Mount Nitai

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Mount Nitai
Har Nitai
Harnitaihill1.jpg
Har Nitai viewed from Mount Arbel
Highest point
Coordinates32°49′32.22″N 35°29′12.04″E / 32.8256167°N 35.4866778°E / 32.8256167; 35.4866778Coordinates: 32°49′32.22″N 35°29′12.04″E / 32.8256167°N 35.4866778°E / 32.8256167; 35.4866778
Geography
Mount Nitai is located in Israel
Mount Nitai
Mount Nitai

Mount Nitai (Hebrew: הר נתאי‎, Har Nitai), sometimes spelled Nitay, is a mountain in Israel; it is situated west of the Sea of Galilee and north of the city of Tiberias and is due west of Mount Arbel. Har Nitai is named after Nittai of Arbela. The cliffs of both Nitai and Arbel are visible when looking southwest from Capernaum on the shore of the Sea of Galillee.

Harnitaimap.jpg

A valley with a stream through it separates Mount Nitai (Har Nitai) from Mount Arbel(Har Arbel). The valley is called today in Hebrew 'Arbel' and in Arabic 'Wadi Hamam' ("Valley of the Doves").

On the eastern slope of Mount Nitai, down next to the stream, is an archaeological site, Khirbet Wadi Hamam (Hurvat Vradim is the modern Hebrew name), where an ancient Jewish synagogue has been excavated. The site is identified by some as the ancient Jewish town of Arbel, which moved onto the opposite side of the valley, on the northern side of Mount Arbel, only in the Middle Ages.[1]

Atop Har Nitai is a grove of trees and the ruins of an ancient settlement, identified as the ancient village of Arbel[2][dubious ] (cf. Hosea 10:14). The eastern boundary of the site is marked by the ruins of an ancient wall, and approximately 80 metres east of the wall is a sheer drop-off, or cliff. Ancient residents may have built the wall for safety-reasons (for example, to prevent their children from having access to the cliff); or perhaps to enclose a defendable area, bounded by the wall and the cliff, to repel attackers. Excavation must be performed and evidence unearthed to interpret the site's history.

References[]

  1. ^ Arbel National Park and Nature Reserve, at the website of the Israel Nature and Parks Authority, accessed 17 July 2019
  2. ^ The New Encyclopedia of Archaeological Excavations in the Holy Land, vol. 1, p. 87-88.
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