Bet Sheʾan
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- Also spelled:
- Beth-shan
- Arabic:
- Baysān, or Beisān
Bet Sheʾan, town, northeastern Israel, principal settlement in the low ʿEmeq Bet Sheʾan (ʿemeq, “valley”), site of one of the oldest inhabited cities of ancient Palestine. It is about 394 ft (120 m) below sea level. Overlooking the town to the north is Tel Bet Sheʾan (Arabic Tall al-Ḥuṣn), one of the most important stratified mounds in Palestine. It was excavated in 1921–33 by University of Pennsylvania archaeologists, who found that the lowest strata date from the late Chalcolithic period in the country (c. 4000–3000 bc) and progress successively upward to Byzantine times (c. ad 500). A series of buildings, including temples and administrative buildings, span the Egyptian period—the earliest from the time of Thutmose III (ruled 1504–1450 bc), and the latest dating to Ramses III (1198–66 bc). The local Canaanite deity Mekal was especially venerated. Important stelae (stone monuments) tell of the conquests of Pharaoh Seti I (1318–04 bc) and of the worship of the goddess Astarte. It was to the temple of this goddess that King Saul’s armour was brought after his death, and his body was hung from the city wall (I Sam. 31:10). Later, the town’s Jewish community is mentioned in rabbinic literature.
During the Hellenistic period, the city was called Scythopolis; it was taken by the Romans in 64 bc and given the status of an imperial free city by Pompey. In 1960 a finely preserved Roman amphitheatre, with a seating capacity for about 5,000, was uncovered. The city was an important centre of the Decapolis (a league of 10 Hellenistic cities) and under Byzantine rule was the capital of the northern province of Palaestina Secunda. It declined after the Arab conquest (ad 636).
Although an Arab town for centuries, Bet Sheʾan long had a Jewish settlement; in the Middle Ages the topographer Ashtori ha-Parḥi settled there and completed his work Kaftor wa-feraḥ, the first Hebrew book on the geography of Palestine (1322).
In modern times the town was one of the centres of Arab terrorism, 1936–39. Part of the territory allocated to Israel by the United Nations partition plan of November 1947, it was taken by the Haganah, the Jewish defense forces, on May 12, 1948, three days before the proclamation of Israel’s statehood. The Arab population fled; after the Arab–Israeli War (1948–49), the town was resettled with new immigrants, including many refugees from Arab countries. Bet Sheʾan is a centre of Israel’s chief cotton-growing region, and many of its residents work in the neighbouring kibbutzim. Local industries include a textile mill and clothing factory. Pop. (2004 est.) 16,000.