Zif, Hebron

Zif
Other transcription(s)
  Arabic زيف
Zif

Location of Zif within the Palestinian Territories

Coordinates: 31°28′47.38″N 35°07′19.17″E / 31.4798278°N 35.1219917°E / 31.4798278; 35.1219917Coordinates: 31°28′47.38″N 35°07′19.17″E / 31.4798278°N 35.1219917°E / 31.4798278; 35.1219917
Governorate Hebron
Government
  Type Village council
Population (2007)
  Jurisdiction 848

Zif (Arabic: زيف) is a Palestinian village located 7 kilometers (4.3 mi) south of Hebron. The village is in the Hebron Governorate in the southern West Bank. According to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics, Zif had a population of 848 in 2007.[1] The primary health care facilities in the village itself are designated by the Ministry of Health as level 1 and at nearby Yatta as level 3.[2]

History

Zif had a Jewish population until at least the 4th-century, but it became Christian during the Byzantine period.[3]

Ottoman era

In 1838 Edward Robinson identified the modern town of Zif and its adjacent Tell Zif with the Biblical Ziph.[4]

Claude Reignier Conder (1875) located his tomb as being the "fine sepulchral monument" immediately south of the present Tell Zif.[5]

References

  1. 2007 PCBS Census Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics. p.119.
  2. West Bank Health care
  3. The Archaeology of the Early Islamic Settlement in Palestine. Eisenbrauns. p. 94. ISBN 978-1-4575-0070-1. Retrieved 6 June 2011.
  4. Robinson and Smith, 1842, vol 2, pp. 191, 195, 200
  5. Palestine Exploration Fund. January 1886. 1886. Retrieved 5 June 2011.

Bibliography

External links

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