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Al-Khalasa (; , al-Khalatsah), was a Palestinian village, located 23 kilometers southwest of the town of . The village stood at the site of an ancient town from the , , , and the beginning of the Early Muslim period. The ancient city, founded by the Nabateans, is known from Greek and Roman sources as "Halasa" or "Chellous", and later as "Elusa", one of the Byzantine administrative centers in the . Still important in the century of the Muslim conquest, it was deserted not long after.

(2025). 9780826413161, Continuum. .
The site was repopulated by Bedouin in the early twentieth century, after western archaeologists took an interest in it. In October 1948, it was captured by during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War. The population of al-Khalasa is unknown, but all of the inhabitants were , from the al-Azizma tribe.


History

Nabataean, Roman, and Byzantine periods
The ancient site was founded by the , probably in the late 4th or early 3rd century BCE. historian identifies Elusa during the 2nd century CE as a town in west of the . After the Roman annexation of Nabataea in 106, Elusa became the main city of the central , the prominent 4th-century Zenobius being born there.

Elusa, as of Palaestina Tertia, was among the first Negev towns with a large population, which coexisted with pagans during the 4th and early 5th century.


Early Muslim period
The Nessana papyri (6th and 7th century) are attesting that after the Muslim conquest of Palestine, the city retained remained an administrative center during the beginning of the Early Muslim period at least until the late 7th century. The papyri are showing that after the Arab conquest, the city's name took the form of al-Khalus, which was closer to the original, pre- Semitic form. Eventually the city went into decline and was abandoned for centuries.

Thirteenth-century geographer Al-Dimashqi identifies it as one of the "Israelite" towns of the Negev Desert.le Strange, 1890, p.30. Fourteenth century geographer, said it was one of the larger "cities" in southern desert of Palestine. Khalidi describes how, as the Negev trade routes declined, al-Khalasa eventually diminished.Khalidi, 1992, p.76.


Western rediscovery, Bedouin resettlement
Edward Robinson visited the ruins in 1838 and, with the help of the preserved Arabic name, correctly identified the site as the long-lost Elusa. The constant interest of British, French and other Western archaeologists in the ancient site, encouraged al-Khalasa's resettlement by the al-Azizma tribe of the Negev, who started building next to the wells and among the ancient ruins after the end of the First World War. They built the village with a triangular plan in between two s, with houses constructed of mud and stone. An elementary school was established in the village in 1941, and there were several shops. Most of the inhabitants earned their living through animal husbandry and commerce, and used a well for drinking water.

Excavations revealed traces of Late Ottoman , commonly associated with or itinerant workers of origins.Taxel, Y., ., & Nagar, Y. (2025). An Infant Jar Burial from Zarnūqa: Muslim Funerary Practices and Migrant Communities in Late Ottoman Palestine. 'Atiqot, 117, 269–293.


1948 war
During the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, the village was defended by the and local militia volunteers. The forces were defeated by Israel's during in the last days of October 1948. Welcome to al-Khalasa , PalestineRemembered.com, retrieved 2008-05-17


See also
  • Depopulated Palestinian locations in Israel
  • List of villages depopulated during the Arab-Israeli conflict


Bibliography


External links

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