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Tiberias

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Ruins of ancient Tiberias, 1862.
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<tr> <td>Arabic</td> <td>طبرية</td> </tr>


<tr> <td>Standard Hebrew</td> <td>Tverya</td> </tr>
Tiberias
Hebrew טבריה
Government City
District North
Population 39 900 (CBS end of a)
Jurisdiction 10 000 dunams (10 km²)

Coordinates: 32°47′23″N, 35°31′29″E

Tiberias (Hebrew: טבריה, Tverya; Arabic: طبرية‎, Ṭabariyyah) is a town on the western shore of the Sea of Galilee, Lower Galilee, Israel. It was named in honour of the emperor Tiberius.

Tiberias was built at about AD 20 by Herod Antipas, the son of Herod the Great on the site of the destroyed village of Rakkat, and it became the capital of his realm in Galilee.

Tiberias's name in the Roman Empire (and consequently the form most used in English) was its Greek form, Τιβεριάς (Tiberiás, Modern Greek Τιβεριάδα Tiveriáda), an adaptation of the taw-suffixed Semitic form that preserved its feminine grammatical gender.

During Herod's time, the Jews refused to settle there; the presence of a cemetery rendered the site ritually unclean. However, Antipas forcibly settled people there from rural Galilee in order to populate his new capital. The Sanhedrin, the Jewish court, fled to Tiberias. It was in fact its final meeting place before its disbandment. Following the expulsion of all Jews from Jerusalem after 135, Tiberias and its neighbor Sepphoris became the major centers of Jewish culture. The Mishnah, which grew into the Jerusalem Talmud, may have begun to have been written here.

In 613 it was the site where the Jewish revolt started coming into aid of the Persian invaders.

Under Byzantine and Arab rule, the city declined and was devastated by wars and earthquakes in the Middle Ages. Despite this decline, the community of masoretic scholars flourished at Tiberias from the beginning of the 8th to the end of the 10th centuries. These scholars created a systematic written form of the vocalization of ancient Hebrew, which is still used by all streams of Judaism. The apogee of the Tiberian masoretic scholarly community is personified in Aaron ben Moses ben Asher, who refined the vocalization system now know as Tiberian Hebrew. During the crusades it was the central city of the Principality of Galilee in the Kingdom of Jerusalem; the region was sometimes called the Principality of Tiberias, or the Tiberiad. Saladin besieged it during his invasion of the kingdom in 1187, and in October of that year defeated the crusaders at the Battle of Hattin outside the city. Around this time the original site of the city was abandoned, and settlement shifted north to the present location.

In 1558, Doña Gracia, a former marrano Jew, rented the site from Suleiman the Magnificent. She restored the city walls, built a yeshiva and encouraged European Jews fleeing the Inquisition to settle the city. Tiberias flourished again for a hundred years. It was devastated again, and again resettled by Hassidic Jews.

In the 18th and 19th centuries Tiberias received an influx of rabbis who established the city as a center for Jewish learning. During this time Tiberias became one of the Jewish Four Holy Cities, along with Jerusalem, Hebron, and Safed.

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[edit] Current

Today, Tiberias is Israel's most popular holiday resort in the northern half of the country.

In October 2004 (Tishrei 5765), a controversial group of rabbis claiming to represent varied communities in Israel undertook a ceremony in Tiberias [1], claiming to have established a new Sanhedrin.

Professor Yitzhar Hirschfeld of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem is leading long-term archaeological excavation at Tiberias, in which many volunteers participate.

[edit] Other transliterations

[edit] Twin Cities

Tiberias is twinned with:

[edit] External links

North District
Cities Afula · Acre (Akko) · Bet She'an · Karmiel · Ma'alot-Tarshiha · Migdal HaEmeq · Nahariya · Nazareth · Nazareth Illit · Sakhnin · Shagor · Shefa-'Amr (Shfar'am) · Tamra · Tiberias · Safed · Qiryat Shemona Image:Israel north dist.png
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ar:طبريا

ca:Tiberíades da:Tiberias de:Tiberias es:Tiberíades eo:Tiberiado fr:Tibériade he:טבריה la:Tiberias lb:Tiberias nl:Tiberias no:Tiberias pl:Tyberiada pt:Tiberíades ru:Тверия tl:Tiberias

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