Khirbat Al-Burj Burj Binyamina | |
|---|---|
| Etymology: "The tower" in Arabic[1] | |
A series of historical maps of the area around Khirbat Al-Burj (click the buttons) | |
Location withinMandatory Palestine | |
| Coordinates:32°30′35″N34°56′28″E / 32.50972°N 34.94111°E /32.50972; 34.94111 | |
| Palestine grid | 144/212 |
| Geopolitical entity | Mandatory Palestine |
| Subdistrict | Haifa |
| Current Localities | Binyamina |
Khirbat Al-Burj was a formerPalestinian village, depopulated in 1948.[2] Presently,Khirbat Al-Burj (lit. "ruin of the tower") orBurj Binyamina is a ruined stone-built structure in theSharon Plain 1 km south ofBinyamina from theOttoman period.[3] It is one of the estates established around Qisarya (Caesarea), alongside al-Manshiya,al-Sufsafa, andHudaydun.[4]
During June 2009, archeological excavations in the courtyard of the Burj building from the Ottoman period exposed a small building that dated to theByzantine period (5th–7th centuries CE).[3] Byzantine ceramics have been found at the structure.[5]

A stone with Greek inscription was found at theburj site, which has been reused in aCrusader fortress.[5][dubious –discuss]
In 1882, thePEF'sSurvey of Western Palestine (SWP), which called it Burj el Kheil, described it as "A Baikeh or cattle-yard in the plain".[6]
Gottlieb Schumacher found in 1887 that the site had been settled since the PEF map was prepared, now consisting of "12 huts, moderate village".[7] A population list from about 1887 give for that place, calledBurj el Kheil, about 105 inhabitants; allMuslims.[8]
On October 26, 1898, German KaiserWilhelm II stayed at the Burjkhan (caravanserai) building duringhis visit to theHoly Land.[3]
Turkish owner, Sidki Pasha, brother ofJamal Pasha, sold 4,000 dunams of the Burj farmland toICA in 1903.[9] The serious drawback was that most of the land was an uncultivable swamp.[10]Rothschild turned the land over toBinyamina's holdings.[10] Initially a group of farmers fromZichron Ya'akov stayed at thekhan during the week, due to the distance to their hometown. The group was calledBurja’im.[3]
Subsequently, Binyamina was founded.[3] A letter from early 1920s describes establishment ofBinyamina: "The 'Zichronim' [people of Zichron Ya'akov] owners of Burj farm decided to establish amoshavah in this farm, in order to settle their sons there…".[11]

Burj became Binyamina in 1922.[9] In the1931 census Khirbat Al-Burj was listed under Binyamina.[12] The ownership of the village land was determined in 1934 according to the Land Settlement Ordinances.[13]
By the time of the1945 village survey, there were 5,291dunums, 15 of which were owned by Arabs, 4,933 owned by Jews, and 343 were public.[14][15]
The building, after renovations, now operates as an event venue.[16]
In the 1945Index Gazetteer, Khirbat Al-Burj was listed as a "village unit" but "no population".[17] According to Frantzman, the 1:20,000 map (produced 1924-1948) shows "a large structure, akin to a khan with no indication that it was populated".[17] According to Khalidi, Khirbat Al-Burj was a Palestinian village which was depopulated by Israelis in 1948.[2] Khalidi also says the "village" was "known for its citrus crops" and situated on "rolling terrain".[17]
The red sandy clayloam (hamra) soils from Binyamina toGedera, west of thecoastal plain, were not cultivated till the 20th century.[18] The original economy of Binyamina was citrus-based.[19]
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