamps and vases and glass vessels, and these date probably from the first to the third or fourth centuries of the Christian era. Four of the tombs were sealed with rolling stones, a type of closure typical of the late Jewish period up to A.D. 70. From the tombs, therefore, it can be concluded that Nazareth was a strongly Jewish settlement in the Roman period. (''The Archaeology of the New Testament'', Princeton University Press: Princeton, 1992: pages 44-46)
Richard Carrier further comments: "See: 'Nazareth,' Avraham Negev & Shimon Gibson, eds., ''Archaeological Encyclopedia of the Holy Land'', new ed. (2001); and B. Bagatti, ''Excavations in Nazareth'', vol. 1 (1969), esp. pp. 233-34, which discusses four calcite column bases, which were reused in a later structure, but are themselves dated before the War by their stylistic similarity to synagogues and Roman structures throughout 1st century Judaea, and by the fact that they contain Nabataean lettering (which suggests construction before Jewish priests migrated to Nazareth after the war), as well as their cheap material (cancite instead of marble); pp. 170-71 discusses Aramaic-inscribed marble fragments paleographically dated around the end of the 1st century or early 2nd century, demonstrating that Nazareth had marble structures near the time the Gospels were written (even if not before)."[http://www.columbia.edu/~rcc20/christianity/galilee.html]
Thus there is some evidence that Nazareth was a Jewish settlement both before and after the First Jewish Revolt in
Anno Domini AD 70.
Nazareth in the New Testament
It is evident from John 1:46 that Nazareth was an obscure place; it was assumed in Judaea that 'nothing good' could possibly come out of this provincial town of
Galilee. According to the
New Testament, Nazareth was the home of Joseph and Mary and the site of the
Annunciation, when Mary was told that she would bear the son of God. Nazareth is also assumed to be where
Jesus grew up from his infancy to manhood. However, some historians have called this into question, suggesting instead that what was originally a title was corrupted (Nazarene) into the name of his hometown (alternately, Nazara or Nazaret or Nazareth). Alfred Loisy, for example, in ''The Birth of Christianity'' argues that ''Iesous Nazarene'' meant not "from Nazareth", but rather that his title was "
Nazarene."
Luke 4:16 implies that Nazareth was large enough to have a synagogue.
The etymology of ''Nazareth'' from as early as
Eusebius up until the 20th century has been said to derive from ''netser'', a "shoot" or "sprout", while the
apocryphal
Gospel of Phillip derives the name from ''Nazara'' meaning "truth". As the tradition was not common knowledge in the 20th century more recent suggestions for an alternative etymology have emmerged such as ''nazir'' meaning "separated" and (in direct opposition to records by the church fathers) ''nosri'' meaning "watcher".
Zindler's view
Frank Zindler, managing editor of the
American Atheist Press, asserts that Nazareth did not exist in the first century. His arguments include the following:
*Nazareth is not mentioned in any historical records or biblical texts of the time and receives no mention by any contemporary historian.
*Nazareth is not mentioned in the Old Testament, the Talmud, nor in the Apocrypha and it does not appear in any early rabbinic literature.
*Nazareth was not included in the list of settlements of the tribes of Zebulon (Joshua 19:10-16) which mentions twelve towns and six villages
*Nazareth is not included among the 45 cities of Galilee that were mentioned by Josephus (37AD-100AD).
*Nazareth is also missing from the 63 towns of Galilee mentioned in the Talmud.
1948
During the
1948 Arab-Israeli War Nazareth capitulated
July 16, after little more than token resistance, during
Operation Dekel. The surrender was formalized in a written agreement, where the town leaders accepted to cease hostilities in return for promises from the Israeli officers, including the leader of the operation, brigade commander
Ben Dunkelman, that no harm would come to the civilians of the town. A few hours later
Chaim Laskov gave order to Dunkelman to evacuate the civilian population of Nazareth. Dunkelman refused to obey these orders. In sharp contrast to the surrounding towns, the
Arab Israeli Arab inhabitants in Nazareth were therefore never forced to evacuate.
References
*Dunkelman, Ben. ''Dual allegiance: an autobiography'', Goodread Biography, 1984, ISBN 0887801277
*Kidron, Peretz in ''Blaming the Victims''
Edward W. Said and
Christopher Hitchens (eds.) 1988, p.85-97 ISBN 0-86091-175-6
External links
-
The History of the Ancient Near East
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Nazareth City Website
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''Jewish Encyclopedia'': Nazareth
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www.jesusneverexisted.com "Nazareth: the town that theology built": a highly critical view of
archaeology at Nazareth.
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''Easton's Bible Dictionary'' 1897: Nazareth
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W.R.F. Browning, ''Oxford Dictionary of the Bible'': Nazareth
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Nazareth Village: A model
villiage and vistors center.
-
The New Official site of Nazareth City
Category:Cities in Israel
Category:Holy cities
Category:Jesus
Category:New Testament places
Category:History of Israel
Category:Biblical cities
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