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It is unusual to find an ancient city in the heart of Galilee.
The area was often full of villages, such as Nazareth and Cana, but cities were
usually located on its periphery: in the time of the First Testament, for
example, Tyre, Acco, Dor, Yokneam, Megiddo, Ibleam, Beth Shean, Chinneroth,
Hazor and Dan. Each of these had its special advantage as a vital nexus of
routes by land or sea, and the combination of these cities left no need, no
"room," for the rise of yet another in the Galilean heartland. This heartland
consists of parallel mountains and valleys. The main trunk road between Asia and
Africa ran through the valleys, but because these were bounded by the walls of
the mountain ranges, no vital nexus could form in them. (See map below.)
The full name, "Galilee (circle) of the peoples" (Isaiah
8:23/9:1) may refer to the outer "circle" of cities, which sometimes exerted
power themselves but more often represented this or that empire. From their
positions on the edge of the circle, the cities sought to control the heart of
Galilee. Yet that could be difficult: when taxes rose, the farmers could take
refuge in the mountains, especially those of Upper Galilee (reaching 4000 feet).
From here they sometimes attempted rebellion. In the First Testament period, the
heartland did contain one exception, a fairly large city called Hannaton, which
dominated the Beit Netofa Valley. In the Second Testament period, Sepphoris
arose to become the exception, ruling the valley from a hill southeast of
Hannaton.

Despite scant finds of a settlement at Sepphoris from the 8th
century BC, there is no tell, for the nearest spring is more than a mile away.
The first real development took place around 100 BC, after the Hasmoneans had
conquered Galilee. They probably chose this hill because of its "bird's eye
view" of the Beit Netofa Valley, through which the international trunk road ran.
(See map below.) The Greek name Sepphoris transliterates the Hebrew Tzippori,
derived perhaps from tzippor, meaning "bird." During Herod's fight for power
between 40 and 37 BC, he conquered the Hasmonean stronghold (in a blizzard,
writes Josephus). He used it, no doubt, as a base for taxation, which he carried
out so assiduously that the nearby peasants rose in revolt when he died in 4 BC.
Defeated, they were sold by the Romans into slavery. (Archaeology shows no trace
of battle in the city itself.) Herod's realm was then divided among his three
surviving sons. Among them was Herod Antipas, who became Tetrarch of Galilee
(and of Perea across the Jordan). Lacking any of the large peripheral cities, he
decided to build up Sepphoris as his capital. That explains why we find this
exceptional phenomenon, a city in the Galilean heartland, during the Second
Testament period. Sepphoris was still confined to the hill; for water it relied
on cisterns. But it must have been an expensive undertaking, built with the
taxes of Galilee's peasants and fishermen. Among the workmen we may picture
Joseph and his teenage son, who could have commuted from their village, four
miles south. Here Jesus may have met a young worker from Cana, probably to be
identified with a ruin that is today called Khirbet Kana, five miles to the
north.

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Scripture taken from the NEW AMERICAN STANDARD BIBLE(r),
(c) Copyright 1960, 1962, 1963, 1968, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1995 by The
Lockman Foundation. (www.Lockman.org)
© 2003 Near East Tourist
Agency (NET)
Text © 2003 Stephen Langfur
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