Anim Synagogue | |||||||||||||
Image Upright: | 1.4 | ||||||||||||
Festivals: | --> | ||||||||||||
Organizational Status: | --> | ||||||||||||
Functional Status: | Ruins | ||||||||||||
Location: | near Arad, Yatir Forest, Southern District | ||||||||||||
Country: | Israel | ||||||||||||
Map Type: | Israel north negev | ||||||||||||
Map Size: | 250 | ||||||||||||
Map Relief: | 1 | ||||||||||||
Coordinates: | 31.3425°N 35.0617°W | ||||||||||||
Established: | CE | ||||||||||||
Date Destroyed: | --> | ||||||||||||
Length: | 14.50NaN0 | ||||||||||||
Width: | 8.50NaN0 | ||||||||||||
Materials: | Hewn stone | ||||||||||||
Elevation Ft: | --> | ||||||||||||
Module: |
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The Anim Synagogue is an ancient former Jewish synagogue, located approximately 25km (16miles) drive northwest of Arad, in the Yatir Forest, immediately south of the Green Line, in the Southern District of Israel. The ancient synagogue was in use during the 4th - 7th centuries CE. The site is recognized as a National Heritage Site of Israel.
The synagogue is located at an ancient site identified with the Anim mentioned in the Bible (Joshua 15:50). It is also believed to be the site of the large Jewish village of Anaya during the Roman-Byzantine period.[1] Eusebius mentions the same village in his Onomasticon as being one of two villages in his day, located south of Hebron, and bearing the same name.[2] One of the two villages, he writes, had a settlement of Jews, while the other, of Christians.[2] [3]
Rabbi Shimon ben Yehudah, mentioned in Pesikta Rabbati, came from the village of Anim.[4]
The building functioned as a synagogue until the seventh or eighth century when it was turned into a mosque.
The site of the ancient Jewish village is now known as Lower Horvat Anim (Arabic Khirbet Ghuwein et-Taḥta, lit. 'Ruins of Lower Ghuwein'; grid position 156/084PAL), with a neighbouring contemporary Christian village at Upper Horvat Anim (Arabic Khirbet Ghuwein al-Fauqa, lit. 'Ruins of Upper Ghuwein') just 2 km northeast from it.[5] [6] [7] Ben-Yosef places the site of the Upper Horvat Anim at a distance of 5 km northeast of the lower site (grid position 1583/0855PAL).[2] Excavations at Upper Horvat Anim have uncovered the remains of a larger regional Byzantine church outside the village,[2] overlooking it from the hill to the east and joined to it by a pathway—a configuration repeatedly met in the Southern Hebron Hills.[6]
The synagogue was discovered during an excavation conducted in 1987. It consists of a rectangular prayer hall orientated towards Jerusalem measuring 14.5mx8.5mm (47.6feetx27.9feetm), an entrance portico and a courtyard with rooms on both sides.[1] Hewn stone walls still stand to a height of 3.50NaN0 and two entrances on the east side survive with their lintels intact. Evidence of a mosaic floor was found beneath the current stone slab flooring[1] and fragments of an inscription remain.[8]
he:ספי בן-יוסף
. Israel Guide - Judaea (A useful encyclopedia for the knowledge of the country). 9 . Keter Publishing House, in affiliation with the Israel Ministry of Defence . Jerusalem . n.d.. 220 . he. 745203905., s.v.