1920 in British-administered Palestine explained
Events in the year
1920 in British-administered Palestine (British-controlled part of
OETA territory).
Incumbents
Events
February
March
- 1 March – Zionist activist Joseph Trumpeldor and five Palestinian Jewish fighters are killed in the battle of Tel Hai. The battle, which gave Tel Hai its long-enduring fame, was significant far beyond the small number of fighters involved on either side – mainly due to its influence on Zionist history, both inspiring an enduring heroic myth and profoundly influencing Zionist military and political strategies over several decades.
April
May
- 31 May – Second Palestine Arab Congress, held in secret because banned by British authorities.
- 12 June – Following the Battle of Tel Hai, the Jewish leadership in Palestine establishes the Jewish paramilitary organisation "Haganah" to protect Jewish farms and kibbutzim, believing that the Jewish population in Palestine could not rely on the British administration for protection from the frequent attacks carried out by local Arab gangs against Palestinian Jews.
June
- 30 June – Two Arabs shot dead by British troops during demonstrations in Jaffa following the landing of new Jewish immigrants.[2]
July
August
- 7 August – Sir Herbert Louis Samuel's request to extend the frontier of British territory beyond the Jordan River and to bring Transjordan under his administrative control is rejected. The British Foreign Secretary, Lord Curzon, proposed instead that British influence in Tranjordan should be advanced by sending a few political officers, without military escort, to encourage self-government and give advice to local leaders in the territory.[4]
- 10 August – The Treaty of Sèvres endorses the allocation to the United Kingdom of a mandate of Palestine. The treaty is stillborn and subsequently superseded by the Treaty of Lausanne.
December
- 4 December – Third Palestine Arab Congress held in Haifa.
- 6 December – The Histadrut is established in Haifa to look after the interests of Jewish workers.
- 23 December – The United Kingdom and France ratify the border between French-controlled Syria and British-controlled Palestine.
Unknown dates
Notable births
- 19 January – Mordechai Maklef, Israeli general, 3rd IDF Chief of General Staff (died 1978).
- 1 June – Amos Yarkoni, Israeli Bedouin senior IDF officer (died 1991).
- 12 June – Ephraim Evron, Israeli diplomat (died 1995).
- Full date unknown
Notable deaths
Notes and References
- [Tom Segev]
- Luke, Sir Harry (1953) Cities and Men. An Autobiography. Volume II. Aegean, Cyprus, Turkey, Transcaucasia & Palestine. (1914–1924). Geoffrey Bles. London. p.243
- Luke, Sir Harry (1953) Cities and Men. An Autobiography. Volume II. Aegean, Cyprus, Turkey, Transcaucasia & Palestine. (1914–1924). Geoffrey Bles. London. p.247
- Martin Sicker, (1999) Reshaping Palestine: From Muhammad Ali to the British Mandate, 1831–1922 p 158.