- Qamun
Infobox Former Arab villages in Palestine
name=Qamun
imgsize=
caption=
arname=قامون
meaning="Cumin "
altSp=
district=hf
population=
popyear=
area=
areakm=
date=before1 March 1948
cause=E
cause2=F
curlocl=Yokneam Qamun ( _ar. قامون, "Kaimôn", meaning "
cumin "; also transliterated "Kamun", "Kaimun", "Keimûn") was a Palestinian village, located southeast ofHaifa , adjacent to the neighbouring village of Qira.cite web|title=Welcome to Qira|publisher=Palestine Remembered|accessdate=2007-12-04|url=http://www.palestineremembered.com/Haifa/Qira/index.html]Thought to be the site of the
Canaanite royal city of Jokneam, during Roman rule in Palestine millennia later, it was a city whose name is transcribed byEusebius of Caesarea as Cammona, and byJerome , as Cimana. During theCrusades , Caymon was a valuablefiefdom , granted toBalian of Ibelin bySaladin . Incorporated into the empires to rulePalestine that followed, it often was referred to by locals in conjunction with its neighbouring village, as "Qira wa Qamun". The occupation of Qira and Qamun by pre-stateIsrael i forces on1 March 1948 resulted in the depopulation of both villages.History
Eusebius of Caesarea , writing of Kamun in the third century, notes that it was a "city" that lay "6 miles north ofMegiddo ."Schwarz, 1850, p. 91.] In his book, "A descriptive geography and brief historical sketch of Palestine" (1850), Joseph Schwarz states that Kamun lies in the valley of Wady Naman, a valley near theCarmel , "which has some slight resemblance to the ancient Jokneam." The identification of Kaimun with Jokneam, one of the thirty-one royal cities ofCanaan , is reiterated by Carel Willem M. van de Velde in "Narrative of a journey through Syria and Palestine in 1851 and 1852".Van de Velde, 1854, p. 331.] He describes Kaimun during his visit there as a "small village with a plastered tomb called Shech-Abrît or Abrik, near where the victory was obtained byBarak overSisera ." Van de Velde also notes the presence of ruins in Kaimun, including the foundations of aChristian church on the east side of the hill upon which the village was located, and several large vaulted caves.Edward Robinson also associated Kaimôn with Jokneam, pointing to the presence of atell known as Tell Kaimôn. Robinson also argued that Kaimôn may be an Arabic corruption of the Hebrew name, Yokneam, as recorded in theOld Testament . By his theory, the "Yod" was dropped, the guttural "Koph" was retained and the "Ayin" sound "may well have disappeared through the medium of theGalilean dialect, which confounded "Aleph", "Heth" and "Ayin"."Robinson, 1856, p. 115.] Robinson further identifies Kaimôn with the writings of Euseubius on Cammona and those of Jerome on Cimana, which is described as a city "situated in the great plain, six Roman miles north ofLegio , on the way toPtolemais ." One rendition of the story ofCain andAbel in local traditionalIslam ic folklore holds that after slaying his brother,Cain was accidentally slain by an arrow launched byLamech while the latter was hunting at Tell el Kaimun.Hanauer, 2002, p. 241.]After
Saladin defeated the armies of theCrusades in the twelfth century and before his death, he granted lordship over thefief of Caymon or Tell Kaimun toBalian of Ibelin , an in-law of Henry of Champagne.Runciman, p. 82.] The Crusaders transformed its name, so as to read, Cain Mons ("Mount Cain"), recalling the tradition that it was the site of Cain's killing as described in theBook of Genesis ' Song of Lamech. Writing in the latter half of the 19th century,Claude R. Conder in "Tent Work in Palestine: A Record of Discovery and Adventure" notes that a local chapel in Keimun "shows the spot once held to be the site of the death of Cain."Conder, 2002, p. 131.]According to
Ilan Pappe in "The Israel/Palestine Question" (1999), the 140 tenant farmers of Qira wa Qamun evacuated the village in March 1948 on the "friendly advice" of the localHaganah intelligence officer at Yokneam, Yehuda Burstein.Pappe, 1999, p. 206.]Benny Morris notes that Burnstein received the orders for the evacuation fromYosef Weitz .Morris, 2004, p. 131.] The Haganah Intelligence Report attributes the flight to "fear and the influence of attacks in the area," which Morris notes is "not really the same thing." Subsequent to the depopulation of the village, Weitz and his colleagues from theJewish National Fund in the North, "decided to raze the tenants' houses, to destroy their crops, and to pay the evictees compensation."Qira wa Qamun's inhabitants joined the first wave of the
1948 Palestinian exodus , displaced prior to the outbreak of the1948 Arab-Israeli war . Today, the villagers and their descendants remain refugees.References
Bibliography
*Citation|title=Tent Work in Palestine: A Record of Discovery and Adventure|first=Claude R.|last=Conder|year=2002|publisher=Adamant Media Corporation|ISBN=1402189877
*Citation|title=Folklore of the Holy Land: Moslem, Christian and Jewish|first1=J. E.|last1= Hanauer|year=2002|publisher=Courier Dover|ISBN=0486424936
*
*Pappe, Ilan (1999). " [http://books.google.ca/books?id=JzfgvSiUt9QC&pg=PA206&dq=qira+qamun&lr=&sig=EJLdNS2PaztW4QkQ8lgiJLg1f4A#PPA206,M1 The Israel/Palestine Question] ".Routledge . ISBN 041516947X
*Citation|title=Later Biblical Researches in Palestine, and in the Adjacent Regions|first1=Edward|last1=Robinson|authorlink=Edward Robinson|year=1856|publisher=Harvard University
*Citation|title=A history of the crusades|first1=Steven|last1=Runciman|publisher=Cambridge University Press |ISBN=052134770X
*Citation|title=A descriptive geography and brief historical sketch of Palestine|first1=Joseph|last1=Schwarz|last2=Schwarz|first2=Leeser|year=1850|publisher=Oxford University
*Citation|title=Narrative of a journey through Syria and Palestine in 1851 and 1852|first1=Carel Willem M.|last1=van de Velde|year=1854|publisher=Oxford University
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