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Al-Ahmadiyah

El-Ahmediye
El-Ahmediye[1] is located in Syria
El-Ahmediye[1]
El-Ahmediye
Al-Ahmadiyah in Syria
Coordinates: 33°0′2″N 35°42′3″E / 33.00056°N 35.70083°E / 33.00056; 35.70083Coordinates: 33°0′2″N 35°42′3″E / 33.00056°N 35.70083°E / 33.00056; 35.70083
Country  Syria
Governorate Quneitra
District Quneitra District
Region Golan Heights

El-Ahmediye (Turkish: El-Ahmediye; Arabic: الاحمدية‎, translit. Al-Ahmadiyah‎) also known as el-Hamediyeh or Ammudiya, is a former Syrian village in the central Golan Heights, 15 kilometers southeast of Lake Hula. It was populated during the Israeli occupation of the Golan Heights during the 1967 Six-Day War. The village spread over two low-lying hills surrounded by springs. The Israeli settlement of Qatzrin was established two kilometers to the south. Al-Ahmadiyah's previous inhabitants had predominantly been Turkomans.

The remains of two ancient synagogue have been discovered at al-Ahmadiyah, which is possibly the site of the ancient Roman Jewish settlement of Ecbatana. A number of artifacts indicate Jewish settlement in the village during the 4th-century CE, such as one containing a relief of nine-branched menorah.Sherds dating to the Islamic era, particularly the Umayyad and Abbasid periods, were also found in the village.

The first archaeological survey of al-Ahmadiyah was undertaken by Gottlieb Schumacher in 1884. He noted that the village, poorly built, was inhabited by some 70 Turkomans living in twelve hut-like houses. They cultivated various types of vegetables. It was situated at the bottom of a hill containing ruins known as Shuwaikah. The residents had utilized the stones of these ruins to build al-Ahmadiyah. The ruins dated to the Roman era, as indicated by the carved stone reliefs of Roman eagles and other animals. Another survey in 1968, this time by Israeli archaeologist S. Guttman, found more sherds from the Roman and Byzantine as well as items from the Hellenistic period. Guttman determined the size of the ancient settlement spanned 35 dunams.


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