Category
page 1District of Hebron

Tell es-Safi
depopulated Palestinian village
Bayt Jibrin
depopulated Palestinian town in Hebron, Palestine

Al-Dawayima
Al-Dawayima, Dawaymeh or Dawayma () was a Palestinian town, located in the former Hebron Subdistrict of Mandatory Palestine, and in what is now the Lakhish region, some 15 kilometres south-east of Kiryat Gat.

Deir al-Dubban
village in Hebron, Mandatory Palestine
'Ajjur
Ajjur () was a Palestinian Arab village of over 3,700 inhabitants in 1945, located northwest of Hebron. It became depopulated in 1948 after several military assaults by Israeli military forces. Agur, Tzafririm, Givat Yeshayahu, Li-On, and Tirosh were built on the village lands.
Al-Qubayba, Hebron
village in Hebron, Mandatory Palestine
Mughallis
Mughallis () was a Palestinian Arab village located northwest of Hebron. It was depopulated during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War between July 9–10, 1948 as part of Operation An-Far.
==History==
===Ottoman era===
It was incorporated into the Ottoman Empire in 1517 with the rest of Palestine, and by the 1596 tax records it was located it nahiya (subdistrict) of Gaza, part of Gaza Sanjak, with a population of 77 household, an estimated 424 persons, all Muslims. The villagers paid a fixed tax-rate of 25% on agricultural products, including wheat, barley, summer crops, fruit trees, goats and beehives,
Bayt Nattif
archaeological site in Israel
Khirbat Umm Burj
village in Mandatory Palestine
Kudna
Kudna (, also known as Kidna) was a Palestinian Arab village on the northwestern slopes of the Hebron hills, about 25 km from Hebron and at an elevation of 250 m above sea level. Its lands covered 15,744 dunams, including olive groves, cereal fields, and pasture grounds. To its west stretched fertile plains known in Arabic as Sahl Ghazāl, while the southern outskirts contained wooded terrain with wild pistachio and carob trees. Natural springs and cisterns provided water, supplemented by seasonal wadis that traversed the area.

Ra'na
'''Ra'na''' () was a village located approximately 26 km northwest of Hebron. It was occupied by the Israeli army during Operation Yo'av in October 1948. It was one of 16 villages in the Hebron district that were depopulated.
Zikrin
Zikrin (), pronounced Dhikrin, was a Palestinian Arab village in the Hebron Subdistrict, depopulated in the 1948 Palestine War. The site is located about northwest of Beit Gubrin and sits at a mean elevation of above sea-level, its access somewhat impeded by hedges of buckthorn and cactus. The entire site is dotted with grottoes and caves, and razed structures.
==History==
The village was called Kefar Dikrina in Roman times. Geographer, Adolf Neubauer mentions the village as formerly being called Kefar Dhikrin () in several Rabbinic sources, including the Babylonian Talmud. Neubauer cites one

Zayta, Hebron
village in Hebron, Mandatory Palestine

Dayr Nakhkhas
village in Hebron, Mandatory Palestine
Barqusya
Barqusya (also: Barkusya, ) was a Palestinian Arab village in the Hebron Subdistrict, depopulated in the 1948 Palestine War. It was located 31 km northwest of Hebron.
==History==
In 1838, in the Ottoman era, Berkusia was noted as Muslim village in the Gaza area, and being "somewhat larger" than Bil'in.

Az-Zakariyya
REDIRECT Zekharia
Hebron Subdistrict
Mandatory Palestine
Carmel
Biblical city