Rebbo Explained

Rebbo
Map Type:Israel
Coordinates:31.6642°N 34.98°W
Grid Position:1481/1183 PAL

Rebbo[1] or Horvat Rebbo (lit. "Rebbo ruins"), alternative spellings: Robbo, Ribbo; in Arabic Khurbet Rubba (lit. "Rubba ruins"), is an ancient site in Israel, mentioned by Eusebius in his Onomasticon as possibly referring to a site by a similar name in the Book of Joshua.[2] [3] The site, which is now a ruin, sits on a hill 414m (1,358feet) above sea level, in the Shephelah region, and is now part of the Adullam-France Park, maintained by the Jewish National Fund (KKL). It lies about 1.5 km. to the west of Aderet as the crow flies, and about 7miles northeast of Beit Guvrin National Park.

The site is quite extensive and contains tunnels believed to have been in use during the Bar Kokhba revolt. Tombs from the Second Temple period, agricultural features and cisterns (now covered with iron gratings) can be seen on the site. Many lentisk mastic trees (Pistacia lentiscus) and buckthorns (Rhamnus lycioides) cover the site.

In ancient sources

Eusebius (4th century) writes in his Onomasticon that in his day it was a village, called in Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: Ῥοββώ and situated "in the territory of Eleutheropolis (Beit Gubrin) to the east."[4] Some have cast doubt on V.L. Trumper's view in Historical Sites in Central Palestine (1918) that Rebbo, located 3 west of Adullam, is to be recognised in the name Uncoded languages: rbt mentioned in the list of Thutmose III, and which place is also called / in the el-Amarna tablets. According to these sources, the king of Jerusalem complained before Pharaoh that certain people from Gezer, from Gath and Keilah had conspired together and forcibly taken away lands belonging to Uncoded languages: '''R'''<sup>u</sup>'''b'''<sup>u</sup>'''t'''<sup>u</sup>.[5] [6] [7] The site's current name was fixed by the Government Naming Committee in Israel.

Archaeological surveys

Victor Guérin (1863)

French explorer, Victor Guérin, visited the site, which he called Khirbet Rebba, in 1863, and wrote of his impressions of the site: "The ruins are fairly large and cover the summit and slopes of a hill. Many cisterns and vaults embedded in the rock attest to its great antiquity. The houses, of very small dimensions, were for the most part constructed of medium-sized and generally well squared stones; they litter the ground everywhere with their debris. An edifice, also overthrown from top to bottom, seems to have been a church, which proves that, in the Christian era, this town was still inhabited. Six sections of mutilated columns lie in this place. I also notice, on a beautiful rectangular block, two carved Greek crosses."[8]

Conder and Kitchener (1878)

The ruin appears in Conder and Kitchener's 1878 Survey of Palestine map under the name Khurbet Rubba. They noted under "Rabba" that it was a "city of Judah, mentioned with Kirjath Jearim (Joshua XV. 60). In the Onomasticon a place called Rebbo is mentioned as east of Eleutheropolis, which might be the same. A good-sized ruin named Rubba is found in the low hills south of the valley of Elah, north-east of Bayt Jibrin, which would be in a suitable position for the early Christian site."[9] They found there "Caves, cisterns, and heaps of stones, ruined walls, bases of pillars and shafts much worn, two lintel stones with crosses, both measuring about 7 feet by 2½ feet."[10]

Aapeli Saarisalo (pre-1931)

The site was surveyed by Finnish archaeologist in the early 20th century, who concluded that the village was inhabited as late as the Byzantine and Early Arab periods.[11]

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Palmer, 1881, p. 401
  2. Notley & Safrai, 2005, pp. 136–137 (§ 778)
  3. Press, 1955, p. 853 (Hebrew), who writes under the entry רבוא, "Eusebius identifies it with Kh. Ribba north of Umm Burj in the vicinity of Hebron."
  4. Notley & Safrai, 2005, pp. 136–137 (§ 778)
  5. Press, 1955, p. 851 (note 2). Cf. Trumper, V.L. (1918), p. 14
  6. Cf. Rainey (1983), p. 4, for another identification of the site mentioned in the Amarna letters as Rubbuti.
  7. Book: William L. Moran . William L. Moran . The Amarna Letters . 1992. The Johns Hopkins University Press . Baltimore, London . 334 . en . 0-8018-4251-4 . Amarna letters .
  8. Guérin, 1869, pp. 336–337
  9. Conder & Kitchener, 1883, SWP III, p. 314
  10. Conder & Kitchener, 1883, SWP III, p. 360
  11. Saarisolo, A. (1931), p. 16