|
|
Ashdod
A city in the southern coastal plain of Erez Israel.
Presently a modern industrial city and important seaport, Ashdod is
also significant because of its rich past history. In fact, archaeological
excavations have revealed 22 strata which testify to continuous settlement
of Ashdod dating back to the 17th century b.c.e. Among these finds are
Canaanite and Israelite fortifications, a musicians' stand and a Hellenistic
plant for extracting purple dye from murex, a purple shell. In the late
Canaanite period, Ashdod served as an important harbor city as is shown
by archaeological finds and references to its maritime trade in the archives
of Ugarit.
According to biblical tradition, it was a town of the ancient Anakim
("giants"). After its conquest by the Philistines, it became one of their
five chief cities and they erected there a temple dedicated to the god
Dagon. Uzziah, king of Judah, breached the fortifications of the town
and built in the area. In 734 b.c.e. the city surrendered to Assyria and
in 712 b.c.e. Ashdod became the capital of an Assyrian province.
Although the city was situated on the via maris, the trade route near
the sea, it was not directly on the coast but possessed an ancient port
which was called Ashdod Yam ("Ashdod-on-the-Sea"). With the decline of
Assyrian power, Egypt conquered the city after a siege of 29 years. In
the sixth and fifth centuries b.c.e., Ashdod was the Philistine capital,
so that in the days of Nehemiah, an "Ashdodite" was synonymous with a
"Philistine." Nehemiah fought against Ashdod's influence which extended
as far as Jerusalem.
The town continued to be a district capital in the Hellenistic period
when it was known as Azotus and it served as a Greek stronghold down to
the days of the Hasmoneans. Its suburbs were burnt by Jonathan and the
city was captured by John Hyrcanus. Ashdod then remained in Hasmonean
hands until its conquest by Rome, and later changed hands numerous times,
eventually becoming the property of Herod I, who gave it to his sister
Salome; she bequeathed it to Livia, the wife of Augustus Caesar, from
whom it was inherited by the emperor Tiberius. From the time of the Hasmoneans
until the second century c.e. Ashdod appears to have been a Jewish town.
Moreover, the discovery of a synagogue at Ashdod-on-the-Sea with a Greco-Jewish
inscription gives further evidence of a Jewish community there in the
sixth century c.e.
Gradually the city declined, and for over 1000 years it remained an unimportant
village -- until the modern period. During the War of Independence (1948--49),
Egyptian forces entered Ashdod and advanced beyond it six miles northward
to the vicinity of Jabneh. In October, 1948, the Egyptian forces were
cut off in "Operation Ten Plagues" and they escaped with great difficulty;
the local Arab inhabitants abandoned the place with them. The modern city
was founded in 1956 four miles north of the mound of Philistine Ashdod.
It received city status in 1968, and is growing into a major manufacturing
center. Ashdod's population grew rapidly from 200 in 1957 to 84,500 in
1993.
Town-planners envisaged Ashdod as Israel's second largest port on the
Mediterranean coast, and the port which was opened in 1965, has shortened
transport routes in the southern half of Israel. The town plan is based
on the principle of self-contained neighborhood units, each with its own
social, educational, and economic services; 16 such units are provided
for in the Ashdod city plan.
[Top] [Places]
[ Zionist Century] [Homepage]
by C.D.I. Systems 1992 (LTD) and Keter.
|
|