Usha (ancient city)

Coordinates: 32°47′58″N 35°08′48″E / 32.799414°N 35.146701°E / 32.799414; 35.146701
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Usha
Ritual bath discovered at Usha
Usha is located in Northern Haifa region of Israel
Usha
Usha
Location of Usha within Haifa District of Israel
Usha is located in Israel
Usha
Usha
Location of Usha within Israel
LocationIsrael
RegionWestern Galilee
Coordinates32°47′58″N 35°08′48″E / 32.799414°N 35.146701°E / 32.799414; 35.146701
Site notes
Conditionruins
Public accessyes

Usha (Hebrew: אושא) was a city in the Western part of Galilee. It was identified in the late 19th century as the Palestinian village of Hawsha, based on the similar-sounding name.[1]

The modern kibbutz of Usha, Israel is located several kilometers to the west. The site is close to the town of Kiryat Ata.[2]

History and archaeology[edit]

Habitation periods[edit]

Archaeological excavations undertaken in 2014 just along the southwestern fringes of Horbat Usha led to the conclusion that that specific area had been continuously inhabited from the Roman period until the Ottoman period.[3] There were additional findings indicating habitation in the Persian period next to pottery from the Hellenistic period.[3]

Regarding the town in which the Sanhedrin set roots sometime after 135 CE, Yair Amitzur, one of the two dig directors, stated in 2019 that between the second and about the sixth century, Usha was inhabited by Jews.[4] At the latter point, during the Byzantine period, the Jews abandoned the site which was then settled by Christians, with unearthed artifacts attesting to this change in populations.[4] According to Amitzur, Usha started being mentioned in Jewish sources in the first century CE.[5]

The Jerusalem Post cites the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) as stating that the second period of significant inhabitance was during the Ottoman period when, starting in the late 18th century, a village was established there, which existed until 1948.[6]

Biblical connection: unlikely[edit]

19th-century researchers have connected the Arab site of Hawsha to the biblical village of Hosah (Chossah), a border settlement of the Israelite tribe of Asher (Book of Joshua, Joshua 19:29).[citation needed] More recently the site of Joshua's Hosah is considered as yet unknown, but most researchers tend to identify it with Tell Rashidiyeh or Khirbet el-Hos,[7] today both in Lebanon, one south of modern Tyre,[8] and one southeast of Tyre.[9]

Roman- and Byzantine-period Jewish city[edit]

Identification[edit]

19th-century researchers such as Leopold Zunz and those from the Palestine Exploration Fund (PEF), among others, have identified the site of Hawsha as that of the Roman- and Byzantine-period city of Usha, the seat of the Sanhedrin after AD 135.[10][11][12]

Seat of the Sanhedrin (2nd century)[edit]

Usha came to renown in the 2nd century (c. 135), after the Hadrianic persecutions, when the Sanhedrin, or rabbinic court, was moved from Yavne in Judea to Usha, and then from Usha back to Yavne, and a second time from Yavne to Usha.[13][14][15] The Sanhedrin is thought to have continued there until it was dissolved during the reign of Lucius Verus (r. 161-169 CE), and reestablished in Shefar'am under Marcus Aurelius.[14]

The Sanhedrin's final settlement in Usha indicates the ultimate spiritual supremacy of Galilee over Judea, the latter having become depopulated after the Bar Kokhba revolt. Usha was also important because some of the pupils of Rabbi Akiva resided there, including Shimon Bar Yochai, Judah bar Ilai, whose original home was in Usha, Jose ben Halafta, and Rabbi Meir.[citation needed] The site received prominence after a Talmudic passage which names the boundary between Usha and Shefa-Amr as the place where Judah ben Bava met his death after ordaining seven elders and disciples of Rabbi Akiva.[16][17]

Findings; economy[edit]

Underground hiding complexes

In 2012, a hiding complex, carved out probably no later than the Bar Kokhba revolt, was found to cut through and put out of use an earlier ritual bath.[18]

Ritual baths, oil & wine industries

Two Jewish ritual baths (mikvehs or mikva'ot) with plastered walls and steps, carved out of the living rock in the 2nd century and kept in use until the 6th, were discovered near wine and olive oil production facilities.[4] The immediate proximity to the industrial area indicates that workers purified themselves by immersion before work, in order to produce kosher oil and wine.[19] The mikvehs were filled in at the time when the Jews left the village (c. 6th century).[4]

The size and complexity of the olive oil and wine producing installations indicate that these were among the primary industries and sources of income for the Jewish inhabitants, who processed the produce of the olive orchards and vines which they grew on the gentle hills in the area.[20]

Glass industry

The other major local industry dealt in glass production.[4] Witness are the numerous remains of delicate wine glasses and glass lamps found next to raw glass lumps.[4] The fragments come in shades of pale blues and greens[6] and a beautiful finish, their quality and quantity bearing witness to the proficiency of the local glassblowers.[4] One of them seems to have been Rabbi Yitzhak Nafha, known from Rabbinical sources and whose by-name is based on the Hebrew root for "to blow".[4]

Smithy

In 2019, the IAA published the discovery of an iron hammer-head, a rare find for the Byzantine period, along with nails and iron slag discovered together at Usha and dated to about 1400 years ago, finds which prove that the town's inhabitants also worked in metallurgy.[19] However, according to Amitzur, this was a very small operation, only producing for the immediate needs of the local community, forging objects like nails and small rings; smithies of this size would have existed in every village.[4] Regarding Rabbi Yitzhak Nafha, his by-name would be generally associated in Rabbinical-period Hebrew with "blacksmith", but in his time the smithy was not in operation, while the large glass industry was, which makes Amitzur associate it with glassblowing.[4]

Rabbinic enactments made at Usha[edit]

The rabbis who settled in Usha were active in making many reforms, under the leadership of Simeon ben Gamaliel II. They ruled in favor of several legal enactments, such as making it compulsory upon Jewish fathers to support their small children by providing sustenance unto them, until they were able to provide for themselves,[21] and that if the Av Beit Din "President of a Court" was known to have transgressed, he was not to be excommunicated as a first resort, but rather asked to simply "show self-respect" by resigning his post. If he persisted in the same act, only then would he be excommunicated by the community.[22]

The court at Usha also ruled that if a wife, during the life of her husband, conveyed any of her private possessions to another, her husband has got the first right of refusal and may recover such items from the hands of the purchaser.[23] The court, moreover, augmented the earlier rabbinic decrees concerning the defilement of foreign lands, making the air-space of foreign lands capable of disqualifying the Terumah (heave-offering eaten by the priests of Aaron's lineage), and that, if it had made contact with the earth from the same lands, required it to be burnt.[24]

Likewise, the court passed a law making it unlawful for any person to be wasteful with his own money, goods or property, and that he is not to expend more than one-fifth (20%) in charitable or philanthropic causes.[25]

The rabbis of Usha also decided in the case of citron fruits that their time of picking determined their tithing status and bi'ur (time of removal).[26] For example, if they were picked during any time of the regular yearly cycle, they are deemed as not having Seventh-year sanctity, even if picked one day following the Seventh-year and had grown during the Seventh-year. If picked at the very onset of the Seventh-year, even though they grew in an ordinary year, they are deemed as Seventh-year produce and the laws of removal (bi'ur) would apply to them.

Judah bar Ilai recalled that, in his youth, he stood up on Purim to read from the Scroll of Esther in his hometown of Usha, and that he was not rebuked by the Chazal for doing so publicly, and as a mere child. The exemplum shown by the Sages led to an easing of strictures, whereby youth, from that time forward, were permitted to read the Megillah ("Scroll of Esther") in public.[27]

Archaeological exploration[edit]

Ruins of ancient Usha

In 2004, a survey of the "Khirbet/Horbat/Hurvat Usha" site was made by the IAA.[28] In 2013, two archaeological surveys and excavations were conducted at Khirbet Usha by Abdallah Massarwa and Alla Nagorski on behalf of the IAA.[29] In 2014, the site continued to be excavated by four individual teams. In October of 2019, traces of metallurgical activities from the Byzantine period were unearthed.[19]

Archaeological park and Sanhedrin Trail Project[edit]

In 2009, Hurvat Usha was declared a National Park of Israel, an area spanning over 263 dunams (nearly 65 acres).[30]

The archaeological excavations at Usha are included in the Sanhedrin Trail Project initiated by the IAA, which touches on the stations of the Sanhedrin through Galilee, leading from Bet She'arim in the west to Tiberias in the east.[20]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Guerin, 1880, pp. 415-416. Partially translated in Conder and Kitchener, 1881, SWP I, p. 311
  2. ^ "1,400-year-old Byzantine Hammer and Nails Discovered in Ancient Jewish Village of Usha", Ruth Schuster for Haaretz, 30 Oct 2019. Accessed 29 Jan 2024.
  3. ^ a b Massarwa, Abdallah (7 October 2015). "Horbat Usha (A): Final Report", Hadashot Arkheologiyot Volume 127, 2015. Accessed 29 January 2024.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Nailed it: Rare 1,400-year-old iron hammer found by family at Sanhedrin site", Amanda Borschel-Dan for Times of Israel, 30 October 2019. Accessed 29 January 2024.
  5. ^ "1,400-year-old work tools discovered at excavation site in northern Israel", Itay Blumenthal for Ynet News, 30 Oct 2019. Accessed 29 January 2024.
  6. ^ a b "Volunteers dig up Byzantine-era tools at Usha during Sukkot", Heddy Breuer Abramowitz for Jerusalem Post, 31 Oct 2019. Accessed 29 January 2024.
  7. ^ Pitkänen, Pekka (2010). Joshua. InterVarsity Press. p. 327. ISBN 978-0-8308-2506-6.
  8. ^ "Tell Rachidiyeh" at openbible.info.
  9. ^ "Khirbet el-Hos" at openbible.info.
  10. ^ Zunz, L. (1841). "On the geography of Palestine from Jewish sources". In Adolf Asher [de] (ed.), The itinerary of Rabbi Benjamin of Tudela, Volume 2. Berlin: Julius Sittenfeld [de] printing house. p. 428. ISBN 1-152-34804-3. Accessed 29 January 2024.
  11. ^ Palestine Exploration Fund (PEF); Stewardson, Henry C. (1838). The survey of western Palestine: A general index to 1. The memoirs, vols. I.-III.; 2. The special papers; 3. The Jerusalem volume; 4. The flora and fauna of Palestine; 5. The geological survey; and to The Arabic and English name lists. Printed for the Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund by Harrison & sons. p. 35.
  12. ^ Driver, S.R. (2004). J. Hastings; John Alexander Selbie; A.B. Davidson; H.B. Swete (eds.). A dictionary of the Bible: dealing with its language, literature, and contents, including the Biblical theology, Volume 3, Part 2. The Minerva Group. p. 653. ISBN 978-1-4102-1727-1.
  13. ^ Babylonian Talmud, Rosh Hashana 31b, Rashi s.v. ומיבנא לאושא
  14. ^ a b Simon, Maurice, ed. (1990). Hebrew-English Edition of the Babylonian Talmud (Seder Moed), Rosh Hashanah, Beẓah, Sheḳalim. The Soncino Press: London, s.v. Rosh Hashanah 31b (note 6, citing Horowitz, Palestine, p.34)
  15. ^ Mantel, Hugo (1957). "The Removals of the Sanhedrin from Yabneh to Usha". Proceedings of the American Academy for Jewish Research. 26. American Academy for Jewish Research: 65–66. JSTOR 3622299.
  16. ^ "Sanhedrin 14a:2". www.sefaria.org.
  17. ^ Heinrich Graetz, History of the Jews (vol. 2) - From the Reign of Hyrcanus (135 B.C.E.) to the Completion of the Babylonian Talmud (500 C.E.), The Jewish Publication Society of America: Philadelphia 1893, p. 429
  18. ^ Oshri, Aviram (5 April 2012). "Horbat Usha: Preliminary Report", Hadashot Arkheologiyot Volume 124, 2012. Accessed 29 January 2024.
  19. ^ a b c Abby VanderHart (October 30, 2019). "Ironworks in Ancient Usha". New York, NY: Friends of the Israel Antiquities Authority. Retrieved 29 January 2024.
  20. ^ a b "A 1,400-year old hammer and nails found at IAA excavation at ancient Usha", Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 30 Oct 2019. Accessed 29 January 2024.
  21. ^ Babylonian Talmud, Ketubot 49b. Prior to this time, it was only mandatory for a father to provide sustenance to his children until the age of six.
  22. ^ Babylonian Talmud, Mo'ed Ḳaṭan 17a
  23. ^ Babylonian Talmud, Baba Kama 88b; Baba Bathra 50a
  24. ^ Babylonian Talmud, Shabbat 15b
  25. ^ Simeon Kayyara, Halachot Gedolot, vol. 3, Hil. Matanat Kehunah
  26. ^ Tosefta (Shevi'it 4:21)
  27. ^ Tosefta (Megillah 2:8)
  28. ^ Israel Antiquities Authority, Excavators and Excavations Permit for Year 2004, Survey Permit # A-4316
  29. ^ Israel Antiquities Authority, Excavators and Excavations Permit for Year 2013, Survey Permits # A-6752 and A-6880
  30. ^ Hurvat Usha National Park (Hebrew)

External links[edit]