In recent years, Ramallah has emerged as a key political, cultural, and economic center.[9][10] It houses various Palestinian governmental bodies, including the Mukataa, the official residence of the President of the Palestinian National Authority, the Palestinian Legislative Council, and the headquarters of the Palestinian Security Services. It is also home to several museums and cultural centers, and has a notable nightlife scene. While historically a predominantly Christian town, Muslims constituted a majority of Ramallah's 38,998 residents by 2017,[11] with Christians making up a significant minority.
Several Ramallah buildings incorporate masonry dating back to the reign of Herod the Great (37–4 BCE).[8]Potsherds from the Crusader/Ayyubid and early Ottoman period have also been found there.[13] Ramallah has been identified with the Crusader place called Ramalie.[14][15] Remains of a building with an arched doorway from the Crusader era, called al-Burj, have been identified,[16] but the original use of the building is undetermined.[17]
Ottoman period
The area of Ramallah was incorporated into the Ottoman Empire in 1517 with all of Palestine. Modern Ramallah was founded in the mid-1500s by the Haddadins (also: Haddadeen), a clan of brothers descended from GhassanidChristians. The Haddadins (ancestors of the present-day Jadallah family, among others), and their leader Rashid el-Haddadin, arrived from east of the Jordan River from the areas of Karak and Shoubak.[18] The Haddadin migration is attributed to fighting and unrest among clans in that area.
Haddadin was attracted to the mountainous site of Ramallah because it was similar to the mountainous areas he came from. In addition, the heavily forested area could supply him with plenty of fuel for his forges.[18] In 1596, Ramallah was listed in the tax registers as being in the nahiya of Quds (Jerusalem), part of the Liwa of Quds. It had a population of 71 Christian households and 9 Muslim households. It paid a fixed tax rate of 25% on wheat, barley, olives, vines or fruit trees, and goats or beehives; a total of 9,400 akçe. All of the revenue went to a waqf.[19]
In 1838, American biblical scholar Edward Robinson visited the area, noting that the inhabitants were Christian "of the Greek rite". There were 200 taxable men, which gives an estimated total population of 800–900 people. The village "belonged" to the Haram al-Sharif, Jerusalem, to which it paid an annual tax of 350 Mids of grain.[20] In 1883, the PEF's Survey of Western Palestine described Ramallah as
A large Christian village, of well-built stone houses, standing on a high ridge, with a view on the west extending to the sea. It stands amongst gardens and olive-yards, and has three springs to the south and one on the west; on the north there are three more, within a mile from the village. On the east there is a well. There are rock-cut tombs to the north-east with well-cut entrances, but completely blocked with rubbish. In the village is a Greek church, and on the east a Latin convent and a Protestant schoolhouse, all modern buildings. The village lands are Wakuf, or ecclesiastical property, belonging to the Haram of Jerusalem. About a quarter of the inhabitants are Roman Catholics, the rest Orthodox Greeks.[21]
Ramallah was declared a modern city in 1908. It had an elected municipality as well as partnership projects with the adjacent town of al-Bireh. The Friends Boys School became a temporary hospital during World War I.[citation needed]
Christian presence, 17th–21st century
Ramallah grew dramatically throughout the 17th and 18th centuries as an agricultural village, attracting more (predominantly Christian) inhabitants from all around the region.[22] In 1700, Yacoub Elias was the first Ramallah native to be ordained by the Greek Orthodox Church of Jerusalem, the Christian denomination that prevailed in the Holy Land at the time. In the early 19th century, the first Jerusalemite Greek Orthodox Christian church was built. Later, in 1852, the Greek Orthodox Church of the Transfiguration, was built to replace it; it is the sole Eastern Orthodox Church in Ramallah today.[22]
There is also a Melkite Greek Catholic Church in Ramallah, built in 1895.[22] The Roman Catholic Church also established its presence in Ramallah the 19th century and constitutes today the second-largest Christian denomination in the city. The Roman Catholic Church established the St. Joseph's Girls' School run by St. Joseph sisters, as well as the co-educational Al-Ahliyyah College high school run by Rosary sisters. In 1913, construction of the Catholic Holy Family Church was started.
As of 2022[update], Ramallah also has a Coptic Orthodox Church,[23] an Evangelical Lutheran Church[24] and an Episcopalian (Anglican) Church.[25] In the 19th century, the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) established a presence in Ramallah and built the Ramallah Friends Schools, one for girls and later a boys' school, to alleviate the dearth of education for women and girls. Eli and Sybil Jones opened "The Girls Training Home of Ramallah" in 1869. A medical clinic was established in 1883, with Dr. George Hassenauer serving as the first doctor in Ramallah. In 1889, the girls academy became the Friends Girls School (FGS). As the FGS was also a boarding school, it attracted a number of girls from surrounding communities, including Jerusalem, Lydda, Jaffa, and Beirut. The Friends Boys School (FBS) was founded in 1901 and opened in 1918. The Quakers opened a Friends Meeting House for worship in the city center in 1910.[26] According to the school's official website, most high school students choose to take the International Baccalaureate exams (IBE) instead of the traditional "Tawjihi" university exams.[27][28]
The activity of foreign churches in Palestine in the late 19th century increased awareness of prosperity in the West. In Ramallah and Bethlehem, a few miles south, local residents began to seek economic opportunity overseas. In 1901, merchants from Ramallah emigrated to the United States and established import-export businesses, selling handmade rugs and other exotic wares across the Atlantic. Increased trade dramatically improved living standards for Ramallah's inhabitants. American cars, mechanized farming equipment, radios, and later televisions became attainable luxuries for upper-class families. As residents of Jaffa and Lydda moved to Ramallah, the balance of Muslims and Christians began to change.[citation needed]
In the 21st century, a large community of people with direct descent from the Haddadins who founded Ramallah live in the United States. The town is now predominately Muslim, but still contains a Christian minority. The change in demographics is due mostly to new migration of Muslims to the area, and emigration of Christians from the area.[18]
British Mandate
During World War I, the British Army captured and occupied Ramallah in December 1917. The city remained occupied until the designation of the Palestine Mandate in 1920, resulting in Ramallah falling under British Mandatory control until 1948. In the 1920s, the economy of Ramallah started to improve, resulting in the local Arab upper class (consisting primarily of landowners and merchants) ordering the construction of several multi-storied villas, many of which still stand today.[29] In 1939, the Jerusalem Electric Company introduced electricity to Ramallah, and a majority of the city's homes became wired shortly thereafter. On the same year, the British Mandatory authorities inaugurated the state-owned Palestine Broadcasting Service in Ramallah, with BBC members training local radio staff to deliver daily broadcasts in Arabic, Hebrew, and English. The station was later renamed Jerusalem Calling.[30]
In 1936, an Arab revolt against the British Mandate broke out in Palestine, and Ramallah soon became a center of insurgent activity. The rebels subsequently established a court near Ramallah, in order to provide legal alternatives to the courts of the British Mandate. One British schoolteacher noted that the Ramallah court judge began to produce "news sheets on typewriters and duplicators, aimed at publicizing the alternative rebel regime."[31]
Jordanian and Israeli occupation: 1948—1993
Following the creation of the State of Israel and the ensuing conflict, Jordan seized the part of Palestine they named the West Bank. This included Ramallah. The West Bank was relatively peaceful during the years of Jordanian rule between 1948 and 1967, with its residents enjoying freedom of movement between the West Bank, Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria. Jordan annexed the West Bank, applying its national law to the conquered territory. However, many Palestinians were jailed for being members of "illegal political parties", which included the Palestine Communist Party and other socialist and pro-independence groups. By 1953, Ramallah's population had doubled, but the economy and infrastructure could not accommodate the influx of poor villagers. Natives of Ramallah began to emigrate, primarily to the United States. By 1956, about one fourth of Ramallah's 6,000 natives had left, with Arabs from the surrounding towns and villages (particularly Hebron) buying the homes and land the émigrés left behind.[citation needed]
During the Six-Day War in 1967, Israel captured Ramallah from Jordan, imposing a military closure and conducting a census a few weeks later. Every person registered in the census was given an Israeli identity card which allowed the bearer to continue to reside there. Those who were abroad during the census lost their residency rights.[32] For residents of Ramallah, the situation had now been reversed. For the first time in 19 years, residents could freely visit Israel and the Gaza Strip and engage in commerce there.
Unlike the Jordanians, Israel did not offer citizenship to the residents. Ramallah residents were issued permits to work in Israel, but did not gain the rights associated with Israeli citizenship. The city remained under Israeli military rule for more than four decades. The Israeli Civil Administration (CA), established in 1981, was in charge of civilian and day-to-day services such as issuing permission to travel, build, export or import, and host relatives from abroad.[33] The CA reprinted Jordanian textbooks for distribution in schools but did not update them. The CA was in charge of tax collection and land expropriation, which sometimes included Israeli seizure of olive groves that Arab villagers had tended for generations.[34][35]
According to the Israeli Human Rights activists, the development of Jewish settlements in the Ramallah area, such as Beit El and Psagot, prevented the expansion of the city and cut it off from the surrounding Arab villages.[36] As resistance increased, Ramallah residents who were members of the Palestine Liberation Organization were jailed or deported to neighboring countries.[37] In December 1987, the popular uprising known as the Intifada erupted, protesting against the continued Israeli occupation.
Ramallah residents were among the early joiners of the First Intifada. The Intifada Unified Leadership, an umbrella organization of various Palestinian factions, distributed weekly bulletins on the streets of Ramallah with a schedule of the daily protests, strikes and action against Israeli patrols in the city. At the demonstrations, tires were burned in the street, and the crowds threw stones and Molotov cocktails. The IDF responded with tear gas and rubber bullets. Schools in Ramallah were forcibly shut down, and opened gradually for a few hours a day.[citation needed] The Israelis conducted house arrests, imposing curfews that restricted travel and exports in what Palestinians regarded as collective punishment. In response to the closure of schools, residents organized home schooling sessions to help students make up missed material; this became one of the few symbols of civil disobedience.[38] The Intifada leadership organized "tree plantings" and resorted to the tactics used in pre-1948 Palestine, such as ordering general strikes in which no commercial businesses were allowed to open and no cars were allowed on the streets.[citation needed]
In 1991, the Palestinian delegation to the Madrid International Peace Conference included many notables from Ramallah. As the Intifada wound down and the peace process moved forward, normal life in Ramallah resumed. On September 13, 1993, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Palestinian Leader Yasser Arafat shook hands at a meeting at the White House. Schoolchildren in Ramallah handed out olive branches to Israeli soldiers patrolling the streets. In December 1995, in keeping with the Oslo Accords, the Israeli army abandoned the Mukataa and withdrew to the city outskirts. The newly established Palestinian Authority assumed civilian and security responsibility for the city, which was designated "Area A" under the accords.[citation needed]
Palestinian Authority rule
The years between 1993 and 2000 (known locally as the "Oslo Years") brought relative prosperity to Ramallah. Ramallah and its immediate environs were classified as Area A in the Oslo Accords, under full civil and security control of the Palestinian Authority (PA) administration in September 1995.[39] Many expatriates returned to establish businesses there, and the atmosphere was one of optimism. In 2000, unemployment began to rise and the economy of Ramallah declined.[40][41] The Israel Defense Forces remained in control of the territories and its government did not restore the freedom of movement enjoyed by Ramallah residents prior to the first Intifada. Travel to Jerusalem required special permits. The number and size of Israeli settlements around Ramallah increased dramatically. A network of bypass roads for use of Israeli citizens only was built around Ramallah, and Israel expropriated land for settlements.[42][43] Many official documents previously handled by the Israeli Civil Administration were now handled by the Palestinian Authority but still required Israeli approval. A Palestinian passport issued to Ramallah residents was not valid unless the serial number was registered with the Israeli authorities, who controlled border crossings.[44]
The failure of the Camp David summit in July 2000 led to the outbreak of the Second Intifada (al-Aqsa Intifada) in September 2000. Young Ramallah residents demonstrated daily against the Israeli army, with marches to the Israeli checkpoints at the outskirts of the city. Over time, the marches were replaced by sporadic use of live ammunition against Israeli soldiers; and various attacks targeting Jewish settlers, particularly on the Israeli-only bypass roads. Army checkpoints were established to restrict movement in and out of Ramallah.[45][46][47] On October 12, 2000, two Israeli army reservists, Vadim Norzhich and Yosef Avrahami were lynched in Ramallah. They had taken a wrong turn, and were set upon by a mob, enraged in particular by the Muhammad al-Durrah incident in Gaza.[48] A frenzied crowd killed the two IDF reservists, mutilated their bodies, and dragged them through the streets.[49] Later that afternoon, the Israeli army carried out an air strike on Ramallah, demolishing the police station. Israel later succeeded in capturing and prosecuting some of those involved in the deaths of the reservists.
The IDF has occasionally operated inside Ramallah, in breach of the 1995 Oslo Accords. The first and largest incursion was the 2002 Operation Defensive Shield, with a more recent intervention coming in March 2017 while attempting to arrest a suspected terrorist.[50][51] In 2002, the army imposed curfews, electricity cuts, school closures and disruptions of commercial life.[52] Many Ramallah institutions, including government ministries, were vandalized, and equipment was destroyed or stolen.[53] The IDF took over local Ramallah television stations, and social and economic conditions deteriorated.[54] Many expatriates left, as did many other Palestinians who complained that the living conditions had become intolerable.[55][56][57] Construction of the Israeli West Bank barrier has added to Ramallah's isolation. Yasser Arafat established his West Bank headquarters, the Mukataa, in Ramallah. Although considered an interim solution, Ramallah became the de facto capital of the Palestinian Authority, now[when?] officially[clarification needed] known as the State of Palestine. It hosts almost all governmental headquarters. In December 2001, Arafat held meetings at the Mukataa, but lived with his wife and daughter in Gaza City. After suicide bombings in Haifa, Arafat was confined to the Ramallah compound. In 2002, the compound was partly demolished by the Israeli Defense Forces and Arafat's building was cut off from the rest of the compound.
On November 11, 2004, Arafat died at the Percy training hospital of the Armies near Paris. He was buried in the courtyard of the Mukataa on November 12, 2004. The site still serves as the Ramallah headquarters of the Palestinian Authority, as well the official West Bank office of Mahmoud Abbas. Throughout 2005, while the Disengagement Plan was underway, some US government officials suggested to the Palestinian leadership to move the provisional capital back to Gaza, where it had been when the Palestinian Authority was first established in 1994. President Abbas, however, refrained from doing so, arguing that at this point, it was important to keep the administrative center in the West Bank in order to remind the international community that the West Bank was still awaiting a territorial solution.[58]
In December 2005, local elections were held in Ramallah in which candidates from three different factions competed for the 15-seat municipal council for a four-year term. The council elected Janet Mikhail as mayor, the first woman to hold the post.[59][60]
Munir Hamdan, a member of Fatah and a Ramallah businessman, discussed the concentration of government offices with a journalist. He said, "The president and prime minister have their offices here.[61] So do the parliament and all the government ministries", representing a "collusion" between the Palestinian Authority and Israel to turn Ramallah into the political as well as the financial capital of the Palestinians. He is particularly worried by the construction of a large new governmental complex by the PA.[61]Hatem Abdel Kader, a Jerusalem resident, Fatah legislator and former Minister for Jerusalem Affairs, complained that "If they are building a new government compound here, that means they have no plans to be based in Jerusalem... Unfortunately, the Palestinian government of Salam Fayyad has abandoned Jerusalem in favor of Ramallah."[61] In November 2011, King Abdullah II of Jordan visited Ramallah for the first time since 2000.[62]
Geography and climate
This area enjoys a Mediterranean climate of a dry summer and mild, rainy winter with occasional snowfall. The recorded average of Ramallah's rainfall is about 615 mm (24 in)[63] and minimum rainfall is 307 mm (12 in) and maximum rainfall is 1,591 mm (63 in).
The Köppen climate classification places Ramallah in the Csa category. Climates of this class generally occur on the western sides of continents between the latitudes of 30° and 45°. These climates are in the polar front region in winter, and thus have moderate temperatures and changeable, rainy weather. Summers are hot and dry, due to the domination of the subtropical high pressure systems, except in the immediate coastal areas, where summers are milder due to the nearby presence of cold ocean currents that may bring fog but prevent rain.
A view from Ramallah
Hills surrounding Ramallah
Sunset in Ramallah
Economy
Ramallah is chief financial and commercial center for the Palestinian Authority, home to the country's numerous financial institutions.[64] Currently Ramallah is seat of power of the Palestinian Authority, whose most of the offices are located within the city.[64] The city serves as the headquarters for most international NGOs and embassies.[64] Hundreds of millions of dollars in aid flowing into the city have boosted Ramallah's economy greatly since the end of the Second Intifada.[64] Ramallah's buoyant economy continues to draw Palestinians from other West Bank towns where jobs are fewer.[64] The built-up area has grown fivefold since 2002.[64]
Construction boom is one of the most obvious signs of West Bank economic growth, estimated at an annual rate of 8 percent.[65] This has been attributed to relative stability and Western donor support to the Palestinian Authority.[65] The PIF have begun work on a $400 million commercial center comprising 13 towers which will be some of the tallest in Ramallah.[65] The Ersal Commercial Center has drawn investment from a Saudi Arabian firm, The Land Holding, which has a 10% stake.[65] It is not the only Gulf Arab firm investing in Ramallah and its outskirts.[65] The Qatari Diar Real Estate Investment Company has a stake in Rawabi, a completely new town being constructed in the hills outside Ramallah at a cost of $1 billion.[65]
Ramallah has highest concentration of high-tech companies.[66] ASAL technologies, an information technology company in Ramallah, has 120 employees and is looking forward to "exponential growth".[67] In collaboration with the Republic of India, a new tech park named, the India Palestine Techno Park is located in Birzeit.[66]Apple Inc operates a research & development center in Rawabi with ASAL Technologies.[68] A large number multinational companies operates facilities in Ramallah, which outsource Palestinians.[66]
By 2010, Ramallah had become the leading center of economic and political activity in the territories under the control of the Palestinian Authority.[61] During a building boom in the early years of the 21st century, apartment buildings and "five-star" hotels were erected, particularly in the Al-Masyoun neighborhood.[61] In 2010, "more than one hundred" Palestinian businesses were reported to have moved to Ramallah from East Jerusalem, because "Here they pay less taxes and have more customers."[61] One local boasted to a journalist that "Ramallah is becoming the de facto capital of Palestine."[61] This boast was seconded by The New York Times which, in 2010, called Ramallah the "de facto capital of the West Bank.[10] According to Sani Meo, the publisher of This Week in Palestine, "Capital or no capital, Ramallah has done well and Palestine is proud of its achievements."[61] Some Palestinians allege that Ramallah's prosperity is part of an Israeli "conspiracy" to make Ramallah the capital of a Palestinian state, instead of Jerusalem.[61]
Demographics
An Ottoman village list of about 1870 showed that Ramallah had 249 houses and a population of 635, though the population count included men only. The village was described as being in the Bire area,"north of Mikhmas, on a rocky hill."[69][70][71] In 1896, the population of Ramallah was estimated to be about 2,061 persons.[72][71]
However, the demographic makeup of the town changed drastically between 1948 and 1967, when considerable emigration of Christians took place. Slightly more than half of the city's 12,134 inhabitants were Christian by 1967, the other half Muslim.[79]
Ramallah's population drastically decreased in the late 20th century from 24,722 inhabitants in 1987 to 17,851 in 1997. In the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS) census in 1997, Palestinian refugees accounted for 60.3% of the population, which was 17,851.[80] There were 8,622 males and 9,229 females. People younger than 20 years of age made up 45.9% of the population, while those aged between 20 and 64 were 45.4%, and residents aged over 64 constituted 4.7%.[81]
Only in 2005 did the population reach more than 24,000. In a PCBS projection in 2006, Ramallah had a population of 25,467 inhabitants.[82] In the 2007 PCBS census, there were 27,460 people living in the city.[83] Sources vary about the current Christian population in the city, ranging around 25%.[84][85]
Health
In the aftermath of the 1936–1939 Arab revolt, the Ramallah Hospital Foundation was established and registered as a tax exempt organization in New York in 1944. It bought large pieces of land in the south-eastern fringes of the city dedicated for the future hospital. In 1963, a hospital was opened.[86] The present Ramallah Government Hospital and the Palestine Medical Centered are located on the land purchased by the Foundation. In January 1987, the first open-heart surgery was performed at the Hospital under the direction of Dr. Shehadeh (Shawki) Harb, a Palestinian surgeon trained in the United States.
Ramallah is generally considered the most affluent and cultural, as well as the most liberal, of all Palestinian cities,[87][88] and is home to a number of popular Palestinian activists, poets, artists, and musicians. It boasts a lively nightlife, with many restaurants including the Stars and Bucks Cafe, a branch of the Tche Tche Cafe and the Orjuwan Lounge, described in 2010 as two among the "dozens of fancy restaurants, bars and discotheques that have cropped up in Ramallah in the last three years".[61]
One hallmark of Ramallah is Rukab's Ice Cream, which is based on the resin of chewing gum and thus has a distinctive taste. Another is the First Ramallah Group, a boy- and girl-scout club that also holds a number of traditional dance (Dabka) performances and is also home to men's and women's basketball teams that compete regionally. International music and dance troupes occasionally make a stop in Ramallah, and the renowned Argentinian-Israeli pianist Daniel Barenboim performs there often. The Khalil Sakakini Cultural Center, founded in 1996, is a popular venue for such events. The Al-Kasaba Theatre is a venue for plays and movies. In 2004, the state-of-the art Ramallah Cultural Palace opened in the city. The only cultural center of its kind in the Palestinian-governed areas, it houses a 736-seat auditorium, as well as conference rooms, exhibit halls, and movie-screening rooms. It was a joint venture of the Palestinian Authority, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), and the Japanese government.[89] Ramallah hosted its first annual international film festival in 2004.
Monument and Palestinian flag at Al Sa’a Square/Yasser Arafat Square
Ceramic mural
French-German Cultural Center
DownTown Cafe
Ramallah Martyrs Memorial
Ramallah folklore
Ramallah, like most Palestinian areas, has a rich folklore of song and dance. Songs accompanied people in every occasion, whether it was the harvest season, roofing a house, traveling, coming back from travel, engagement, wedding, or even death. Most of the songs were sung by the women with the exception of Zaffeh and Mal'ab, which are sung by the men at wedding celebrations. Palestinian educator Bahia Khalil's book "Ramallah Folklore Songs and Traditions" documents to a great extent this oral tradition inherited from one generation to another. The second edition of the book was published in 2002 by the American Federation of Ramallah, Palestine, an organization for Palestinian-Americans from the Ramallah region living in the US.
Foreign travelers to Palestine in late-19th and early-20th centuries often commented on the rich variety of costumes among the Palestinian people, and particularly among the fellaheen or village women. Until the 1940s, a woman's economic status, whether married or single, and the town or area they were from could be deciphered by most Palestinian women by the type of cloth, colors, cut, and embroidery motifs, or lack thereof, used for the robe-like dress or "thoub" in Arabic.
Though experts in the field trace the origins of Palestinian costumes to ancient times, there are no surviving clothing artifacts from this early period against which the modern items might be definitively compared. Influences from the various empires to have ruled Palestine, such as Ancient Egypt, Ancient Rome, the Byzantine Empire, and Ayyubids, among others, have been documented by scholars largely based on the depictions in art and descriptions in literature of costumes produced during these times.
Hanan Munayyer, collector and researcher of Palestinian clothing, sees examples of proto-Palestinian attire in artifacts from the Canaanite period (1500 BCE), such as Egyptian paintings depicting Canaanites in A-shaped garments.[90] Munayyer says that from 1200 BC to AD 1940, all Palestinian dresses were cut from natural fabrics in a similar A-line shape with triangular sleeves.[90] This shape is known to archaeologists as the "Syrian tunic" and appears in artifacts such as an ivory engraving from Megiddo dating to 1200 BC.[90][91]
Until the 1940s, traditional Palestinian costumes reflected a woman's economic and marital status and her town or district of origin, with knowledgeable observers discerning this information from the fabric, colours, cut, and embroidery motifs (or lack thereof) used in the apparel.[92]
Due to the difficulty of travel in the 19th century, villages in Palestine remained isolated. As a result, clothing and accessories became a statement of region. In Ramallah, the back panels of dresses often incorporated a palm tree motif embroidered in cross-stitch.[93] Ramallah women were famous for their distinctive dress of white linen fabric embroidered with red silk thread. The headdress or smadeh worn in Ramallah was common throughout northern Palestine: a small roundish cap, padded and stiffened, with gold and silver coins set in a fringe with a long veil pinned to the back, sometimes of silk and sometimes embroidered.
Cristian family from Ramallah wearing typical Palestinian Ottoman-period clothing, c. 1905
Young woman of Ramallah wearing dowry headdress, c. 1898–1914 (American Colony Collection)
Many foreign nations have located their diplomatic missions to the Palestinian Authority in Ramallah, including, as of 2010[update], Argentina, Australia, Austria, Korea, South Africa, Norway, Sri Lanka, Switzerland, China, Poland, Portugal, The Netherlands, Russia, Jordan, Brazil, Finland, Denmark, Ireland, Germany, India, Japan, the Czech Republic, Canada and Mexico.[61]
^ ab"Religion in Ramallah City". Ramallah Municipality. Archived from the original on March 19, 2008. Retrieved February 22, 2008. Information in text is gathered by several links in the "Religion in Ramallah" page.
^"History of Friends School". Palestine Friends Boys School. Visuals Active Media. Archived from the original on November 1, 2007. Retrieved February 22, 2008. palfriends.org
^"The History of Radio in Israel". Jewish Virtual Library. American-Israeli Cooperative Enterprise. Archived from the original on October 15, 2007. Retrieved February 22, 2008.
^Village Statistics(PDF). 1938. p. 48. Archived(PDF) from the original on November 7, 2023. Retrieved November 6, 2023.
^Government of Palestine, Department of Statistics. Village Statistics, April, 1945. Quoted in Hadawi, 1970, p. 65Archived November 7, 2020, at the Wayback Machine
^ abcPat McDonnell Twair (October 2006). "Sovereign Threads". Palestine Heritage Foundation. Archived from the original on July 1, 2007. Retrieved December 6, 2012.
^Jane Waldron Grutz (January–February 1991). "Woven Legacy, Woven Language". Saudi Aramco World. Archived from the original on February 19, 2007. Retrieved December 6, 2012.
Ben-Arieh, Yehoshua (1985). "The Sanjak of Jerusalem in the 1870s"(PDF). Cathedra (in Hebrew). 36: 73–122. Archived(PDF) from the original on July 22, 2020. Retrieved November 30, 2018.
Government of Palestine, Department of Statistics (1945). Village Statistics, April, 1945. Archived from the original on April 2, 2019. Retrieved November 10, 2015.
Ekkadu Srinivasan Lakshmi NarasimhanE. S. L. Narasimhan Gubernur TelanganaPetahanaMulai menjabat 2 Juni 2014 PendahuluJabatan DibentukPenggantiPetahanaGubernur Andhra PradeshPetahanaMulai menjabat 27 Desember 2009 PendahuluNarayan Dutt TiwariPenggantiPetahanaGubernur ChhattisgarhMasa jabatan25 Januari 2007 – 23 Januari 2010 PendahuluKrishna Mohan SethPenggantiShekhar Dutt Informasi pribadiLahir1945 (umur 78–79)[1]Kepresidenan Madras, India Britania(sekara...
AirolaKomuneComune di AirolaLokasi Airola di Provinsi BeneventoNegara ItaliaWilayah CampaniaProvinsiBenevento (BN)Luas[1] • Total14,9 km2 (5,8 sq mi)Ketinggian[2]270 m (890 ft)Populasi (2016)[3] • Total8.462 • Kepadatan570/km2 (1,500/sq mi)Zona waktuUTC+1 (CET) • Musim panas (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)Kode pos82011Kode area telepon0823Situs webhttp://www.comune.airola.bn.it Airola adalah sebu...
Untuk hakim Italia, lihat Giovanni Grasso (hakim). Giovanni GrassoLahir(1888-11-11)11 November 1888Catania, Sisilia, ItaliaMeninggal30 April 1963(1963-04-30) (umur 74)Catania, Sisilia, ItaliaPekerjaanPemeranTahun aktif1910-1955 Giovanni Grasso (11 November 1888 – 30 April 1963) adalah seorang pemeran panggung dan film Italia. Ia tampil dalam 82 film antara 1910 dan 1955. Ia lahir dan meninggal di Catania, Sisilia, Italia.[1] Filmografi pilihan I naufraghi (19...
Ruggiero Rizzitelli Rizzitelli al Cesena a fine anni 80 Nazionalità Italia Altezza 177[1] cm Peso 68[1] kg Calcio Ruolo Attaccante Termine carriera 2001 Carriera Giovanili 1982-1986 Cesena Squadre di club1 1985-1988 Cesena62 (7)[2]1988-1994 Roma154 (29)1994-1996 Torino60 (30)1996-1998 Bayern Monaco45 (11)1998-2000 Piacenza33 (1)2000-2001 Cesena14 (6) Nazionale 1987-1989 Italia U-2116 (4)1988 Italia Olimpica5 (1)1988-1991 I...
Nama lengkapBlackpool Football Club Ltd.JulukanThe Seasiders,The 'Pool,The TangerinesBerdiri26 Juli 1887; 136 tahun lalu (1887-07-26)[1]StadionBloomfield RoadBlackpool, Inggris(Kapasitas: 17,338)OwnersOwen OystonValeri BelokonKetuaKarl OystonManajerIan HollowayLigaLiga Championship Inggris2012–13ke-15, Liga Championship InggrisSitus webSitus web resmi klub Kostum kandang Kostum tandang Musim ini Blackpool Football Club merupakan sebuah tim sepak bola Inggris yang bermarkas...
Слово «Gaelach», написанное гэльским шрифтом Гэльский шрифт (ирл. cló Gaelach — [kɫ̪oː ˈɡeːɫ̪əx]) — термин, которым обозначают семью островных шрифтов, разработанных для записи ирландского языка. Их использовали в XVI—XX вв. Иногда все гэльские шрифты называют «кельтскими» или ун�...
1888 1906 Élections sénatoriales de 1897 en Ille-et-Vilaine 3 sièges de sénateurs le 5 janvier 1897 Type d’élection Élections sénatoriales Corps électoral et résultats Population 622 039 Inscrits 1 155 Votants 1 153 99,83 % Votes exprimés 1 153 Sénateurs Sortant Élu Auguste Véron Louis Grivart Pierre-Marie Frain de La Villegontier Moanarchistes Henri Guérin Louis Grivart Georges Garreau modifier - modifier le code - voir Wikidata L...
Ice hockey team in Ashwaubenon, WisconsinGreen Bay GamblersCityAshwaubenon, WisconsinLeagueUSHLConferenceEasternFounded1994Home arenaResch CenterColorsBlack, yellow, white Owner(s)PMI Entertainment GroupGeneral managerMike LeoneHead coachMike LeoneFranchise history1994–presentGreen Bay GamblersChampionshipsRegular season titles5 Anderson Cups (1995–96, 1996–97, 2008–09, 2009–10, and 2011–12)Playoff championships4 Clark Cups (1996, 2000, 2010, and 2012) The ...
ХристианствоБиблия Ветхий Завет Новый Завет Евангелие Десять заповедей Нагорная проповедь Апокрифы Бог, Троица Бог Отец Иисус Христос Святой Дух История христианства Апостолы Хронология христианства Раннее христианство Гностическое христианство Вселенские соборы Н...
Nick Kuipers Kuipers saat bermain di ADO Den HaagInformasi pribadiNama lengkap Nick Anna Maria Francois Kuipers[1]Tanggal lahir 8 Oktober 1992 (umur 31)[2]Tempat lahir Maastricht, Belanda[3]Tinggi 193 m (633 ft 2+1⁄2 in)[4]Posisi bermain Bek tengahInformasi klubKlub saat ini Persib BandungNomor 2Karier junior MVV MaastrichtKarier senior*Tahun Tim Tampil (Gol)2009–2017 MVV Maastricht 150 (4)2017–2019 ADO Den Haag 18 (1)2019...
Pour les articles homonymes, voir Germigny. Germigny-des-Prés L'oratoire carolingien. Blason Administration Pays France Région Centre-Val de Loire Département Loiret Arrondissement Orléans Intercommunalité Communauté de communes du Val de Sully Maire Mandat Philippe Thuillier 2020-2026 Code postal 45110 Code commune 45153 Démographie Gentilé Germignons Populationmunicipale 705 hab. (2021 ) Densité 72 hab./km2 Géographie Coordonnées 47° 50′ 45″ nord, 2...
Application of acoustics to music Musical acoustics or music acoustics is a multidisciplinary field that combines knowledge from physics,[1][2][3] psychophysics,[4] organology[5] (classification of the instruments), physiology,[6] music theory,[7] ethnomusicology,[8] signal processing and instrument building,[9] among other disciplines. As a branch of acoustics, it is concerned with researching and describing the physics ...
1938 film by Jack Conway Too Hot to HandleTheatrical release posterDirected byJack ConwayWritten by Laurence Stallings John Lee Mahin Buster Keaton (uncredited) Produced byLawrence WeingartenStarring Clark Gable Myrna Loy Walter Pidgeon Cinematography Harold Rosson Clyde De Vinna (in Dutch Guiana) Edited byFrank SullivanMusic byFranz WaxmanProductioncompanyMetro-Goldwyn-MayerDistributed byLoew's Inc.Release date September 16, 1938 (1938-09-16) Running time106 minutesCountryUnit...
Gugusdepan, disingkat Gudep adalah suatu kesatuan organik dalam Gerakan Pramuka yang merupakan wadah untuk menghimpun anggota Gerakan Pramuka sebagai peserta didik dan pembina Pramuka, serta berfungsi sebagai pangkalan keanggotaan peserta didik.[1] Ketentuan umum Anggota Gerakan Pramuka yang berkedudukan sebagai peserta didik, pembina Pramuka dan anggota Majlis Pembimbing Gugusdepan (Mabigus) dihimpun dalam Gudep. Gudep dapat dibentuk di: Lembaga pendidikan umum seperti sekolah dan Pe...
جوزيف لوزي (بالإنجليزية: Joseph Losey) معلومات شخصية اسم الولادة (بالإنجليزية: Joseph Walton Losey)[1] الميلاد 14 يناير 1909 [2][3][4][5] لاكروس الوفاة 22 يونيو 1984 (75 سنة) [2][3][4][5] لندن الإقامة لندن مواطنة الولايات المتحدة مناصب �...
1958 single by Pat BooneA Wonderful Time Up ThereSingle by Pat Boonefrom the album Pat Boone Sings B-sideIt's Too Soon to KnowReleasedJanuary 9, 1958 (U.S.)March 1958 (U.K.)GenrePopLength2:04LabelDot (U.S.)London (U.K.)Songwriter(s)Lee Roy AbernathyProducer(s)Randy WoodPat Boone singles chronology April Love (1957) A Wonderful Time Up There (1958) Sugar Moon (1958) The song known as both Gospel Boogie and A Wonderful Time Up There was written by Lee Roy Abernathy, and first recorded by him in...
English zoologist, surgeon and writer For other people named Thomas Bell, see Thomas Bell (disambiguation). Thomas BellBorn(1792-10-11)11 October 1792Poole, EnglandDied13 March 1880(1880-03-13) (aged 87)Selborne, EnglandKnown forBritish Stalke-eyed CrustaceaSpouse Jane Roberts (scientific illustrator)ChildrenOne daughter, Susan GosseRelativesPhilip Henry Gosse (cousin)AwardsFellow of the Royal College of Surgeons and of the Linnean Society (president)Scientific careerInstitutionsKin...
Former railway in Dorset, England 50°33′55″N 2°26′34″W / 50.565153°N 2.442786°W / 50.565153; -2.442786 Verne Hill, showing two levels where the Merchant's Railway transported stone along to Castletown Merchant's Railway was a horse drawn and cable operated incline railway on the Isle of Portland, Dorset, England, built for the stone trade on the island. It was the earliest railway in Dorset, opening in 1826. The railway ran two miles from many working quarr...
Election in Oregon Main article: 1988 United States presidential election 1988 United States presidential election in Oregon ← 1984 November 8, 1988 1992 → Nominee Michael Dukakis George H. W. Bush Party Democratic Republican Home state Massachusetts Texas Running mate Lloyd Bentsen Dan Quayle Electoral vote 7 0 Popular vote 616,206 560,126 Percentage 51.28% 46.61% County Results Dukakis 40–50% 50–60% 60�...
French telecommunications company This article is about the French mobile phone company. For other uses, see SFR (disambiguation). This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these template messages) This article contains content that is written like an advertisement. Please help improve it by removing promotional content and inappropriate external links, and by adding encyclopedic content written from a neut...