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Qatzrin

Katzrin
كتسرين
קַצְרִין
Town
Katzrin
Katzrin
Official seal of Katzrin
Seal
Katzrin is located in Golan Heights
Katzrin
Katzrin
Katzrin is located in Israel
Katzrin
Katzrin
Katzrin is located in Syria
Katzrin
Katzrin
Coordinates: 32°59′31″N 35°41′28″E / 32.992°N 35.691°E / 32.992; 35.691Coordinates: 32°59′31″N 35°41′28″E / 32.992°N 35.691°E / 32.992; 35.691
Country Golan Heights, (Internationally recognized as Syrian territory occupied by Israel)
Israeli District Northern District
Israeli Subdistrict Golan
Syrian Governorate Quneitra Governorate
Syrian District Quneitra District
Government
 • Mayor Dmitry Apartzev
Elevation 339 m (1,112 ft)
Population (2016)
 • Total 6,998
Founded 1977

Katzrin (Hebrew: קַצְרִין‎; also Qatzrin) is an Israeli settlement organized as a local council in the Golan Heights Known as the "capital of the Golan," it is the second-largest locality there after Majdal Shams, and the largest Jewish locality. In 2016 it had a population of 6,998. It is the seat of Golan Regional Council.

The international community considers Israeli settlements in the Golan Heights illegal under international law, though the Israeli government disputes this.

To the south of Katzrin is the Sea of Galilee, to the north Mount Hermon, and to the west are the Upper Galilee hills of Israel.

The site was occupied from the Middle Bronze Age, continuing into the Iron, Hellenistic and Roman (when it was destroyed) periods. The most substantial structural remains date from the Late Roman, Byzantine and Early Islamic periods (3rd–4th to mid-8th centuries), when the site was a Jewish village with a synagogue.

The Jewish settlement served as an important trading location in the region, but started to decline with the change of trading routes after the Islamic conquest. The village was destroyed in an earthquake in CE 746–749. As a result of the earthquake the location was most probably abandoned by the declining Jewish community.

During the Mamluk period (13th–14th centuries), it was a Muslim village and a mosque was built on the ruins of the synagogue.

In the 1880s, Kisrin, as it was known then, was described as "a small Bedawin winter village, with a group of beautiful oak trees and old ruins". From the late 19th century to 1967, the village was occupied by Bedouin and a settled population. Since 1920 and until the independence of Syria in 1944, the area was under the jurdisdiction of the French Mandate.


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