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{{Short description|City in northern Israel}}
{{Infobox Israel municipality
{{Infobox settlement
| name = Safed
| image_skyline = Safed 2009.jpg | name = Safed (Tzfat)
| native_name = {{Hlist
| image_caption =
| {{Lang|he|{{Script/Hebrew|צְפַת}}|rtl=yes}}
| emblem = Coat of arms of Safed.svg
| {{Lang|ar|{{lang|ar|صفد}}|rtl=yes}}
| emblem_type =
}}
| hebname = {{Hebrew|צְפַת}}
| settlement_type = ]
| country = {{ISR}}
| ISO = Çpat | translit_lang1 = Hebrew
| translit_lang1_type1 = ]
| pushpin_map = Israel northeast#Israel | pushpin_label_position = left
| translit_lang1_info1 = Çpat
| coordinates = {{coord|32|57|57|N|35|29|54|E|region:IL|format=dms|display= inline,title}}
| translit_lang1_type2 = Translit.
| founded = 15th century BCE or before (?)<ref name="Gorys">{{cite book |title= Heiliges Land |series= Kunst-Reiseführer |author= Erhard Gorys |year= 1996 |location= Cologne |publisher= DuMont |isbn= 3-7701-3860-0 |language= German |page= 267 |quote= Der ägyptische Pharao Thutmosis III (1490-1436) erwähnte in seiner Liste der eroberten Städte Kanaans auch Saft, das möglicherweise mit Zefat identisch war. (The Egyptian Pharao ] (1490-1436) mentioned Saft in his ], which might be identical with Safed.)}}</ref>
| translit_lang1_info2 = Tz'fat
| type = city
| translit_lang1_type3 = Also spelled
| typefrom =
| translit_lang1_info3 = Tsfat, Tzefat, Zfat, Sfat, Ẕefat (official)
| stdHeb = Tz'fat
| image_skyline =
| altOffSp = Tsfat, Tzefat, Zfat, Ẕefat
{{center|{{Photomontage
| district = North
|photo1a = Tsfat-the old town croped.jpg
| elevation_m = 900
|photo1b = Safed1.jpg
| popyear = {{Israel populations|Year}}
|photo2a = PikiWiki Israel 48709 Safed - the Old City.jpg
| population = {{Israel populations|Zefat}}
|photo2b = Safed (3301183887).jpg
|photo3e = PikiWiki Israel 65747 old safed the dormant spring.jpg
|size = 280
|color = transparent
|border = 0
}}}}
| image_caption =
| image_blank_emblem = Coat of arms of Safed.svg
| pushpin_map_alt =
| pushpin_map = Israel northeast#Israel
| pushpin_mapsize =
| pushpin_label_position = left
| pushpin_map_caption =
| coordinates = {{coord|32|57|57|N|35|29|54|E|region:IL|format=dms|display= inline,title}}
| subdivision_type = ]
| subdivision_name = {{ISR}}
| subdivision_type1 =
| subdivision_name1 =
| subdivision_type2 = ]
| subdivision_name2 = ]
| subdivision_type3 = Sub-district
| subdivision_name3 = ]
| established_title = Founded
| established_date = 1500 BCE<ref name="Gorys">{{cite book |title= Heiliges Land |series= Kunst-Reiseführer |author= Erhard Gorys |year= 1996 |location= Cologne |publisher= DuMont |isbn= 3-7701-3860-0 |language= de |page= 267 |quote= Der ägyptische Pharao Thutmosis III (1490-1436) erwähnte in seiner Liste der eroberten Städte Kanaans auch Saft, das möglicherweise mit Zefat identisch war. (The Egyptian Pharao ] (1490-1436) mentioned Saft in his ], which might be identical with Safed.)}}</ref>
| leader_title = Mayor
| leader_name = Yossi Kakon
| unit_pref = dunam
| population_footnotes = {{Israel populations|reference}} | population_footnotes = {{Israel populations|reference}}
| mayor = Shuki Ohana | population_total = 42117
| population_as_of = 2024
| website =
| population_density_km2 = auto
| demographics_type1 = Ethnicity
| demographics1_footnotes = {{Israel populations|reference}}
| demographics1_title1 = ]
| demographics1_info1 = 97.9%
| demographics1_title2 = ]
| demographics1_info2 = 2.1%
| elevation_m = 850
| website =
| official_name = Tzfat
}} }}


'''Safed''' ({{lang-he-n|צְפַת}} '''''Tsfat''''', ]: ''Tzfas'', ]: ''Ṣǝp̄aṯ'') is a city in the ] of ]. Located at an elevation of {{convert|900|m|ft|0}}, Safed is the highest city in the ] and in Israel.<ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/vie/Safed.html |title= Safed |publisher= Jewish Virtual Library Article |date= |accessdate= 2012-01-07}}</ref> Due to its high elevation, Safed experiences warm summers and cold, often snowy, winters.<ref name="vilnai">{{cite book|title= A Guide to Israel|author= Vilnay, Zev|authorlink= Zev Vilnay|publisher= HaMakor Press|location= ], Palestine|year = 1972|chapter= Tsefat|pages= 522–532}}</ref> '''Safed''' (also known as '''Tzfat'''; {{langx|he|צְפַת}}, ''Ṣəfaṯ''; {{langx|ar|صفد}}, ''Ṣafad'')<ref>{{Cite web |title=Safed {{!}} History, Location, & Facts {{!}} Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/place/Zefat |access-date=2022-05-21 |website=www.britannica.com |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=An in depth guide to the mystical city of Tzfat (or Safed) |url=https://www.timeout.com/israel/attractions/tzfat-a-guide-to-the-mystical-city |access-date=2022-05-21 |website=Time Out Israel |language=en-US}}</ref> is a city in the ] of ]. Located at an elevation of up to {{cvt|937|m}}, Safed is the highest city in the ] and in Israel.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/vie-safed |title=Safed |publisher=Jewish Virtual Library Article |access-date=December 29, 2022}}</ref>


Safed has been identified with ''Sepph,'' a fortified town in the ] mentioned in the writings of the Roman-Jewish historian ].<ref>, accessed 9 December 2016</ref> The ] mentions it as one of five elevated spots where fires were lit to announce the ] and festivals during the ] period.<ref name="judaica">{{cite encyclopedia | encyclopedia= Encyclopedia Judaica |title= Safed |volume= 14 |pages= 626 |publisher= Keter |location= ], Israel |year= 1972}}</ref> In the 12th century CE Safed was a fortified city in the Crusaders' ], known to them as ''Saphet''.<ref name="vilnai" /> The ] ] captured the city in 1266 and appointed a governor to take charge of the fortress.<ref name="Drory165"/> The city also became the administrative centre of Mamlakat Safad, a province in ] whose jurisdiction included the Galilee and the lands up to ].<ref name=Sharonxii>Sharon, 1997, p. </ref> Under the ], Safed functioned as the capital of the ], which encompassed much of the Galilee and extended to the Mediterranean coast. Since the 16th century, Safed has been considered one of ]'s ], along with ], ] and ];<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=32&letter=P#176#ixzz0RkYTWcVv |title= Tiberias |publisher= Jewish Encyclopedia |date= |accessdate= 2012-01-07}}</ref> since that time the city has remained a centre of ] and ]. Rabbi ] introduced interest in the Kabbalah to the city in the 16th century.<ref>De la Fuente Salvat, Jose. "Palestina: ¿Existe o no? 2017"</ref> Safed has been identified with ''Sepph'' (Σέπφ), a fortified town in the ] mentioned in the writings of the ] historian ]. The ] mentions Safed as one of five elevated spots where fires were lit to announce the ] and festivals during the ]. Safed attained local prominence under the ], who built a large fortress there in 1168. It was conquered by ] 20 years later, and demolished by his grandnephew ] in 1219. After reverting to the Crusaders in a treaty in 1240, a larger fortress was erected, which was expanded and reinforced in 1268 by the ] sultan ], who developed Safed into a major town and the capital of a new province spanning the Galilee. After a century of general decline, the stability brought by the ] conquest in 1517 ushered in nearly a century of growth and prosperity in Safed, during which time Jewish immigrants from across Europe developed the city into a center for ] and the mystical ] movement. It became known as one of the ] of Judaism. As the capital of the ], it was the main population center of the Galilee, with large Muslim and Jewish communities. Besides during the fortunate governorship of ] in the early 17th century, the city underwent a general decline and by the mid-18th century was eclipsed by ]. Its Jewish residents ] in ] and local Muslim raids in the 1830s, and many perished in an ] in that same decade through the philanthropy of ], its Jewish synagogues and homes were rebuilt.


Safed's population reached 24,000 toward the end of the 19th century; it was a ], divided roughly equally between Jews and Muslims with a small Christian community. Its Muslim merchants played a key role as middlemen in the ] between the local farmers and the traders of Acre, while the Ottomans promoted the city as a center of ] ]. Safed's conditions improved considerably in the late 19th century, a municipal council was established along with a number of banks, though the city's jurisdiction was limited to the Upper Galilee. By 1922, Safed's population had dropped to around 8,700, roughly 60% Muslim, 33% Jewish and the remainder Christians. Amid rising ethnic tension throughout ], Safed's Jews were attacked in an ]. The city's population had risen to 13,700 by 1948, overwhelmingly Arab, though the city was proposed to be part of a Jewish state in the ]. During the ], Arab factions attacked and besieged the Jewish quarter which held out until Jewish paramilitary forces captured the city after heavy fighting, precipitating British forces to withdraw.<ref name=Abbasi40/> Most of the city's predominantly Palestinian-Arab population ] as a result of ] and the nearby ], and were not allowed to return after the war, such that today the city has an almost exclusively Jewish population.<ref name=Abbasi40/><ref>Morris (2004) 221–226.</ref> That year, the city became part of the then-newly established state of Israel.
Due to its mild climate and scenic views, Safed has become a popular holiday resort frequented by Israelis and by foreign visitors.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.planetware.com/israel/Safed-isr-nr-sf.htm |title= Planetware Safed Tourism |publisher= Planetware.com |date= |accessdate= 2012-01-07 |deadurl= yes |archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20110812094811/http://www.planetware.com/israel/Safed-isr-nr-sf.htm |archivedate= 2011-08-12 |df= }}</ref> In {{Israel populations|Year}} it had a population of {{Israel populations|Zefat}}.{{Israel populations|reference}}

Safed has a large ] community and remains a center for Jewish religious studies. Safed today hosts the Ziv Hospital as well as the ]. Safed is a major subject in Israeli art, it hosts an ]. Several prominent art movements played a role in the city, most notably the ].<ref name=":0">{{Cite book |last=Hecht Museum |title=After the School Of Paris |year=2013 |isbn=9789655350272 |location=Israel |language=en, he}}</ref> However the ] has declined since its golden age in the second half of the 20th century.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Artist Quarter of Safed |url=https://www.safed.co.il/ArtistQuarterofSafed.html |access-date=2023-10-24 |website=www.safed.co.il}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=24 October 2023 |title=The School of Paris and the Artists' Quarter of Safed |url=https://mushecht.haifa.ac.il/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=57:2015-01-27-09-53-19&catid=208&lang=he&Itemid=169 |website=Hecht Museum}}</ref> Due to its high elevation, the city has warm summers and cold, often snowy winters.<ref name="vilnai">{{cite book|title= A Guide to Israel|author= Vilnay, Zev|author-link= Zev Vilnay|publisher= HaMakor Press|location= ], Palestine|year = 1972|chapter= Tsefat|pages= 522–532}}</ref> Its mild climate and scenic views have made Safed a popular holiday resort frequented by Israelis and foreign visitors.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.planetware.com/israel/Safed-isr-nr-sf.htm |title= Planetware Safed Tourism |publisher= Planetware.com |access-date= 2012-01-07 |url-status= dead |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20110812094811/http://www.planetware.com/israel/Safed-isr-nr-sf.htm |archive-date= 2011-08-12 }}</ref> In {{Israel populations|Year}} it had a population of {{Israel populations|Zefat}}.{{Israel populations|reference}}


==Biblical reference== ==Biblical reference==
Legend has it that Safed was founded by a son of ] after the ].<ref name="vilnai" /> According to the ] ({{Bibleref2|Judges 1:17}}), the area where Safed is located was assigned to the ].<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.hadassah.org/news/content/per_hadassah/archive/2004/04_DEC/traveler.asp |archive-url= https://archive.is/20120804185810/http://www.hadassah.org/news/content/per_hadassah/archive/2004/04_DEC/traveler.asp |dead-url= yes |archive-date= 2012-08-04 |title= Hadassah Magazine |publisher= Hadassah.org |date= |accessdate= 2009-05-06 }}</ref> Legend has it that Safed was founded by a son of ] after the ].<ref name="vilnai" /> According to the ] ({{bibleverse|Judges|1:17}}), the area where Safed is located was assigned to the ].<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.hadassah.org/news/content/per_hadassah/archive/2004/04_DEC/traveler.asp |archive-url= https://archive.today/20120804185810/http://www.hadassah.org/news/content/per_hadassah/archive/2004/04_DEC/traveler.asp |url-status= dead |archive-date= 2012-08-04 |title= Hadassah Magazine |publisher= Hadassah.org |access-date= 2009-05-06 }}</ref>


It has been suggested that ]' assertion that "a city that is set on a hill cannot be hidden" <ref>{{bibleverse||Matthew|5:14|NKJV}}</ref> may have referred to Safed.<ref> and on Matthew 5, both accessed 9 December 2016</ref> It has been suggested that ]' assertion that "a city that is set on a hill cannot be hidden"<ref>{{bibleverse||Matthew|5:14|NKJV}}</ref> referred to Safed.<ref> and on Matthew 5, both accessed 9 December 2016</ref>


==History== ==History==
===Classical Antiquity=== ===Antiquity===
Safed has been identified with ''Sepph,'' a fortified town in the ] mentioned in the writings of the Roman-Jewish historian ].<ref>, accessed 9 December 2016</ref> It is mentioned in the ] as one of five elevated spots where fires were lit to announce the New Moon and festivals during the ] period.<ref name="judaica"/> Safed has been identified with ''Sepph,'' a fortified town in the ] mentioned in the writings of the Roman-Jewish historian ].<ref name="Geography of Israel: Safed">, accessed 9 December 2016</ref> Safed is mentioned in the ] as one of five elevated spots where fires were lit to announce the ] and festivals during the ].<ref name="judaica">{{cite encyclopedia | encyclopedia= Encyclopedia Judaica |title= Safed |volume= 14 |pages= 626 |publisher= Keter |location= ], Israel |year= 1972}}</ref>

===Crusader era===
====Pre-Crusader village and tower====
{{multiple image
| image1 = Safedcitadel.jpg
| caption1 = Ruins in the modern day of the ]
| width1 = 200
| image2 = Kulat Safed from the 1871-77 Palestine Exploration Fund Survey of Palestine.jpg
| caption2 = 1871-77 ] map
| width2 = 100
| footer = The ]-]-era fortress of Safed
}}

There is scarce information about Safed before the ] conquest.<ref name="Drory163">Drory 2004, p. 163.</ref><ref>Luz 2014, p. 33.</ref> A document from the ], composed in 1034, mentions a transaction made in Tiberias in 1023 by a certain Jew, Musa ben Hiba ben Salmun with the '']'' (Arabic descriptive suffix) "al-Safati" (of Safed),<ref name="Drory163"/> indicating the presence of a Jewish community living alongside Muslims in Safed in the 11th century.<ref name="Barbé 2016, p. 63">Barbé 2016, p. 63.</ref> According to the Muslim historian ] (d. 1285), at the beginning of the 12th century, a "flourishing village" beneath a tower called Burj Yatim had existed at the site of Safed on the eve of the Crusaders' capture of the area in 1101–1102 and that "nothing" about the village was mentioned in "the early Islamic history books".<ref name="Ellenblum179n15">Ellenblum 2007, p. 179, note 15.</ref> Although Ibn Shaddad mistakenly attributes the tower's construction to the ], the modern historian ] asserts that the tower was likely built during the early Muslim period (mid-7th–11th centuries).<ref name="Ellenblum179n15"/>


===Early Muslim period=== ====First Crusader period====
The Frankish chronicler ] noted the presence of a '']'' (tower) in Safed, which he called "Castrum Saphet" or "Sephet", in 1157.<ref name="Ellenblum179n16">Ellenblum 2007, p. 179, note 16.</ref> Safed was the seat of a '']y'' (area governed by a castle) by at least 1165, when its ''castellan'' (appointed castle governor) was Fulk, constable of ].<ref>Barbé 2016, p. 58.</ref> The castle of Safed was purchased from Fulk by King ] in 1168.<ref name="Ellenblum179n16"/> He subsequently reinforced the castle and transferred it to the Templars in the same year.<ref name="Ellenblum179n16"/> ], describing his visit to the area in 1172, noted that the expanded fortification of the castle of Safed was meant to check the raids of the Turks (the Turkic ] ruled the area east of the Kingdom).<ref>Ellenblum 2007, p. 179.</ref> Testifying to the considerable expansion of the castle, the chronicler ] (d. 1240) wrote that it was practically built anew.<ref>Ellenblum 2007, p. 180.</ref> The remains of Fulk's castle can now be found under the citadel excavations, on a hill above the old city.<ref name="Sachar190">Howard M. Sachar, Random House, 2013 p. 190.</ref>
There is scarce information about the town of Safed prior to the ] conquest in 1099.<ref name="Drory163">Drory, p. 163.</ref>


In the estimation of modern historian Havré Barbé, the ''castellany'' of Safed comprised approximately {{convert|376|km2|mi2|sp=us}}.<ref name="Barbé 2016, p. 63"/> According to Barbé, its western boundary straddled the domains of Acre, including the fief of ], which included ] and ], and the fief of Geoffrey le Tor, which included ] and ], and in the southwest ran north of ] and ].<ref>Barbé 2016, pp. 56, 59.</ref> Its northern boundary was marked by the ] (Wadi al-Hindaj) stream,<ref>Barbé 2016, p. 56.</ref> its southern boundary was likely formed near Wadi al-Amud, separating it from the fief of Tiberias,<ref>Barbé 2016, p. 59.</ref> while its eastern limits were the marshes of the ] and upper ].<ref>Barbé 2016, p. 57.</ref> There were several Jewish communities in the ''castellany'' of Safed, as testified in the accounts of Jewish pilgrims and chroniclers between 1120 and 1293.<ref>Barbé 2016, pp. 63, 59.</ref> ], who visited the town in 1170, does not record any Jews living in Safed proper.<ref>Sachar 1994, p. 120.</ref>
===Crusader period===
]-]-era fortress of Safed]]


====Ayyubid interregnum====
The city appears in Jewish sources in the late ].<ref name="vilnai" />{{clarify|What period is it referring to? The book is not accessible online, pls. show quotation! The term Middle Ages has been coined for European circumstances and is NOT commonly used in the Levant, where it doesn't actually fit. At most it's used for the period of European rule, i.e. the Crusader period, so "late Middle Ages" is meaningless.|date=January 2018}} In the 12th century, Safed was a fortified city in the Crusaders' ], known by the Crusaders as Saphet.<ref name="vilnai" /> King ] built a strong castle there on a steep hill, which was kept by the ] from 1168.<ref name="Sharon152">Sharon 2007, p. </ref> ], who visited the town in 1170, does not mention any Jews as living there. The remains of this castle can now be found under the "citadel" excavations, on a hill above the old city.<ref>Howard M. Sachar, Random House, 2013 p. 190.</ref>
Safed was captured by the ] led by Sultan ] in 1188 after ], following the ] in 1187.<ref name="Sharon152">Sharon 2007, p. </ref> Saladin ultimately allowed its residents to relocate to ].<ref name="Sharon152"/> He granted Safed and Tiberias as an '']'' (akin to a fief) to Sa'd al-Din Mas'ud ibn Mubarak (d. 1211), the son of his niece, after which it was bequeathed to Sa'd al-Din's son Ahmad.<ref name="Drory164">Drory 2004, p. 164.</ref> ], who visited the town in 1210, mentions the existence of a Jewish community of at least fifty there.<ref>Schechter, Solomon. ''Studies in Judaism: Second Series (Jewish Studies Classics 3)'', p. 206. Gorgias Press LLC, 2003. {{ISBN|1-59333-039-1}}</ref> He also noted that two Muslims guarded and maintained the cave tomb of a rabbi, Hanina ben Horqano, in Safed.<ref>Barbé 2016, p. 68.</ref> The ''iqta'' of Safed was taken from the family of Sa'd al-Din by the Ayyubid emir of ], ], in 1217.<ref name="Luz34">Luz 2014, p. 34.</ref> Two years later, during the Crusader ], al-Mu'azzam Isa had the Safed castle demolished to prevent its capture and reuse by potential future Crusaders.<ref name="Luz34"/>


====Second Crusader period====
Safed was captured by the ] led by ] in 1188 after one year's siege, following the ] in 1187. Saladin ultimately allowed its residents to relocate to ].<ref name="Sharon152"/> ], who visited the town in 1210, mentions the existence of a Jewish community of at least fifty there.<ref>Schechter, Solomon. ''Studies in Judaism: Second Series (Jewish Studies Classics 3)'', p. 206. Gorgias Press LLC, 2003. {{ISBN|1-59333-039-1}}</ref> In 1227, the Ayyubid emir of ], ], had the Safed castle demolished to prevent it being captured and reused by potential future Crusades.<ref name="Sharon152"/> In 1240, ], on his own Crusade to the Holy Land, negotiated with the Ayyubids of ] and of ]{{clarify|The term is commonly used in connection with ancient Egypt, not the Ayyubids or the Muslim period as a whole. Why was it chosen? Didn't the Ayyubids control Sudan etc.?|date=January 2018}} and finalized a treaty with the former against the latter whereby the Kingdom of Jerusalem regained ] itself, plus ] and most of the region of Galilee, including ] and Safed.<ref>Tyerman. ''God's War''. p. 767.</ref> The Templars thereafter rebuilt the town's fortress.<ref name="Sharon152"/>
As an outcome of the treaty negotiations between the Crusader leader ] and the Ayyubid ], in 1240 Safed once again passed to Crusader control.<ref name="Luz34"/> Afterward, the Templars were tasked with rebuilding the ], with efforts spearheaded by ], ].<ref name="Luz34"/> The rebuilding is recorded in a short treatise, '']'', from the early 1260s.<ref>Pringle 1985, p. 139.</ref> The reconstruction was completed at the considerable expense of 40,000 ]s in 1243.<ref name="Luz34"/><ref name="AmitaiPreiss757">Amitai-Preiss 1995, p. 757.</ref> The new fortress was larger than the original, with a capacity for 2,200 soldiers in time of war, and with a resident force of 1,700 in peacetime.<ref name="AmitaiPreiss757"/><ref>Luz 2014, pp. 34–35.</ref> The garrison's goods and services were provided by the town or large village growing rapidly beneath the fortress, which, according to Benoit's account, contained a market, "numerous inhabitants" and was protected by the fortress.<ref name="Luz35"/> The settlement also benefited from trade with travelers on the route between ] and the Jordan Valley, which passed through Safed.<ref name="Luz34"/>


===Mamluk period=== ===Mamluk period===
] in 1275, and renovated or expanded by the Ottomans in 1671/72]]
In 1260, the ] sultan ] declared the treaty invalid due to the Christians working in concert with the ] against the Muslims, and launched a series of attacks on castles in the area, including on Safed.{{Citation needed|date=January 2016}} In 1266, during a Mamluk military campaign to subdue Crusader strongholds in ], Baybars captured Safed in July, following a failed attempt to capture the Crusaders' coastal stronghold of ].<ref name="Drory163"/> Unlike the coastal Crusader fortresses, which were demolished upon their capture by the Mamluks, Baybars spared Safed from destruction.<ref name="Drory165">Drory 2004, p. 165.</ref> Instead, he appointed a governor to be in charge of the fortress.<ref name="Drory165"/> Baybars likely preserved Safed because he viewed its fortress to be of high strategic value due to its location on a high mountain and its isolation from other Crusader fortresses.<ref name="Drory165"/> Moreover, Baybars determined that in the event of a renewed Crusader invasion of the coastal region, a strongly fortified Safed could serve as an ideal headquarters to confront the Crusader threat.<ref>Drory 2004, pp. 166–167.</ref> In 1268, he had the fortress repaired, expanded and strengthened.<ref name="Drory165"/> Furthermore, he commissioned numerous building works in the town of Safed, including ]s, ], baths, and converted the town's church into a mosque.<ref name="Drory166">Drory 2004, p. 166.</ref> By the end of Baybars' reign, Safed had become the site of a prospering town, in addition to its fortress.<ref name="Drory166"/> The city also became the administrative centre of Mamlakat Safad, a province in Mamluk Syria whose jurisdiction included the Galilee and the lands further south down to ].<ref name=Sharonxii/>


The Ayyubids of Egypt had been supplanted by the ] in 1250 and the Mamluk sultan ] entered ] with his army in 1261. Thereafter, he led a series of campaigns over several years against Crusader strongholds across the Syrian coastal mountains.<ref>Holt 1995, p. 11.</ref> Safed, with its position overlooking the Jordan River and allowing the Crusaders early warnings of Muslim troop movements in the area, had been a consistent aggravation for the Muslim regional powers.<ref>Amitai-Preiss 1995, pp. 757–758.</ref> After a six-week siege,<ref name="Luz35">Luz 2014, p. 35.</ref> Baybars ] in July 1266,<ref name="Drory163"/> after which he had nearly the entire garrison killed.<ref name="AmitaiPreiss758">Amitai-Preiss 1995, p. 758.</ref> The siege occurred during a Mamluk military campaign to subdue Crusader strongholds in ] and followed a failed attempt to capture the Crusaders' coastal stronghold of Acre.<ref name="Drory163"/> Unlike the Crusader fortresses along the coastline, which were demolished upon their capture by the Mamluks, Baybars spared the fortress of Safed.<ref name="Drory165">Drory 2004, p. 165.</ref> He likely preserved it because of the strategic value stemming from its location on a high mountain and its isolation from other Crusader fortresses.<ref name="Drory165"/> Moreover, Baybars determined that in the event of a renewed Crusader invasion of the coastal region, a strongly fortified Safed could serve as an ideal headquarters to confront the Crusader threat.<ref>Drory 2004, pp. 166–167.</ref> In 1268, he had the fortress repaired, expanded and strengthened.<ref name="Drory165"/> He commissioned numerous building works in the town of Safed, including ]s, ] and baths, and converted the town's church into a mosque.<ref name="Drory166">Drory 2004, p. 166.</ref> The mosque, called Jami al-Ahmar (the Red Mosque), was completed in 1275.<ref>Petersen, p. 73.</ref> By the end of Baybars's reign, Safed had developed into a prosperous town and fortress.<ref name="Drory166"/>
According to ], who died in Safed in 1327, writing around 1300, Baybars built a "round tower and called it Kullah ..." after levelling the old fortress. The tower is built in three stories. It is provided with provisions, and halls, and magazines. Under the place is a cistern for rain-water, sufficient to supply the garrison of the fortress from year's end to year's end.<ref>Al-Dimashqi, p. 210, quoted in le Strange, p. 524</ref> According to ], Safed "was a town of medium size. It has a very strongly built castle, which dominates the ]. There are underground watercourses, which bring drinking-water up to the castle-gate...Its suburbs cover three hills... Since the place was conquered by Al Malik Adh Dhahir from the Franks , it has been made the central station for the troops who guard all the coast-towns of that district."<ref>Abu'l Fida, p. 243, quoted in le Strange, p. 525</ref>


Baybars assigned fifty-four ]s, at the head of whom was Emir Ala al-Din Kandaghani, to oversee the management of Safed and its dependencies.<ref name="Barbé71-2">Barbé 2016, pp. 71–72.</ref> From the time of its capture, the city was made the administrative center of Mamlakat Safad,<ref name=Sharonxii>Sharon, 1997, p. </ref> one of seven ''mamlakas'' (provinces), whose governors were typically appointed from ], which made up ].<ref>Rhode 1979, pp. 16–17.</ref> Initially, its jurisdiction corresponded roughly with the Crusader ''castellany''.<ref name="Barbé71-2"/> After the fall of the ] to the Mamluks in 1271, the castle and its dependency, the ] district, were incorporated into Mamlakat Safad.<ref>Barbé 2016, pp. 72.</ref> The territorial jurisdiction of the ''mamlaka'' eventually spanned the entire Galilee and the lands further south down to ].<ref name=Sharonxii/>
===Ottoman period===
{{see also|Jewish textile industry in 16th-century Safed}}
]
{{Yishuv haYashan}}
Under the Ottomans, Safed was the capital of the ], which encompassed much of the Galilee and extended to the Mediterranean coast. This ] was part of the ] until 1660, when it was united with the sanjak of Sidon into ], of which it was briefly the capital. Finally, from the mid-19th century it was part of the ] of ]. The orthodox ] courts arbitrated over cases in ], ] and as far away as ].<ref name="ADiS"/> In 1549, under Sultan ], a wall was constructed and troops were stationed to protect the city.<ref name="David2010.96">Abraham David, 2010. </ref>


]
During the early Ottoman period from 1525 to 1526, the population of Safed consisted of 633 Muslim families, 40 Muslim bachelors, 26 Muslim religious persons, nine Muslim disabled, 232 Jewish families, and 60 military families.<ref>{{cite journal | author = Bernard Lewis | title = Studies in the Ottoman Archives–I | journal = Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies | volume = 16 | number = 3 | year = 1954 | pages = 469–501 | doi=10.1017/s0041977x00086808}}</ref> In 1553–54, the population consisted of 1,121 Muslim households, 222 Muslim bachelors, 54 Muslim religious leaders, 716 Jewish households, 56 Jewish bachelors, and 9 disabled persons.<ref name="Lewis">{{cite journal |doi= 10.1017/S0041977X00086808 |author=Bernard Lewis |title=Studies in the Ottoman Archives—I |journal= Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London |volume=16 |issue=3 |year=1954 |pages= 469–501}}</ref>


The geographer ], who died in Safed in 1327, wrote around 1300 that Baybars built a "round tower and called it Kullah ..." after leveling the old fortress. The tower was built in three stories, and provided with provisions, halls, and ]s. Under the structure, a ] collected enough rainwater to regularly supply the garrison.<ref>Al-Dimashqi, p. 210, quoted in le Strange, p. 524</ref> The governor of Safed, Emir Baktamur al-Jukandar (the Polomaster; {{reign|1309|1311}}), built a mosque later called after him in the northeastern section of the city.<ref>Petersen, pp. 260–261.</ref> The geographer ] (1273–1331), the ruler of ], described Safed as follows:<blockquote> was a town of medium size. It has a very strongly built castle, which dominates the ] . There are underground watercourses, which bring drinking-water up to the castle-gate...Its suburbs cover three hills... Since the place was conquered by Al Malik Adh Dhahir from the Franks , it has been made the central station for the troops who guard all the coast-towns of that district."<ref>Abu'l Fida, p. 243, quoted in le Strange, p. 525</ref></blockquote>
The ] quarter was established in the Middle Ages and continued through to the 19th century.<ref name="ADiS">R. Y. Ebied, M. J. L. Young (1976) Some Arabic Legal Documents of the Ottoman Period: From the Leeds Manuscript Collection University of Leeds. Dept. of Semitic Studies Brill Archive, {{ISBN|90-04-04401-9}} p. 7</ref>


The native '']'' (Islamic head judge) of Safed, Shams al-Din al-Uthmani, composed a text about Safed called ''Ta'rikh Safad'' (the History of Safed) during the rule of its governor Emir Alamdar ({{reign|1372|1376}}).<ref>Luz 2014, pp. 178–180.</ref> The extant parts of the work consisted of ten folios largely devoted to Safed's distinguishing qualities, its dependent villages, agriculture, trade and geography, with no information about its history.<ref>Luz 2014, p. 178.</ref> His account reveals the city's dominant features were its citadel, the Red Mosque and its towering position over the surrounding landscape.<ref>Luz 2014, pp. 178–179.</ref> He noted Safed lacked "regular urban planning", '']s'' (schools of Islamic law), '']s'' (hostels for military volunteers) and defensive walls, and that its houses were clustered in disarray and its streets were not distinguishable from its squares.<ref>Luz 2014, pp. 179–180.</ref> He attributed the city's shortcomings to the dearth of generous patrons.<ref name="Luz180">Luz 2014, p. 180.</ref> A device for transporting buckets of water called the ''satura'' existed in the city mainly to supply the soldiers of the citadel; surplus water was distributed to the city's residents.<ref>Luz 2014, p. 179.</ref> Al-Uthmani praised the natural beauty of Safed, its therapeutic air, and noted that its residents took strolls in the surrounding gorges and ravines.<ref name="Luz180"/>
Safed rose to fame in the 16th century as a centre of ], or Jewish mysticism.<ref name="jvl">{{cite web |url= https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/vie/Safed.html |title=Safed |publisher=] |accessdate=2008-10-25}}</ref> After the expulsion of all the Jews from Spain in 1492, many prominent ]s found their way to Safed, among them the Kabbalists ] and ]; ], the author of the ] and ], composer of the ] hymn "]". The influx of ]—reaching its peak under the rule of Sultans Suleiman the Magnificent and ]—made Safed a global centre for Jewish learning and a regional centre for trade throughout the 15th and 16th centuries.<ref name="jvl" /><ref>{{Cite book |publisher=General Council (Vaad leumi) of the Jewish Community of Palestine |last= Keneset Yiśraʼel be-Erets-Yiśraʼel. Ṿaʻad ha-leʼumi |title= Historical memoranda |year= 1947 |page=56}}</ref> A ] printing press was established in Safed in 1577 by Eliezer Ashkenazi and his son, Isaac of Prague.<ref name="judaica" /><ref>{{cite web|url=http://coursesa.matrix.msu.edu/~fisher/hst373/chronology/seventeenth.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20000817180349/http://coursesa.matrix.msu.edu/~fisher/hst373/chronology/seventeenth.html|dead-url=yes|archive-date=2000-08-17|title=Ottomans and Safavids 17th Century|publisher=]|accessdate=2008-10-25}}</ref> In 1584, there were 32 synagogues registered in the town.<ref name="DavidOrdan2010.117">{{cite book|author1=Abraham David|author2=Dena Ordan|title=To Come to the Land: Immigration and Settlement in 16th-Century Eretz-Israel |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qqy4wqVbSUkC&pg=PA117 |accessdate=24 October 2011 |date= 2010|publisher=University of Alabama Press |isbn=978-0-8173-5643-9 |page=117}}</ref>


The ] brought about a decline in the population in Safed from 1348 onward.<ref name="AmitaiPreiss758"/> There is little available information about the city and its dependencies during the last century of Mamluk rule ({{circa|1418|1516}}), though travelers' accounts describe a general decline precipitated by famine, plagues, natural disasters and political instability.<ref>Rhode 1979, p. 17.</ref>
During the transition from Egyptian Mamluk to Ottoman-Turkish rule in 1517, the local Jewish community was subjected to ] as local ]s, sidelined by the change in authority, sought to reassert their control after being removed from power by the incoming Turks. Economic decline after 1560 and expulsion decrees depleted the Jewish community in 1583. Local Arabs assaulted those who remained, and two epidemics in 1589 and 1594 further damaged the Jewish presence.<ref>Dan Ben Amos, Dov Noy (eds.) ''Folktales of the Jews,'' volume 3 (Tales from Arab Lands) The Jewish Publication Society, 2011 p. 54</ref>


===Ottoman era===
Over the course of the 17th century, Jewish settlements of Galilee had declined economically and demographically, with Safed being no exception. In around 1625, ] spoke of the town being inhabited "chiefly by Hebrews, who had their ]s and schools, and for whose sustenance contributions were made by the Jews in other parts of the world." <ref name="Robinson1841">{{cite book |author= Edward Robinson |title= Biblical Researches in Palestine, Mount Sinai and Arabia Petraea: a journal of travels in the year 1838 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=Vt0uAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA333 |accessdate=4 October 2010 |year=1841 |publisher=Crocker and Brewster |page=333}}</ref> In ], the city fell to the ] and five years later was retaken by Ottomans. In 1660, in the turmoil following the death of ], the Druze ] and ], with only a few of the former Jewish residents returning to Safed by 1662. As nearby ] remained desolate for several decades, Safed gained the key position among Galilean Jewish communities. In 1665, the ] movement is said to have arrived in the town.
====Sixteenth-century prosperity====
]
The Ottomans conquered Mamluk Syria following their victory at the ] in northern Syria in 1516.<ref name="Rhode18">Rhode 1979, p. 18.</ref> Safed's inhabitants sent the keys of the town citadel to Sultan ] after he captured Damascus.<ref name="Layish67">Layish 1987, p. 67.</ref> No fighting was recorded around Safed, which was bypassed by Selim's army on the way to Mamluk Egypt.<ref name="Rhode18"/> The sultan had placed the district of Safed under the jurisdiction of the Mamluk governor of Damascus, ], who defected to the Ottomans.<ref name="Layish67"/> Rumors in 1517 that Selim was slain by the Mamluks precipitated a revolt against the newly appointed Ottoman governor by the townspeople of Safed, which resulted in wide-scale killings, many of which ], who were viewed as sympathizers of the Ottomans.<ref>Rhode 1979, pp. 18–19.</ref> Safed became the capital of the ], roughly corresponding with Mamlakat Safad but excluding most of the Jezreel Valley and the area of ],<ref>Rhode 1979, pp. 16–17, 25–26.</ref> part of the larger province of ].<ref name="Abbasi50">Abbasi 2003, p. 50.</ref>

In 1525/26, the population of Safed consisted of 633 Muslim families, 40 Muslim bachelors, 26 Muslim religious persons, nine Muslim disabled, 232 Jewish families, and 60 military families.<ref>{{cite journal | author = Bernard Lewis | title = Studies in the Ottoman Archives–I | journal = Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies | volume = 16 | number = 3 | year = 1954 | pages = 469–501 | doi=10.1017/s0041977x00086808| s2cid = 162304704 }}</ref> In 1549, under Sultan ], a wall was constructed and troops were garrisoned to protect the city.<ref name="David2010.96">Abraham David, 2010. </ref> In 1553/54, the population consisted of 1,121 Muslim households, 222 Muslim bachelors, 54 Muslim religious leaders, 716 Jewish households, 56 Jewish bachelors, and 9 disabled persons.<ref name="Lewis">{{cite journal |doi= 10.1017/S0041977X00086808 |author=Bernard Lewis |title=Studies in the Ottoman Archives—I |journal= Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London |volume=16 |issue=3 |year=1954 |pages= 469–501|s2cid=162304704 }}</ref> At least in the 16th century, Safed was the only ''kasaba'' (city) in the sanjak and in 1555 was divided into nineteen ''mahallas'' (quarters), seven Muslim and twelve Jewish.<ref name="Rhode34">Rhode 1979, p. 34.</ref> The total population of Safed rose from 926 households in 1525–26 to 1,931 households in 1567–1568.<ref name= "Petersen2001"/> Among these, the Jewish population rose from a mere 233 households in 1525 to 945 households in 1567–1568.<ref name= "Petersen2001">Petersen (2001), Gazetteer 6, s,v. </ref> The Muslim quarters were Sawawin, located west of the fortress; Khandaq (the moat); Ghazzawiyah, which had likely been settled by ]ns; Jami' al-Ahmar (the Red Mosque), located south of the fortress and named for the local mosque; al-Akrad,<ref name="Rhode3435"/> which dated to the Middle Ages and continued to exist through the 19th century,<ref name="ADiS">Ebied and Young 1976, p. 7.</ref> and whose inhabitants mainly were ]; al-Wata (the lower), the southernmost quarter of Safed and situated below the city; and al-Suq, named after the market or mosque located within the quarter.<ref name="Rhode3435">Rhode 1979, pp. 34–35.</ref> The Jewish quarters were all situated west of the fortress. Each quarter was named for the place of origin of its inhabitants: Purtuqal (Portugal), Qurtubah (]), Qastiliyah (]), Musta'rib (Jews of local, Arabic-speaking origin), Magharibah (northwestern Africa), Araghun ma' Qatalan (] and ]), Majar (Hungary), Puliah (]), Qalabriyah (]), Sibiliyah (]), Taliyan (Italian) and Alaman (German).<ref name="Rhode3435"/>

]

In the 15th and 16th centuries there were several well-known ] (mystics) of ] living in Safed.<ref>Layish 1987, p. 70.</ref> The Sufi sage Ahmad al-Asadi (1537–1601) established a ] (Sufi lodge) called Sadr Mosque in the city.<ref>Layish 1987, p. 71.</ref> Safed became a center of ] (Jewish mysticism) during the 16th century.<ref name="jvl">{{cite web |url= https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/vie/Safed.html |title=Safed |publisher=] |access-date=2008-10-25}}</ref>

After the ], many prominent ]s found their way to Safed, among them the Kabbalists ] and ]; ], the author of the '']''; and ], composer of the ] hymn "]".
{{blockquote|The kabbalistic response to the trauma of the exile varied widely, ranging from a quietistic approach adopted by the Italian and North African kabbalists, to a more activist apocalyptic approach which sought signs of the imminent redemption. The expulsion was seen by many as the tribulation that would herald the beginning of the messianic age as foretold in rabbinic literature. The spiritualization of religious life culminated in the creative outburst of religious innovation in Safed in the second half of the sixteenth century as a response to the expulsion. This spiritual revolution spread from Safed and transformed the practice of Judaism throughout the Jewish world.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Zohar |first1=Zion |title=Sephardic and Mizrahi Jewry: From the Golden Age of Spain to Modern Times |date=2005 |publisher=NYU Press |isbn=978-0-8147-9706-8 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=H6K1IcaHwd0C |language=en}}</ref>}}

The influx of ]—reaching its peak under the rule of sultans ] and ]—made Safed a global center for Jewish learning and a regional center for trade throughout the 15th and 16th centuries.<ref name="jvl" /><ref>{{Cite book |publisher=General Council (Vaad leumi) of the Jewish Community of Palestine |last= Keneset Yiśraʼel be-Erets-Yiśraʼel. Ṿaʻad ha-leʼumi |title= Historical memoranda |year= 1947 |page=56}}</ref> Sephardi Jews and other Jewish immigrants by then outnumbered ] in the city.<ref name="AmitaiPreiss758"/>

During this period, the Jewish community ], transforming the town into an important and lucrative wool production and textile manufacturing centre.<ref>Rhode 1979, p. 20.</ref> There were more than 7000 Jews in Safed in 1576 when ] proclaimed the forced deportation of 1000 wealthy Jewish families to ] to boost the island's economy. There is no evidence that the edict or a second one issued the following year for removing 500 families, was enforced.<ref name="David2010">{{cite book|author=Abraham David|editor=Róbert Dán|title=Occident and Orient: a tribute to the memory of Alexander Scheiber|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=z8cUAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA86|year=1988|publisher=Brill Archive|isbn=9789630540247|pages=86–87|chapter=Demographic Changes in the Safed Jewish Community of the 16th Century}}</ref> In 1584, there were 32 ]s registered in the town.<ref name="DavidOrdan2010.117">{{cite book|author1=Abraham David|author2=Dena Ordan|title=To Come to the Land: Immigration and Settlement in 16th-Century Eretz-Israel |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qqy4wqVbSUkC&pg=PA117 |access-date=24 October 2011 |date= 2010|publisher=University of Alabama Press |isbn=978-0-8173-5643-9 |page=117}}</ref>

A Hebrew ], the ], was established in Safed in 1577 by Eliezer ben Isaac Ashkenazi of Prague and his son, Isaac.<ref name="judaica" /><ref>{{cite web|url=http://coursesa.matrix.msu.edu/~fisher/hst373/chronology/seventeenth.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20000817180349/http://coursesa.matrix.msu.edu/~fisher/hst373/chronology/seventeenth.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=2000-08-17|title=Ottomans and Safavids 17th Century|publisher=]|access-date=2008-10-25}}</ref>

====Political decline, attacks and natural disasters====
] by the Ottomans in the mid-1700s, the "Saraya" (house of the governor) currently serves as a community centre<ref name="Winter1999">{{cite book|author=Dave Winter|title=Israel Handbook: With the Palestinian Authority Areas|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hvaiOGV9BjkC|year=1999|publisher=Footprint Handbooks|isbn=978-1-900949-48-4|page=714|quote=The Saraya was originally built as a caravanserai in the Ottoman period, though it was later used by both the Turks and the British as an administrative building.}}</ref>]]

By the early part of the 17th century, Safed was a small town.<ref name="AmitaiPreiss758"/> In 1602, the paramount chief of the ], ] of the ], was appointed the ] (district governor) of Safed, in addition to his governorship of neighbouring ] to the north. In the preceding years, the Safed Sanjak had entered a state of ruin and desolation and was often the scene of conflict between the local Druze and Shia Muslim peasants and the Ottoman authorities. By 1605, Fakhr al-Din had established peace and security in the sanjak, with highway brigandage and ] raids having ceased under his watch. Trade and agriculture consequently thrived and the population prospered.<ref>Abu-Husayn 1985, pp. 83–84.</ref> He formed close relations with the city's ] ] (religious scholars), particularly the ], ] of the ] of ] (Islamic jurisprudence), who became his practical court historian.<ref>Abu-Husayn 1993, pp. 5–7.</ref>

The Ottomans drove Fakhr al-Din into European exile in 1613, but his son Ali became governor in 1615.<ref>Abu-Husayn 1985, p. 99.</ref> Fakhr al-Din returned to his domains in 1618 and five years later regained the governorship of Safed, which the ] had lost, after his victory against the governor of Damascus at the ].<ref>Abu-Husayn 1985, p. 121.</ref> In {{circa|1625}}, the orientalist ] spoke of Safed being inhabited "chiefly by Hebrews, who had their synagogues and schools, and for whose sustenance contributions were made by the Jews in other parts of the world."<ref name="Robinson1841">{{cite book |author= Edward Robinson |title= Biblical Researches in Palestine, Mount Sinai and Arabia Petraea: a journal of travels in the year 1838 |url= https://archive.org/details/biblicalresearch03robiuoft |access-date=4 October 2010 |year=1841 |publisher=Crocker and Brewster |page=}}</ref> According to the historian Louis Finkelstein, the Jewish community of Safed was plundered by the Druze under ], nephew of Fakhr al-Din.<ref name="Finkelstein63">Finkelstein 1960, p. 63.</ref> Five years later, Fakhr al-Din was routed by the Ottoman governor of Damascus, Mulhim abandoned Safed, and its Jewish residents returned.<ref name="Finkelstein63"/>{{dubious|date=February 2021}}

The Druze again attacked the Jews of Safed in 1656.<ref name="Finkelstein63"/> During the ] (1658–1667), each faction attacked Safed.<ref name="Finkelstein63"/> In the intra-communal turmoil among the Druze following the death of Mulhim, the ] targeted the Jews there and in Tiberias; only a few of the former Jewish residents returned to the city before 1662.<ref name="rappel">Joel Rappel. ''History of Eretz Israel from Prehistory up to 1882'' (1980), Vol.2, p.531. "In 1662 ] arrived to Jerusalem. It was the time when the Jewish settlements of Galilee were destroyed by the Druze: Tiberias was completely desolate and only a few of former Safed residents had returned..."</ref><ref name=barnai14>Barnai, Jacob. ''The Jews in Palestine in the Eighteenth Century: under the patronage of the Istanbul Committee of Officials for Palestine'' (University of Alabama Press 1992) {{ISBN|978-0-8173-0572-7}}; p. 14</ref> Survivors relocated mainly to ] or ].

] and the neighbouring ] to the north were administratively separated from Damascus in 1660 to form the ], of which Safed was briefly the capital.<ref name="Salibi66">Salibi 1988, p. 66.</ref> The province was created by the imperial government to check the power of the Druze of Mount Lebanon, as well as the Shia of ].<ref name="Salibi66"/>

As nearby Tiberias remained desolate for several decades, Safed gained a key position among ] Jewish communities. In 1665, the ] movement arrived in Safed.{{citation needed|date=June 2020}} In the 1670s, the account of the Turkish traveller ] recorded that Safed contained three ]s, several ]s, seven zawiyas, and six ]s.<ref name="AmitaiPreiss758"/> The Red Mosque was restored by Safed's governor Salih Bey in 1671/72, at which point it measured about {{convert|120x80|ft|m|sp=us}}, had all masonry interior, a cistern to collect rainwater in the winter for drinking and a tall ] over its southern entrance; the minaret had been destroyed before the end of the 17th century.<ref>Petersen 2001, p. 261.</ref>

The Tiberias-based sheikh ] of the local Arab ] clan, whose father ] had been the governor and tax farmer of Safed in 1702–1706, wrested control of Safed and its ] from its native strongman, Muhammad Naf'i, through military pressure and diplomacy by 1740.<ref>Joudah 1987, p. 24.</ref> The Naf'i, Shahin, and Murad families continued to farm the taxes of Safed and its countryside into the 1760s as Zahir's subordinates.<ref>Cohen 1973, p. 83.</ref> By the 1760s, Zahir entrusted Safed to his son Ali, who made the town his headquarters.<ref>Cohen 1973, pp. 84–85.</ref> After Zahir was killed by Ottoman imperial forces, the governor of Sidon, ], moved to oust Zahir's sons from their Galilee strongholds. Ali made a final, unsuccessful stand against Jazzar Pasha from Safed, which was afterward captured and garrisoned by the governor.<ref>Cohen 1973, pp. 93–95.</ref> The simultaneous rise of Acre, established by Zahir as his capital in 1750 and which served as the capital of the Sidon Eyalet under Jazzar Pasha (1775–1804) and his successors, ] (1805–1819) and ] (1820–1831), contributed to the political decline of Safed. It became a subdistrict center with limited local influence, belonging to the ] .<ref name="Abbasi50"/>

Underdevelopment and a series of natural disasters further contributed to Safed's decline during the 17th–mid-19th centuries.<ref name="Abbasi50"/> An outbreak of plague decimated the population in 1742 and the ] left the city in ruins, killing 200 residents.<ref>Sa'ar H. ''When Israel trembles: former earthquakes.'' Ynet online. 11.05.2012. {{in lang|he}}</ref> An influx of ]s in 1776 and 1781, and of ]s of the ] movement in 1809 and 1810, reinvigorated the Jewish community.<ref>Morgenstern 2006, p.</ref> In 1812, another plague killed 80% of the Jewish population.<ref name="Franco633">Franco 1916, p. 633.</ref> Following Abdullah Pasha of Acre's ordered killing of his Jewish vizier ], who served the same post under Jazzar and Sulayman, the governor imprisoned the Jewish residents of Safed on 12 August 1820, accusing them of tax evasion under the concealment of Farhi; they were released upon paying a ransom.<ref name="Franco633"/><ref>Morgenstern 2006, p. 72.</ref> The war between Abdullah Pasha and the influential Farhi brothers in ] and Damascus in 1822–1823 prompted Jewish flight from the Galilee in general, though by 1824 Jewish immigrants were steadily moving to the city.<ref>Morgenstern 2006, p. 60.</ref>

The forces of ] wrested control of the Levant from the Ottomans in 1831 and in the same year many Jews who had fled the Galilee, including Safed, under Abdullah Pasha returned as a result of Muhammad Ali's liberal policies toward Jews.<ref>Morgenstern 2006, p. 61.</ref> Safed was raided by Druze in 1833 at the approach of ], the Egyptian governor of the Levant.<ref name="Franco633"/> In the following year, the Muslim notables of the city, led by Salih al-Tarshihi, opposed to the Egyptian policy of conscription, joined the ].<ref name="Safi">{{citation |first=Khaled M. |last=Safi |editor=Roger Heacock |title=Of Times and Spaces in Palestine: The Flows and Resistances of Identity |chapter=Territorial Awareness in the 1834 Palestinian Revolt |chapter-url=http://books.openedition.org/ifpo/483 |publisher=Presses de l'Ifpo |location=Beirut |year=2008 |isbn=9782351592656}}</ref> During the revolt, rebels ] for over thirty days.<ref>Sicker 1999, p. 13.</ref> Emir ] of Mount Lebanon and his Druze fighters entered its environs in support of the Egyptians and compelled Safed's leaders to surrender.<ref name="Safi"/> The ] killed about half of Safed's 4,000-strong Jewish community,<ref name="Lieber256">Lieber 1992, p. .</ref> destroyed all fourteen of its synagogues and prompted the flight of 600 ] for Jerusalem;<ref name="Idinopulos1998">{{cite book|author=Thomas A. Idinopulos|title=Weathered by Miracles: A History of Palestine from Bonaparte and Muhammad Ali to Ben-Gurion and the Mufti|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=goVtAAAAMAAJ|year=1998|publisher=Ivan R. Dee|isbn=978-1-56663-189-1|page=63}}</ref> the surviving Sephardic and Hasidic Jews mostly remained.<ref>Lieber 1992, pp. 256–257.</ref> Among the 2,158 residents of Safed who had died, 1,507 were Ottoman subjects, the rest foreign citizens.<ref name="Ambraseys933">{{cite journal |last1=Ambraseys |first1=N. N. |title=The earthquake of 1 January 1837 in Southern Lebanon and Northern Israel |journal=Annals of Geophysics |date=25 November 1997 |volume=40 |issue=4 |doi=10.4401/ag-3887 |hdl=2122/1595 |hdl-access=free }}</ref> The Jewish quarter was situated on the hillside and was particularly hard hit;<ref name="Lieber256"/> the southern and Muslim section of the town experienced considerably less damage.<ref name="Ambraseys933"/> The following year, in 1838, Druze rebels and local Muslims ] for three days.

====Tanzimat reforms and revival====
]

Ottoman rule was restored across the Levant in 1840. The Empire-wide ] reforms, which were first adopted in the 1840s, brought about a steady rise in Safed's population and economy.<ref name="Abbasi50"/> In 1849 Safed had a total estimated population of 5,000, of whom 2,940-3,440 were Muslims, 1,500-2,000 were Jews and 60 were Christians.<ref name="Abbasi52">Abbasi 2003, p. 52.</ref> The population was estimated at 7,000 in 1850–1855, of whom 2,500-3,000 were Jews.<ref name="Abbasi52"/> The Jewish population increased in the last half of the 19th century by immigration from ], ], and ].<ref name="Franco633"/> ] (d. 1885) visited Safed seven times and financed much of the rebuilding of Safed's synagogues and Jewish houses.<ref name="Franco633"/>

In 1864 the Sidon Eyalet was absorbed into the new province of ]. In the new province, Safed remained part of the Acre Sanjak and served as the center of a ] (third-level subdivision), whose jurisdiction covered the villages around the city and the subdistrict of ] (Jabal Jarmaq).<ref name="Abbasi50"/> In the Ottoman survey of Syria in 1871, Safed had 1,395 Muslim households, 1,197 Jewish households and three Christian households.<ref name="Abbasi52"/> The survey recorded a relatively high number of businesses in the city, namely 227 shops, fifteen mills, fourteen bakeries and four olive oil factories, an indicator of Safed's long-established role as an economic hub for the people of the Upper Galilee, the ], the ] and parts of modern-day ].<ref name="Abbasi54">Abbasi 2003, p. 54.</ref> Through the late 19th century, Safed's merchants served as middlemen in the Galilee grain trade, selling the wheat, pulses and fruit grown by the peasants of the Galilee to the traders of Acre, who in turn exported at least part of the merchandise to Europe.<ref name="Abbasi54"/> Safed also maintained extensive trade with the port of Tyre.<ref name="Abbasi54"/> The bulk of trade in Safed, which was traditionally dominated by the city's Jews, largely passed to its Muslim merchants during the late 19th century, particularly trade with the local villagers; Muslim traders offered higher credit to the peasants and were able to obtain government assistance for debt repayments.<ref name="Abbasi54"/> The wealth of Safed's Muslims increased and a number of the city's leading Muslim families made an opportunity from the ] to purchase extensive tracts around Safed.<ref name="Abbasi56">Abbasi 2003, p. 56.</ref> The major Muslim landowning clans were the Soubeh, Murad and Qaddura.<ref>Abbasi 2003, p. 55.</ref> The latter owned about 50,000 ]s toward the end of the century, including eight villages around Safed.<ref>Abū Mannah, Weismann and Zachs 2005, p. .</ref>


] ]


In 1878 the municipal council of Safed was established.<ref name="Abbasi51"/> In 1888 the Acre Sanjak, including the Safed Kaza, became part of the new province of ], an administrative state of affairs which persisted until the Empire's fall in 1918.<ref>Abbasi 2003, pp. 50–51.</ref> The centralization and stability brought by the imperial reforms solidified the political status and practical influence of Safed in the Upper Galilee.<ref name="Abbasi51">Abbasi 2003, p. 51.</ref> The Ottomans developed Safed into a center for ] to counterbalance the influence of non-Muslim communities in its environs and the Shia Muslims of Jabal Amil.<ref name="Abbasi53">Abbasi 2003, p. 53.</ref> Along with the three major landowning families, the Muslim ''ulema'' (religious scholarly) families of Nahawi, Qadi, Mufti and Naqib comprised the urban elite (''a'yan'') of the city.<ref name="Abbasi56"/> The Sunni courts of Safed arbitrated over cases in ], ] and as far away as ].<ref name="ADiS"/> According to the late 19th-century account of British missionary E. W. G. Masterman, the Muslim families of Safed included Kurds, Damascenes, ], Bedouin from the ], and people from the villages around Safed.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Masterman |first=E. W. G. |date=1914-10-01 |title=Safed |url=https://doi.org/10.1179/peq.1914.46.4.169 |journal=Palestine Exploration Quarterly |volume=46 |issue=4 |pages=169–179 |doi=10.1179/peq.1914.46.4.169 |issn=0031-0328}}</ref><ref name="Abbasi53"/> Many Damascenes had been settled in the city by Baybars when he conquered Safed in 1266.<ref name="Abbasi53"/> Until the late 19th century the Muslims of Safed maintained strong social and cultural connections with Damascus.<ref name="Abbasi53"/> The government settled Algerian and ] exiles in the countryside of Safed in the 1860s and 1878, respectively, possibly in an effort to strengthen the Muslim character of the area.<ref name="Abbasi53"/> At least two Muslim families in the city itself, Arabi and Delasi, were of Algerian origin, though they accounted for a small proportion of the city's overall Muslim population.<ref name="Abbasi53"/> Masterman noted that the Muslims of Safed were conservative, "active and hardy", who "dress well and move about more than the people from the region of southern Palestine".<ref>Abbasi 2003, pp. 53–54.</ref> They lived mainly in three quarters of the city: al-Akrad, whose residents were mostly laborers, Sawawin, home to the Muslim ''a'yan'' households and the city's Catholic community, and al-Wata, whose inhabitants were largely shopkeepers and minor traders.<ref name="Abbasi53"/><ref name="Schumacher188">Schumacher, 1888, p. </ref> The entire Jewish population lived in the Gharbieh (western) quarter.<ref name="Schumacher188"/>
An outbreak of plague decimated the population in 1742 and the ] left the city in ruins, killing 200 town residents.<ref>Sa'ar H. ''When Israel trembles: former earthquakes.'' Ynet online. 11.05.2012. {{he icon}}</ref> An influx of ]s in 1776 and 1781, and of ]s of the ] movement in 1809 and 1810, reinvigorated the Jewish community.<ref>{{cite book |title= Hastening Redemption: Messianism and the Resettlement of the Land of Israel |author=Morgenstern, Arie |publisher= Oxford University Press |year=2007 |isbn=978-0-19-530578-4}}</ref> In 1812, another plague killed 80% of the Jewish population, and, in 1819, the remaining Jewish residents were held for ransom by ], the ]-based governor of ].{{Citation needed|date=December 2008}} During the period of ] (ca. 1831–1841), the city experienced a severe decline, with the Jewish community hit particularly hard. In the ], much of the Jewish quarter was destroyed by rebel Arabs, who plundered the city for many weeks.
] in Safed]]
Safed's population reached over 15,000 in 1879, 8,000 of whom were Muslims and 7,000 Jews.<ref name="Abbasi53"/> A population list from about 1887 showed that Safad had 24,615 inhabitants; 2,650 Jewish households, 2,129 Muslim households and 144 Roman Catholic households.<ref name="Schumacher188"/> Arab families in Safed whose social status rose as a result of the Tanzimat reforms included the ], whose presence in Safed dated to the 16th century, Hajj Sa'id, Hijazi, Bisht, Hadid, Khouri, a Christian family whose progenitor moved to the city from Mount Lebanon during the ], and Sabbagh, a long-established Christian family in the city related to Zahir al-Umar's fiscal adviser Ibrahim al-Sabbagh;<ref name="Abbasi56"/><ref>Layish 1987, pp. 68, 71.</ref><ref>Deeb 1996, p. 1.</ref> many members of these families became officials in the civil service, local administrations or businessmen.<ref name="Abbasi56"/> When the Ottomans established a branch of the Agricultural Bank in the city in 1897, all of its board members were resident Arabs, the most influential of whom were Husayn Abd al-Rahim Effendi, Hajj Ahmad al-Asadi, As'ad Khouri and Abd al-Latif al-Hajj Sa'id. The latter two also became board members of the Chamber of Commerce and Agriculture branch opened in Safed in 1900.<ref>Abbasi 2003, pp. 55–56.</ref> In the last decade of the 19th century, Safed contained 2,000 houses, four mosques, three churches, two public bathhouses, one caravanserai, two public '']s'', nineteen mills, seven olive oil presses, ten bakeries, fifteen coffeehouses, forty-five stalls and three shops.<ref>Petersen 2001, p. 259.</ref>

===Mandatory Palestine===
{{Image frame|align=left|content=
{{Switcher
| ]
| 2018 street map overlaid on 1942 map
| ]
| 1942 map without overlay}}
| caption= Safed street map (date 2018, white text and light grey streets) overlaid on a ] map (date 1942, black text, red urban areas and black streets), showing the relative locations of Safed to its three Mandate-era satellite villages: ], ] and ].
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Safed was the centre of ]. According to a ] conducted in 1922 by the ], Safed had a population of 8,761 inhabitants, consisting of 5,431 Muslims, 2,986 Jews, 343 Christians and others.<ref name=Census1922>Barron, 1923, p. </ref> Safed remained a mixed city during the ] and ethnic tensions between Jews and Arabs rose during the 1920s. During the ], Safed and Hebron became major clash points. In the ] 20 Jewish residents were killed by local Arabs.<ref>"Arab Attack At Safed", ''The Times'', Saturday, August 31, 1929; p. 10; Issue 45296; col D.</ref> Safed was included in the part of Palestine recommended to be included in the proposed Jewish state under the ].<ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120524094913/http://domino.un.org/unispal.nsf/0/7f0af2bd897689b785256c330061d253 |date=24 May 2012 }}</ref>

By 1948 the city was home to about 12,000 Arabs and about 1,700 Jews, mostly religious and elderly.<ref name="vilnai" /> On 5 January 1948, Arabs attacked the Jewish Quarter.<ref>Martin (2005). Routledge Atlas of the Arab-Israeli Conflict. Routledge. {{ISBN|0-415-35901-5}}.</ref> In February 1948, during the ], Muslim Arabs attacked a Jewish bus attempting to reach Safed, and the Jewish quarter of the town came under siege by the Muslims. British forces that were present did not intervene. According to ], food supplies ran short. "Even water and flour were in desperately short supply. Each day, the Arab attackers drew closer to the heart of the Jewish quarter, systematically blowing up Jewish houses as they pressed in on the central area."<ref>Martin Gilbert ''Israel, A history'' William Morrow & Co, NY 1998 {{ISBN|0-688-12362-7}} p. 174</ref>

On April 16, the same day that British forces evacuated Safed, 200 local Arab militiamen, supported by over 200 ] soldiers, tried to take over the city's Jewish Quarter. They were repelled by the Jewish garrison, consisting of some 200 ] fighters, men and women, boosted by a ] platoon.<ref>Benny Morris, ''1948, The First Arab-Israeli War'', 2008 Yale University Press, p. 157</ref>

The Palmach ground attack on the Arab section of Safed took place on 6 May, as a part of ]. The first phase of the Palmach plan to capture Safed, was to secure a corridor through the mountains by capturing the Arab village of ].<ref name="Gilbert, 1998, p. 177">Gilbert, 1998, p. 177</ref> The Arab Liberation Army placed artillery pieces on a hill adjacent to the Jewish quarter and started its shelling.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://archive.org/details/1948historyoffir00morr|title=1948|date=April 28, 2008|publisher=Yale University Press|via=Internet Archive}}</ref> The Palmach's Third Battalion failed to take the main objective, the "citadel", but "terrified" the Arab population sufficiently to prompt further flight, as well as urgent appeals for outside help and an effort to obtain a truce.<ref>Morris, 2004, p. 223</ref>


The secretary-general of the Arab League ] stated that the goal of Plan Dalet was to drive out the inhabitants of Arab villages along the Syrian and Lebanese frontiers, particularly places on the roads by which Arab regular forces could enter the country. He noted that Acre and Safed were in particular danger.<ref>Broadmead to HC, 5 May 1948, SAMECA CP III\5\102. Quoted in Morris, 2004, p. 223</ref> However, the appeals for help were ignored, and the British, now less than a week away from the end of the British Mandate of Palestine, also did not intervene against the second and final Haganah attack, which began on the evening of 9 May, with a mortar barrage on key sites in Safed. Following the barrage, Palmach infantry, in bitter fighting, took the citadel, Beit Shalva and the police fort, Safed's three dominant buildings. Through 10 May, Haganah mortars continued to pound the Arab neighbourhoods, causing fires in the marked area and in the fuel dumps, which exploded. "The Palmah 'intentionally left open the exit routes for the population to "facilitate" their exodus...' "<ref>Morris 2004, page 224 quoting unnamed source from ''Book of the Palmah II''</ref> According to Gilbert, "The Arabs of Safed began to leave, including the commander of the Arab forces, ] (later Prime Minister of Syria). With the ] on Mount Canaan isolated, its defenders withdrew without fighting. The fall of Safed was a blow to Arab morale throughout the region... With the invasion of Palestine by regular Arab armies believed to be imminent – once the British had finally left in eleven or twelve days' time – many Arabs felt that prudence dictated their departure until the Jews had been defeated and they could return to their homes.<ref name="Gilbert, 1998, p. 177"/> According to Abbasi, the exodus of the Arabs of Safed had three phases.<ref name=Abbasi40>Abbasi (2004) pp. 40–42.</ref> The first was due to the departure of the British compounded by the failure of an attack on the Jewish quarter and a disagreement between the Jordanian and Syrian commanders.<ref name=Abbasi40/> The second was due to the fall of nearby Ein al-Zeitun and the ] that Jewish forces committed there.<ref name=Abbasi40/> The third was due to the deliberate creation of panic by Jewish forces.<ref name=Abbasi40/>
In 1837 there were around 4,000 Jews in Safed.{{clarify|reason=Please use households number as above.|date=October 2014}}<ref name="Lieber1992">{{cite book |author=Sherman Lieber |title=Mystics and missionaries: the Jews in Palestine, 1799–1840 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=mrltAAAAMAAJ |year=1992 |publisher=University of Utah Press |isbn=978-0-87480-391-4 |page=256}}</ref> The ] was particularly catastrophic for the Jewish population, as the Jewish quarter was located on the hillside. About half their number perished, resulting in around 2,000 deaths.<ref name="Lieber1992"/> Of the 2,158 inhabitants killed, 1507 were Ottoman subjects. The southern, Muslim section of the town suffered far less damage.<ref> by N. N. Ambraseys, in ''Annali di Geofisica'', Aug. 1997, p. 933</ref> The following year, in 1838, the ] rebels ] over the course of three days, killing many among the Jews. In 1840, Ottoman rule was restored. In 1847, plague struck Safed again. The Jewish population increased in the last half of the 19th century by immigration from ], ], and ]. ] visited Safed seven times and financed rebuilding of much of the town.


Some 12,000 Arabs, with some estimates reaching 15,000, fled Safed and were a "heavy burden on the Arab war effort".<ref>Morris, 2004, page 224 quoting ] from ''Book of the Palmah II''</ref> Among them was the family of ] ].<ref name="Honig">{{cite news |author=Sarah Honig |newspaper=The Jerusalem Post |url=http://fr.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1246443837339&pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowFull |title=Another Tack: Self-exiled by guilt |date= July 17, 2009 |author-link=Sarah Honig}}</ref>{{efn|Abbas is quoted as saying "People were motivated to run away... They feared retribution from Zionist terrorist organizations – particularly from the Safed ones. Those of us from Safed especially feared that the Jews harbored old desires to avenge what happened during the 1929 uprising.... They realized the balance of forces was shifting and therefore the whole town was abandoned on the basis of this rationale – saving our lives and our belongings."<ref name="Honig"/> In 2012 Abbas stated "I visited Safed before once. I want to see Safed. It's my right to see it, but not to live there."<ref>{{cite news|author=Harriet Sherwood in Jerusalem |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2012/nov/04/mahmoud-abbas-palestinian-territories |title=Mahmoud Abbas outrages Palestinian refugees by waiving his right to return &#124; World news |work=The Guardian |date= 2012-11-04|access-date=2013-03-12 |location=London}}</ref>}} The city was fully under the control of Jewish paramilitary forces by May 11, 1948.<ref name="vilnai" />
The Kaddoura family{{clarify|Who were they? Useless factlet, unless ethnicity and economic etc. background is explained.|date=January 2018}} was a major political force in Safed. At the end of Ottoman rule the family owned 50,000 ]s. This included eight villages around Safed.<ref>''Ottoman Reform and Muslim Regeneration'', Buṭrus Abū Mannah, Itzchak Weismann, Fruma Zachs by I.B.Tauris, 2005 {{ISBN|1-85043-757-2}} p. </ref>


Early in June, Jewish dignitaries from Safed journeyed to Tel Aviv to ask the government to block the return of Arabs to the city, threatening to abandon it if the latter were allowed back. They reasoned that since most of the Arabs' property had been seized or stolen in the meantime, the Jewish community would be unable to withstand the pressure of the returnees' demands for restitution.<ref>], ] 3 June 2021.</ref>
A population list from about 1887 showed that Safad had about 24,615 inhabitants; 13,250 Jews, 5,690 Muslims, and 5,675 Catholic Christians.<ref>Schumacher, 1888, p. </ref>
]


===British Mandate of Palestine===
Safed was the centre of ]. According to a ] conducted in 1922 by the ], Safed had a population of 8,761 inhabitants, consisting of 5,431 Muslims, 2,986 Jews, 343 Christians and others.<ref name=Census1922>Barron, 1923, p. </ref> Safed remained a mixed city during the ] and ethnic tensions between Jews and Arabs rose during the 1920s. With the eruption of the ], Safed and Hebron became major clash points. In the ] 20 Jewish residents were killed by local Arabs.<ref>"Arab Attack At Safed", ''The Times'', Saturday, August 31, 1929; p. 10; Issue 45296; col D.</ref> Safad was included in the part of Palestine allocated for the proposed Jewish state under the ].<ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120524094913/http://domino.un.org/unispal.nsf/0/7f0af2bd897689b785256c330061d253 |date=24 May 2012 }}</ref>
<gallery> <gallery>
File:Zoltan Kluger. Safed.jpg|Safad 1937
File:Safed iv.jpg|Mandate Police station at Mount Canaan, above Safed (1948) File:Safed iv.jpg|Mandate Police station at Mount Canaan, above Safed (1948)
File:Safed 1948.jpg|Safed (1948) File:Safed 1948.jpg|Safed (1948)
File:Safed citadel.jpg|Safed Citadel (1948) File:Safed citadel.jpg|Safed Citadel (1948)
File:Safed i.jpg|Safed ] Saraya (1948)
File:Safad v.jpg|Safad Municipal Police Station after the battle (1948) File:Safad v.jpg|Safad Municipal Police Station after the battle (1948)
File:Safad i.jpg|Bussel House, Safad, 11 April 1948: ] headquarters File:Safad i.jpg|Bussel House, Safad, 11 April 1948: ] headquarters
File:Mount Canaan iv.jpg|View of Safed from Mount Canaan (1948) File:Mount Canaan iv.jpg|View of Safed from Mount Canaan (1948)
File:Mount Canaan Police station.jpg|Mandate administration building on the eastern outskirts of Safed (1948) File:Mount Canaan Police station.jpg|Mandate administration building on the eastern outskirts of Safed (1948)
File:Safed v.jpg|], with their ] machine guns, based at Bussel House, 1948
File:Druze in Safad.jpg|Druze parading in Safed after the ] victory in 1948
</gallery> </gallery>
By 1948, the city was home to around 1,700 Jews, mostly religious and elderly, as well as some 12,000 Arabs.<ref name="vilnai" /> On 5 January 1948, Arabs attacked the Jewish Quarter.<ref>Martin (2005). Routledge Atlas of the Arab-Israeli Conflict. Routledge. {{ISBN|0-415-35901-5}}.</ref> In February 1948, during the ], Muslim Arabs attacked a Jewish bus attempting to reach Safed, and the Jewish quarter of the town came under siege by the Muslims. British forces that were present did not intervene. According to ], food supplies ran short. "Even water and flour were in desperately short supply. Each day, the Arab attackers drew closer to the heart of the Jewish quarter, systematically blowing up Jewish houses as they pressed in on the central area."<ref>Martin Gilbert ''Israel, A history'' William Morrow & Co, NY 1998 {{ISBN|0-688-12362-7}} p. 174</ref>

On April 16, the same day that British forces evacuated Safed, 200 local Arab militiamen, supported by over 200 ] soldiers, tried to take over the city's Jewish Quarter. They were repelled by the Jewish garrison, consisting of some 200 ] fighters, men and women, boosted by a ] platoon.<ref>Benny Morris, ''1948, The First Arab-Israeli War'', 2008 Yale University Press, p. 157</ref>
], with their ] machine guns, based at Bussel House, 1948]]

The ] ground attack on the Arab section of Safed took place on 6 May, as a part of ]. The first phase of the Palmach plan to capture Safed, was to secure a corridor through the mountains by capturing the Arab village of ].<ref>Gilbert, 1998, p. 177</ref> The ] had plans to take over the whole city on May 10 and to slaughter all as cabled by the Syrian commander al-Hassan Kam al-Maz, and in the meantime placed artillery pieces on a hill adjacent to the Jewish quarter and started its shelling.<ref></ref> The Third Battalion failed to take the main objective, the "citadel", but "terrified" the Arab population sufficiently to prompt further flight, as well as urgent appeals for outside help and an effort to obtain a truce.<ref>Morris, 2004, p. 223</ref>

The secretary-general of the Arab League ] stated that the goal of Plan Dalet was to drive out the inhabitants of Arab villages along the Syrian and Lebanese frontiers, particularly places on the roads by which Arab regular forces could enter the country. He noted that Acre and Safed were in particular danger.<ref>Broadmead to HC, 5 May 1948, SAMECA CP III\5\102. Quoted in Morris, 2004, p. 223</ref> However, the appeals for help were ignored, and the British, now less than a week away from the end of the ], also did not intervene against the second – and final – ] attack, which began on the evening of 9 May, with a mortar barrage on key sites in Safed. Following the barrage, Palmach infantry, in bitter fighting, took the citadel, Beit Shalva and the police fort, Safed's three dominant buildings. Through 10 May, Haganah mortars continued to pound the Arab neighbourhoods, causing fires in the marked area and in the fuel dumps, which exploded. "The Palmah 'intentionally left open the exit routes for the population to "facilitate" their exodus...' "<ref>Morris 2004, page 224 quoting unnamed source from ''Book of the Palmah II''</ref> According to Gilbert, "The Arabs of Safed began to leave, including the commander of the Arab forces, ] (later Prime Minister of Syria). With the ] on Mount Canaan isolated, its defenders withdrew without fighting. The fall of Safed was a blow to Arab morale throughout the region... With the invasion of Palestine by regular Arab armies believed to be imminent – once the British had finally left in eleven or twelve days' time – many Arabs felt that prudence dictated their departure until the Jews had been defeated and they could return to their homes.<ref>Gilbert, 1998, p. 177</ref>

Some 12,000 Arabs, with some estimates reaching 15,000, fled Safed and were a "heavy burden on the Arab war effort".<ref>Morris, 2004, page 224 quoting ] from ''Book of the Palmah II''</ref> Among them was the family of ] ].<ref>{{cite news |author=Sarah Honig |newspaper=Jerusalem Post |url=http://fr.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1246443837339&pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowFull |title=Another Tack: Self-exiled by guilt |date= July 17, 2009 |author-link=Sarah Honig }} Abbas is quoted as saying ''"People were motivated to run away... They feared retribution from Zionist terrorist organizations – particularly from the Safed ones. Those of us from Safed especially feared that the Jews harbored old desires to avenge what happened during the 1929 uprising.... They realized the balance of forces was shifting and therefore the whole town was abandoned on the basis of this rationale – saving our lives and our belongings."''</ref> The city was fully under the control of Jewish paramilitary forces by May 11, 1948.<ref name="vilnai" />
] victory in 1948]]


===State of Israel=== ===State of Israel===
In 1974, 25 Israeli Jews (mainly school children) from Safed, were killed in the ]. Over 1990s and early 2000s, the town accepted thousands of Russian Jewish immigrants and Ethiopian ].<ref name="safed.co.il">{{cite web|url=http://www.safed.co.il/|title=Safed|work=safed.co.il|access-date=May 12, 2012}}</ref> In July 2006, ] rockets fired by ] from Southern Lebanon hit Safed, killing one man and injuring others. Many residents fled the town for the duration of the conflict.<ref name="Myre">{{cite news|author=Myre, Greg|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/15/world/middleeast/15voices.html?_r=1&oref=slogin|title=2 More Israelis Are Killed as Rain of Rockets From Lebanon Pushes Thousands South|work=]|date=2006-07-15|access-date=2008-10-25}}</ref> On July 22, four people were injured in a rocket attack.
In 1974, 102 Israeli Jewish school children from Safed on a school trip were taken hostage by a Palestinian militant group ] (DFLP) while sleeping in a school in ]. In what became known as the ], 22 of these school children were among those killed by the hostage takers after the school had been raided by a special forces unit of the ].


The town has retained its unique status as a Jewish studies centre, incorporating numerous facilities.<ref name=safed.co.il/> In 2010, eighteen senior rabbis led by the chief rabbi of Safed, ], ] urging the city's residents not to rent or sell property to Arabs, warning of an "Arab takeover"; Arabs constitute a fractional proportion of the population, and the statement was generally perceived to be directed at the 1,300 Arab students enrolled at ].<ref name="SherwoodGuardian">{{cite news |last1=Sherwood |first1=Harriet |title=Dozens of Israeli rabbis back call to forbid sale of property to Arabs |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2010/dec/07/israeli-rabbis-ban-rental-sale-to-arabs |access-date=9 June 2020 |work=The Guardian |date=7 December 2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last1=Ashkenazi |first1=Eli |title=Safed Rabbi Boasts That anti-Arab Edict Worked |url=https://www.haaretz.com/1.5005432 |access-date=9 June 2020 |work=Haaretz |date=28 April 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last1=Cook |first1=Jonathan |title=Safed 'the most racist city' in Israel |url=https://www.thenational.ae/uae/safed-the-most-racist-city-in-israel-1.557067 |access-date=9 June 2020 |work=The National |date=8 November 2010}}</ref>
Over 1990s and early 2000s, the town accepted thousands of Russian Jewish immigrants and Ethiopian ].<ref name="safed.co.il">{{cite web|url=http://www.safed.co.il/|title=Safed|work=safed.co.il|accessdate=May 12, 2012}}</ref>


== Demographics ==
In July 2006, ]<ref>In Israel, "Katyusha" became a generic name for most rocket launchers owned by Hezbollah.</ref> rockets fired by ] from Southern Lebanon hit Safed, killing one man and injuring others. Many residents fled the town.<ref name="Myre">{{cite news|author=Myre, Greg|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/15/world/middleeast/15voices.html?_r=1&oref=slogin|title=2 More Israelis Are Killed as Rain of Rockets From Lebanon Pushes Thousands South|work=New York Times|date=2006-07-15|accessdate=2008-10-25}}</ref> On July 22, four people were injured in a rocket attack.
In 2008, the population of Safed was 32,000.<ref name="cbs populations2009">{{cite web|url=http://www.cbs.gov.il/population/new_2009/table3.pdf|publisher=]|title=Table 3 – Population of Localities Numbering Above 1,000 Residents and Other Rural Population|date=2008-06-30|access-date=2016-06-04}}</ref> According to ] figures in 2001, the ethnic makeup of the city was 99.2% ]ish and non-Arab, with no significant ] population. 43.2% of the residents were 19 years of age or younger, 13.5% between 20 and 29, 17.1% between 30 and 44, 12.5% from 45 to 59, 3.1% from 60 to 64, and 10.5% 65 years of age or older.


The city is home to a relatively large community of ].<ref name="SherwoodGuardian"/> The village of ] in the city's southwestern outskirts, which had a population of about 500 Arab Muslims, most of whom belonged to a single clan, the Halihal, is under Safed's municipal jurisdiction.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Hassin |first1=Tal |title=A New Racist Reality for the Arabs of Safed |url=https://www.haaretz.com/1.4776066 |access-date=9 June 2020 |work=Haaretz |date=4 August 2020}}</ref>
The town has retained its unique status as a Jewish studies centre, incorporating numerous facilities.<ref name=safed.co.il/> It is currently a predominantly Jewish town, with mixed religious and secular communities and with a small number of ] Christians and ].


== Seismology ==
Palestinian president ] was born in Safed and left with his family when tensions arose in 1948. In 2012, he publicly stated, "I visited Safed before once. I want to see Safed. It's my right to see it, but not to live there." <ref>{{cite news|author=Harriet Sherwood in Jerusalem |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2012/nov/04/mahmoud-abbas-palestinian-territories |title=Mahmoud Abbas outrages Palestinian refugees by waiving his right to return &#124; World news |publisher=The Guardian |date= 2012-11-04|accessdate=2013-03-12 |location=London}}</ref>
The city is located above the ], and is one of the cities in Israel most at risk of ]s (along with Tiberias, ], ], and ]).<ref> By Rachel Avraham, staff writer for United With Israel Date: Oct 22, 2013</ref>


== Demographics == == Geography==
Safed is {{convert|40|km|mi|sp=us}} east of Acre and {{convert|20|km|mi|sp=us}} north of Tiberias.<ref name="AmitaiPreiss757"/>
In 2008, the population of Safed was 32,000.<ref name="cbs populations2009">{{cite web|url=http://www.cbs.gov.il/population/new_2009/table3.pdf|publisher=]|title=Table 3 – Population of Localities Numbering Above 1,000 Residents and Other Rural Population|date=2008-06-30|accessdate=2016-06-04}}</ref> According to ] figures in 2001, the ethnic makeup of the city was 99.2% ]ish and non-Arab, with no significant ] population. 43.2% of the residents were 19 years of age or younger, 13.5% between 20 and 29, 17.1% between 30 and 44, 12.5% from 45 to 59, 3.1% from 60 to 64, and 10.5% 65 years of age or older.

== Seismology ==
The city is located above the ], and is one of the cities in Israel most at risk of ]s (along with ], ], ], and ]).<ref> By Rachel Avraham, staff writer for United With Israel Date: Oct 22, 2013</ref> The last major earthquake to hit Safed was the ].


== Climate == === Climate ===
Safed has a ] with hot, dry summers and cold, rainy and occasionally snowy winters. The city receives {{convert|682|mm|0|abbr=on}} of precipitation per year. Summers are rainless and hot with an average high temperature of {{convert|29|°C|0|abbr=on}} and an average low temperature of {{convert|18|°C|0|abbr=on}}. Winters are cold and wet, and precipitation is occasionally in the form of snow. Winters have an average high temperature of {{convert|10|°C|0|abbr=on}} and an average low temperature of {{convert|5|°C|0|abbr=on}}. Safed has a ] (]: ''Csa'') with hot, dry summers and cool, rainy and occasionally snowy winters. The city receives {{convert|682|mm|0|abbr=on}} of precipitation per year. Summers are rainless and hot with an average high temperature of {{convert|31|°C|0|abbr=on}} and an average low temperature of {{convert|20|°C|0|abbr=on}}. Winters are cool and wet, and precipitation is occasionally in the form of snow. Winters have an average high temperature of {{convert|10|°C|0|abbr=on}} and an average low temperature of {{convert|5|°C|0|abbr=on}}.
{{Weather box {{Weather box
|location = Safed |width = auto
|location = Safed (Har Kenaan) (2004-2022, extremes 1939–present)
|metric first = yes |metric first = yes
|single line = yes |single line = yes
|Jan record high C = 21.7 |Jan record high C = 21.7
|Feb record high C = 21.2 |Feb record high C = 26.7
|Mar record high C = 24.2 |Mar record high C = 30.9
|Apr record high C = 32.4 |Apr record high C = 34.5
|May record high C = 38.1 |May record high C = 38.1
|Jun record high C = 38 |Jun record high C = 40.0
|Jul record high C = 39 |Jul record high C = 39.0
|Aug record high C = 38.7 |Aug record high C = 42.0
|Sep record high C = 36.8 |Sep record high C = 40.6
|Oct record high C = 33.1 |Oct record high C = 36.0
|Nov record high C = 27.5 |Nov record high C = 30.1
|Dec record high C = 24.4 |Dec record high C = 24.4
|year record high C = 31.25 |year record high C =
|Jan high C = 9.4 |Jan high C = 10.3
|Feb high C = 10.1 |Feb high C = 12.2
|Mar high C = 13.3 |Mar high C = 15.6
|Apr high C = 19.5 |Apr high C = 20.5
|May high C = 25 |May high C = 25.3
|Jun high C = 28.3 |Jun high C = 28.6
|Jul high C = 29.8 |Jul high C = 30.6
|Aug high C = 29.8 |Aug high C = 30.4
|Sep high C = 28.1 |Sep high C = 28.5
|Oct high C = 23.7 |Oct high C = 24.8
|Nov high C = 16.7 |Nov high C = 18.1
|Dec high C = 11.5 |Dec high C = 12.6
|year high C = 20.43 |year high C = 21.4
|Jan low C = 4.5 |Jan mean C = 7.6
|Feb low C = 4.3 |Feb mean C = 9.1
|Mar low C = 6.3 |Mar mean C = 11.7
|Apr low C = 10.6 |Apr mean C = 15.9
|May low C = 14.3 |May mean C = 20.1
|Jun low C = 17 |Jun mean C = 23.1
|Jul low C = 18.8 |Jul mean C = 25.2
|Aug low C = 18.8 |Aug mean C = 25.2
|Sep low C = 17.1 |Sep mean C = 23.4
|Oct low C = 15.1 |Oct mean C = 20.4
|Nov low C = 10.3 |Nov mean C = 14.8
|Dec low C = 6.4 |Dec mean C = 10.0
|year low C = 11.95 |year mean C =
|Jan record low C = -3.6 |Jan low C = 5.0
|Feb record low C = -6.5 |Feb low C = 6.0
|Mar record low C = -2.2 |Mar low C = 7.9
|Apr record low C = 0.3 |Apr low C = 11.3
|May record low C = 5.8 |May low C = 14.9
|Jun low C = 17.6
|Jul low C = 19.9
|Aug low C = 20.0
|Sep low C = 18.4
|Oct low C = 15.9
|Nov low C = 11.4
|Dec low C = 7.3
|year low C =
|Jan record low C = -6.4
|Feb record low C = -9.0
|Mar record low C = -3.4
|Apr record low C = 0.2
|May record low C = 5.7
|Jun record low C = 8.7 |Jun record low C = 8.7
|Jul record low C = 13.2 |Jul record low C = 12.2
|Aug record low C = 14 |Aug record low C = 13.0
|Sep record low C = 12 |Sep record low C = 10.7
|Oct record low C = 7.2 |Oct record low C = 5.9
|Nov record low C = 0.1 |Nov record low C = -1.7
|Dec record low C = -2.7 |Dec record low C = -3.2
|year record low C = 3.85 |year record low C =
|rain colour = green
|Jan precipitation mm = 158.8
|Feb precipitation mm = 129.7 |Jan rain mm= 182.1
|Mar precipitation mm = 94.9 |Feb rain mm = 122.9
|Apr precipitation mm = 43.1 |Mar rain mm = 61.4
|May precipitation mm = 5.7 |Apr rain mm = 34.8
|Jun precipitation mm = 0 |May rain mm = 12.3
|Jul precipitation mm = 0 |Jun rain mm = 0.1
|Aug precipitation mm = 0 |Jul rain mm = 0.0
|Sep precipitation mm = 1.5 |Aug rain mm = 0.8
|Oct precipitation mm = 24.5 |Sep rain mm = 3.3
|Nov precipitation mm = 85.5 |Oct rain mm = 21.3
|Dec precipitation mm = 138.4 |Nov rain mm = 72.3
|year precipitation mm = 682.1 |Dec rain mm = 143.4
|year rain mm =
|Jan precipitation days = 15
|Feb precipitation days = 13.1 |unit rain days = 0.1 mm
|Mar precipitation days = 11.7 |Jan rain days = 14.3
|Apr precipitation days = 5.9 |Feb rain days = 11.3
|May precipitation days = 2.7 |Mar rain days = 9.7
|Jun precipitation days = 0.0 |Apr rain days = 5.0
|Jul precipitation days = 0.0 |May rain days = 2.9
|Aug precipitation days = 0.0 |Jun rain days = 0.2
|Sep precipitation days = 0.5 |Jul rain days = 0.0
|Oct precipitation days = 4.5 |Aug rain days = 0.1
|Nov precipitation days = 9.0 |Sep rain days = 1.1
|Dec precipitation days = 13.1 |Oct rain days = 4.3
|year precipitation days = 75.5 |Nov rain days = 7.8
|Dec rain days = 11.3
|source 1 = Israel Meteorological Service<ref>{{cite web |url=http://ims.gov.il/IMS/CLIMATE |title=Climate data for several places in Israel |language=Hebrew |publisher=Israel Meteorological Service |date=May 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://ims.gov.il/IMS/CLIMATE/TopClimetIsrael/ |title=Weather Records Israel (Excluding Mt. Hermon) |language=Hebrew |publisher=Israel Meteorological Service }}</ref>
|year rain days = 67.9
|date=August 2010
|source 1 = Israel Meteorological Service<ref>{{cite web
| url = https://ims.gov.il/en/ClimateAtlas
| title = Climate Atlas
| publisher = ]
| accessdate = January 22, 2023
}}</ref><ref>{{cite web
| url = https://ims.gov.il/en/data_gov
| title = Meteorological Database
| publisher = ]
| accessdate = January 22, 2023
}}</ref>
}} }}


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], one of the city's historic synagogues]] ], one of the city's historic synagogues]]
] ]
According to CBS, the city has 25 schools and 6,292 students. There are 18 elementary schools with a student population of 3,965, and 11 high schools with a student population of 2,327. 40.8% of Safed's 12th graders were eligible for a matriculation (]) certificate in 2001. The Safed Academic College, originally an extension of ], was granted independent accreditation by Israel's Council of Higher Education in 2007.<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.zefat.ac.il/?CategoryID=637 |title = המכללה האקדמית צפת}}</ref> For the 2011–2012 school year, the college began a program designed specifically for ].<ref name=":0">Omer-Man, Michael. 2011. Safed college opens track for haredi women. Jerusalem Post, Dec 09, 2011. https://search.proquest.com/docview/913691816 (accessed November 16, 2018)</ref> It was created in order to allow haredi women living in the Upper Galilee access to higher education, while still maintaining strict religious practice.<ref name=":0" /> The program accomplishes this goal through separate classes for male and female students.<ref name=":0" /> The classes are also taught during certain hours as to allow women to fulfill other aspects of their religiosity.<ref name=":0" /> According to CBS, the city has 25 schools and 6,292 students. There are 18 elementary schools with a student population of 3,965, and 11 high schools with a student population of 2,327. 40.8% of Safed's 12th graders were eligible for a matriculation (]) certificate in 2001. The ], originally an extension of ], was granted independent accreditation by Israel's Council of Higher Education in 2007.<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.zefat.ac.il/?CategoryID=637 |title = המכללה האקדמית צפת}}</ref> For the 2011–2012 school year, the college began a program designed specifically for ].<ref name=OmerMan2011>{{cite news |id={{ProQuest|913691816}} |last1=Omer-Man |first1=Michael |date=9 December 2011 |title=Safed college opens track for haredi women |url=https://www.jpost.com/metro/features/safed-college-opens-track-for-haredi-women |work=The Jerusalem Post }}</ref> It was created in order to allow haredi women living in the Upper Galilee access to higher education, while still maintaining strict religious practice.<ref name=OmerMan2011/> The program accomplishes this goal through separate classes for male and female students.<ref name=OmerMan2011/> The classes are also taught during certain hours as to allow women to fulfill other aspects of their religiosity.<ref name=OmerMan2011/>


In October 2011, Israel's fifth medical school opened in Safed, housed in a renovated historic building in the centre of town that was once a branch of ].<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.haaretz.com/business/new-medical-school-to-open-in-safed-1.392699|title=New Medical School to Open in Safed|work=Haaretz.com|date=2011-10-30}}</ref> In October 2011, Israel's fifth medical school opened in Safed, housed in a renovated historic building in the centre of town that was once a branch of ].<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.haaretz.com/business/new-medical-school-to-open-in-safed-1.392699|title=New Medical School to Open in Safed|work=Haaretz.com|date=2011-10-30}}</ref>
The Azrieli Faculty of Medicine opened in 2011 as an extension of Bar-Ilan University, created to train physicians in the Upper Galilee region.<ref name=":1">"About." About | The Azrieli Faculty of Medicine | Bar-Ilan University. Accessed December 02, 2018. http://medicine.biu.ac.il/en/node/3</ref> The schools conducts clinical instructions in six hospitals in the region:

The Azrieli Faculty of Medicine opened in 2011 as an extension of ], created to train physicians in the Upper Galilee region.<ref name=":1">"About." About | The Azrieli Faculty of Medicine | Bar-Ilan University. Accessed December 02, 2018. http://medicine.biu.ac.il/en/node/3</ref> The schools conducts clinical instructions in six hospitals in the region:

*] *]
*] *]
Line 226: Line 351:
*Mazra Mental Health Center <ref name=":1" /> *Mazra Mental Health Center <ref name=":1" />


On March 8, 2021, the Israeli ] ] announced that Israel is to establish its 10th university in Safed, after a growing need for a university in the ]. Plans have been in place to establish a university in the ] since 2005, but no progress was made until 2015 when Netanyahu vowed to start working on the project during a Galilee Conference.<ref>{{Cite news|date=2021-03-09|title=Israel to establish its 10th university in Safed|url=https://www.ynetnews.com/article/HkMmrZB7u|access-date=2021-03-12|website=ynetnews|language=en}}</ref>
The ] program in Safed provides an open, non-denominational atmosphere for young Jewish adults that combines volunteering, hiking and study with exploring Jewish heritage.<ref>"Israel Programs – Kahal – Inspiration Center." Livnot U'Lehibanot. November 19, 1970. Accessed December 02, 2018. https://www.livnot.org/</ref>


As one of Judaism's Holy Cities, Safed hosts several ]s.
Sharei Bina is a program for women who have just finished high school and want to study in a ] in Safed for one year that teaches young women who want to experience Jewish spirituality in the mystical city of Safed.<ref>"Safed HOME." Rabbi Cordovero. Accessed December 02, 2018. https://www.safed.co.il/open-learning-environment-for-women.html</ref> In comparison to other seminaries, Sharei Bina includes the study of the ] and other Kabbalist rituals in the learning.<ref name=":3">Rothenberg, Jennie. 2005. Ghosts, artists & kabbalists; the struggle for the soul of tsfat. Moment. 04, https://search.proquest.com/docview/228062899 (accessed November 16, 2018)</ref>
The ] ''Yeshivat Tzfat'' <ref></ref> and associated institutions are ] by Rabbi Mordechai Kaplan.
The ] ''] ]'' <ref></ref> was founded in 1997 by Rabbi ] and is today headed by Rabbi ] with approximately 120 students.
For women, ''Sharei Bina'' is a ] (seminary) offering a one-year post high school program,<ref>"Safed HOME." Rabbi Cordovero. Accessed December 02, 2018. https://www.safed.co.il/open-learning-environment-for-women.html</ref> with an increased focus on Jewish spirituality - including formal study of ] topics.<ref name=Rothenberg2005>{{cite news |id={{ProQuest|228062899}} |last1=Rothenberg |first1=Jennie |title=Ghosts, Artists & Kabbalists; the struggle for the soul of Tsfat |journal=Moment |date=April 2005 |page=42 }}</ref>
] has several institutions including ''Machon Alte'' <ref></ref> for women, and the advanced '']'' ''Tzemach Tzedek''.<ref></ref>


The ] program in Safed provides an open, non-denominational atmosphere for young Jewish adults that combines volunteering, hiking and study with exploring Jewish heritage.<ref>"Israel Programs – Kahal – Inspiration Center." Livnot U'Lehibanot. November 19, 1970. Accessed December 02, 2018. https://www.livnot.org/</ref>
==Religious life==
Safed is home to a large community of Jews who practice ], a mystical form of Judaism.<ref>"Safed HOME." Rabbi Cordovero. Accessed December 02, 2018. https://www.safed.co.il/city-of-kabbalah-html</ref> A strong tradition in mystical ], reinforced by the central text of Kabbalah, the ], maintains that the Jewish ] will first reveal himself in the ], which is where Safed is located.<ref>{{cite book|author=Harris Lenowitz|title=The Jewish Messiahs: From the Galilee to Crown Heights|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PLyb3zV8OmgC&pg=PA126|year=2001|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-534894-1|page=126|chapter=The Messiahs of Safed: Isaac Luria and Hayim Vital}}</ref>

One practice of Kabbalah describes god with two faces, one is the ], which is described as the female aspect of God, while ] is the male counterpart.<ref name=":5">Dan, Joseph. ''A Very Short Introduction''. Place of Publication Not Identified: Oxford University Press, 2006.</ref> Kabbalist thought tells that the womanly aspect of god returned to Safed when the ] was destroyed and waits to be redeemed in this city.<ref name=":2">Rothenberg, Jennie. 2005. Ghosts, artists & kabbalists; the struggle for the soul of tsfat. Moment. 04, https://search.proquest.com/docview/228062899 (accessed November 16, 2018</ref> The tradition holds that when women connect with one another in the city of Safed, they awaken the shekhinah, which translates to the dweller within.<ref name=":5" />

One of the critical aspect of women's religious life in Safed is visiting the Safed Mikveh and Education Center, which holds the biggest and most up-to-date ] in the Northern part of Israel.<ref name=":4">"Safed HOME." Rabbi Cordovero. Accessed December 02, 2018. https://www.safed.co.il/article.html</ref> This center is located on the spot that followers of Kabbalah believe ] revealed secret information to the Holy Ari (]).<ref name=":4" /> The process of a woman immersing herself in the mikveh is a holy and spiritual process.<ref name=":4" /> The Education Center provides information and classes where women can learn about the experience and find it more uplifting rather than another chore on their errand list.<ref name=":4" /> The married women of Safed visit this mikveh in order to follow the monthly practice of immersing oneself after menstruation.<ref name=":4" />

The center is also a location to host events for women such ] celebrations, which are common for women as they are responsible for celebrating the new month because of their menstrual cycle.<ref name=":4" /> The Safed Mikveh and Education Center has art and dance classes and also contains a room for women to gather in for ] parties for brides-to-be before their weddings.<ref name=":4" /> The Center also has a library for women to receive counseling about any issues they may have.<ref name=":4" /> The mikveh was created with much meaning because of the Kabbalist teaching about the shekhinah and achieving inner glory.<ref name=":4" />


== Culture == == Culture ==
] gallery in the artists' colony]]
In the 1950s and 1960s, Safed was known as Israel's art capital. The artists' colony established in Safed's Old City was a hub of creativity that drew artists from around the country, among them ], ], ] and Menachem Shemi. Some of Israel's art galleries were located there. In honor of the opening of the Glitzenstein Art Museum in 1953, the artist ] donated eight of his paintings to the city. During this period, Safed was home to the country's top nightclubs, hosting the debut performances of ], ], and other singers.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1024907.html|title=An Inside Job?|publisher=]|author=Ashkenazi, Eli|accessdate=2008-10-25}}</ref>


=== Artists' colony ===
Safed has been hailed as the ] capital of the world, hosting an annual ] Festival<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.safed-home.com/KlezmerFestivalofSafed.html |title = Klezmer Festival 2019 in Safed}}</ref> that attracts top musicians from around the globe.<ref>{{cite web|last=Davis |first=Barry |url=http://fr.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowFull&cid=1249418567163 |title=You can take the music out of the shtetl |publisher=Fr.jpost.com |date=2009-08-10 |accessdate=2012-01-07}}</ref>
{{main|Artists Quarter of Safed}}


In the 1950s and 1960s, Safed was known as Israel's art capital. An artists' colony established in the old Arab quarter was a hub of creativity that drew artists from around the country, among them ], ], ], Menachem Shemi, ] and ].
The city still hosts galleries and museums, some of whom are located in the former homes of major Israeli artists. Beit Castel gallery in ]'s home, in ]'s Safed home.


In honor of the opening of the Glitzenstein Art Museum in 1953, the artist ] donated eight of his paintings to the city. Today the area contains a large number of galleries and workshops run by individual artists and art vendors. There are several museums and galleries that function in the historical homes of major Israeli artists such as the ] and the ] gallery (in ]'s former home).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://hectorbarel.wixsite.com/beitcastel|title=Paintings {{!}} Moshe Castel Gallery {{!}} Israel|website=Moshecastelgallery|language=en|access-date=2019-08-12|archive-date=2019-08-12|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190812071258/https://hectorbarel.wixsite.com/beitcastel|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name=":6">{{Cite web|url=https://www.frenkel-frenel.org/The_official_Isaac_Frenkel-Frenel_web_site/Welcome.html|title=FRENKEL FRENEL MUSEUM|website=www.frenkel-frenel.org|access-date=2019-08-10}}</ref><ref name="ITN">Israel Travel News, ''Spotlight – A Spiritual Journey of Safed'' </ref>
==Tourism==
Travelers will find an extensive Tourist Information Center<ref> {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111125212133/http://www.safed-home.com/TouristInformation.html |date=November 25, 2011 }}</ref> in the Old Jewish Quarter on Alkabetz Street. The Center provides assistance to tourists who drop in to access information about the center, and for travelers who are planning a trip.<ref>http://email%20and%20phone%20assistance</ref> Visitors can explore the places of interest,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.safed-home.com/WalkingaroundSafed.html |title=Safed |publisher=Safed-home.com |date= |accessdate=2012-01-07 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20111226084857/http://safed-home.com/WalkingaroundSafed.html |archivedate=2011-12-26 |df= }}</ref> activities<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.safed-home.com/ActivitiesinTzfat.html |title=Safed |publisher=Safed-home.com |date= |accessdate=2012-01-07}}</ref> and historical sites<ref> {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100723135541/http://www.safed-home.com/HistoricalSitesofSafed.html |date=July 23, 2010 }}</ref> when visiting Safed. Tourists may find the stories of legends<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.safed-home.com/StoriesLegendsMiraclesofSafed.html |title=Safed |publisher=Safed-home.com |date= |accessdate=2012-01-07}}</ref> of Safed to expand their understanding of the town and its history. Accommodations<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.safed-home.com/AccommodationsofSafed.html |title=Accommodations of Safed Tzfat Zefat Tzefat Tsfat |publisher=Safed-home.com |date= |accessdate=2012-01-07}}</ref> provide boarding opportunities for people of all ages and incomes and the list of eateries<ref> {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120130163229/http://www.safed-home.com/FoodinSafed.html |date=January 30, 2012 }}</ref> is extensive in the city.


===Citadel Hill=== === Music ===
In the 1960s, Safed was home to the country's top nightclubs, hosting the debut performances of ], ], and other singers.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.haaretz.com/1.5038830|title=An Inside Job?|newspaper=]|author=Ashkenazi, Eli|access-date=2008-10-25}}</ref> Nowadays,
The Citadel Hill, in Hebrew HaMetzuda, rises east of the Old City and is named after the huge Crusader and then Mamluk castle built there during the 12th and 13th centuries, which continued in use until being totally destroyed by the 1837 earthquake. Its ruins are still visible.
Safed has been hailed as the ] capital of the world, hosting an annual Klezmer Festival that attracts top musicians from around the globe.<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.safed-home.com/KlezmerFestivalofSafed.html |title = Klezmer Festival 2019 in Safed}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=Davis |first=Barry |url=http://fr.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowFull&cid=1249418567163 |title=You can take the music out of the shtetl |publisher=Fr.jpost.com |date=2009-08-10 |access-date=2012-01-07}}</ref> A school of world music, especially eastern music called Maqamat operates in the ].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Maqamat School of Eastern Music - WOMEX |url=https://www.womex.com/virtual/maqamat_school_of |access-date=2023-12-27 |website=www.womex.com}}</ref>


=== Museums ===
On the western slope beneath the ruins stands the former British police station, still pockmarked by bullet holes from the 1948 war.
*The Beit Hameiri museum documents Safed's Jewish community over the past 200 years.
*The Museum of the Art of Printing displays the first Hebrew printing press.


==Historic sites==
===Old Jewish Quarter===
]
The Old Jewish Quarter takes the northern half of the Old City, and is where the bulk of the Jewish population used to live before the 1948 war. It is now also called the Synagogue Quarter due to its 32 synagogues. Here are its main tourist attractions.
;Citadel Hill
The Citadel Hill, in Hebrew HaMetzuda, rises east of the Old City and is named after the huge Crusader and then Mamluk castle built there during the 12th and 13th centuries, which continued in use until being totally destroyed by the 1837 earthquake. Its ruins are still visible. On the western slope beneath the ruins stands the former British police station, still pockmarked by bullet holes from the 1948 war.


;Old Jewish Quarter
The two Ari synagogues are named after Rabbi ] (1531–1573), commonly known by the Hebrew acronym "Ha'ARI", ''the Ari'', formed from the initials of his byname, title and name, and which as a word mean "the Lion".
Before 1948, most of Safed's Jewish population used to live in the northern section of the old city. Currently home to 32 synagogues, it is also referred to as the synagogue quarter and includes synagogues named after prominent rabbis of the town: the ], ], ] and two named for Rabbi ]: one ], the other Sephardi.
*]
*Sephardic Ari Synagogue
*], named after ]ic scholar ], in Hebrew Yitzhak Abuhav (fl. end of the 14th century in Spain)
*Alsheich Synagogue, named after ] (1508–1593)
*Yosef Caro Synagogue, named after ] (1488–1575)
*Breslov Synagogue, named after ] (1772–1810)
*Hameiri Museum, illustrating Jewish settlement in Safed and located in a 16th-century house
*Old Jewish cemetery


;Mamluk-period buildings
===Artists' Quarter===
The Artists' Quarter, situated in the pre-1948 Arab quarter just south of the Old Jewish Quarter or Synagogue Quarter, contains a large number of galleries and workshops run by individual artists and art vendors.<ref name="ITN">Israel Travel News, ''Spotlight – A Spiritual Journey of Safed'' </ref> Several galleries and museums function in the Safed homes of the artists (''Beit'' ''Castel'', the Frenkel Frenel museum). Its "General Exhibition" presents a number of different representative artists, past and present, and is housed in the Late Ottoman (1902) ] known as the Market Mosque.<ref name="ITN"/> Some prominent artists who worked in the quarter are ], ] and others...

===Southern part===
Further south are two monumental Mamluk-period buildings: Further south are two monumental Mamluk-period buildings:
* the Red Mosque with a khan (1276) * the Red Mosque with a khan (1276)
* the Mamluk mausoleum, now used by ]. The mausoleum was built for a Mamluk ''na'ib'' (governor) of Safed, Muzaffar ad-Din Musa Ibn Hajj ar-Ruqtai Musa Muzaffar (Mudhafar) al-din b. Ruqtay al-Hajj, who died in AH 762/AD 1360-1).<ref name="Egypt">{{cite book |title=The Mamluks in Egyptian Politics and Society |editors=Thomas Philipp, Ulrich Haarmann |year=1998 |location= |publisher=] |series=Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization |isbn=9780521591157 |url={{Google books |id=WoPF9T4ZiWsC |page=43 |plainurl=yes}} |accessdate=24 January 2018}}</ref><ref></ref> * the Mamluk mausoleum, now used by ]. The mausoleum was built for a Mamluk ''na'ib'' (governor) of Safed, Muzaffar ad-Din Musa ibn Hajj al-Ruqtay Musa Muzaffar al-Din ibn Ruqtay al-Hajj, who died in AH 762/AD 1360–61).<ref name="Egypt">{{cite book |title=The Mamluks in Egyptian Politics and Society |editor1=Thomas Philipp |editor2=Ulrich Haarmann |year=1998 |publisher=] |series=Cambridge Studies in Islamic Civilization |isbn=9780521591157 |url={{Google books |id=WoPF9T4ZiWsC |page=43 |plainurl=yes}} |access-date=24 January 2018}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://go.galil.gov.il/en/the-red-kahn-and-the-mamluk-mausoleum|title=The Galilee Development Authority website|access-date=2018-01-24|archive-date=2018-01-25|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180125015724/http://go.galil.gov.il/en/the-red-kahn-and-the-mamluk-mausoleum|url-status=dead}}</ref>


Southeast of the Artists' Quarter is the ], the fortified governor's residence built by ] (1689/90–1775). Southeast of the Artists' Quarter is the ], the fortified governor's residence built by Zahir al-Umar (1689/90–1775).

A report about the "obliteration of non-Jewish historic sites in Safed" mentions a mausoleum, an ancient grave and an ancient mosque that was converted into a clubhouse.<ref> - ''Haaretz''</ref>


==Notable people== ==Notable people==
{{main|List of notable people from Safed}}
===Born in Safed===
<!-- Please respect alphabetical order by last name. If in doubt, check the "defaultsort" template of the article being added. -->
*], Palestinian president since 2005<ref name=NYT110412>{{cite news|title=Palestinian's Remark, Seen as Concession, Stirs Uproar|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/05/world/middleeast/in-palestine-abbas-spurs-right-of-return-uproar.html|accessdate=November 5, 2012|newspaper=The New York Times|date=November 4, 2012|author=Jodi Rudoren}}</ref>
*], Palestinian Jewish sculptor and printmaker who was successful in Germany in the 1920s
* ], Israeli fighter pilot
*], a politician who served as a member of ] between 1977 and 1981
* ] (1533–1600), kabbalist and poet
* ] (1912–1992), Israeli writer
*], Jewish rabbi who converted to Catholicism
*] (1789–1810), author of ''Zenanname'' (The Book of Women)<ref>{{cite book|first=Philip|last=Mansel|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LrnvC98bNSoC&pg=PT185&lpg=PT185|title=Constantinople: City of the World's Desire, 1453–1924|publisher= ] |year=1995|page=185|isbn=9781848546479}}</ref>
* ], Israeli Supreme Court justice
* ], Sephardi Chief Rabbi
*], also known as Abu Hani, the Palestinian leader of the ]'s armed wing
* ] (1857–1935), rabbi
*], Palestinian-Jordanian poet and translator
*], ] politician, lawyer, and newspaper columnist
* ], Israeli footballer
*], the ] commander of Safed during 1948 and mayor of Safed between 1965 and 1966
* ], Israeli model
* ], Jewish poet
*], UCLA mathematics professor and noted logician
*], Israeli folk singer
*], basketball player
*], politician who served six times as Jordanian prime minister
* ], artist
*], negotiator for the ] and its first foreign minister
* Khalīl b. Aybak ], author and historian
* ], Israeli rapper
* ], Israeli author
* ], mayor of Safed from 2008 to 2018
* ], Jewish rabbi and disciple of ]

===Notable residents of Safed===<!-- Please respect alphabetical order -->
*], 16th-century rabbi, kabbalist and poet perhaps best known for his composition of the song "]".
*], prominent rabbi, preacher, and biblical commentator in the latter part of the 16th century.
*], influential rabbi and talmudist of the 15th century best known for his attempt to reintroduce ].
*], leader of mystical school in Safed in the 16th century.
*], ] of Safed.
*], father of ].
*], artist.
*], 16th-century rabbi, and author of the great codification of Jewish law, the ].
*], basketball player and coach
*], a foremost rabbi and Jewish mystic of the 16th century in the community of Safed in Ottoman Palestine. He is considered the father of contemporary Kabbalah.<ref>Eisen, Yosef (2004). Miraculous journey : a complete history of the Jewish people from creation to the present (Rev. ed.). Southfield, Mich.: Targum/Feldheim. p. 213. {{ISBN|1568713231}}.</ref>
*], Tzfat resident Israeli artist since 1999 of Dutch birth,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.zissil.com/topics/Miriam-Mehadipur-Gallery-Safed |title=Miriam Mehadipur Gallery Safed |publisher=Zissil.com |date= |accessdate=2013-06-25}}</ref> owner of Mehadipur + Collection<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mehadipurandcollection.com/about |title=Mehadipur + Collection |publisher=Mehadipurandcollection.com |date= |accessdate=2013-06-25}}</ref>
*{{Interlanguage link multi|Ben Snof|he|3=בן סנוף}}, Israeli vocalist.
*], rabbi of Safed from 1525 until 1535.
* Possibly the Biblical ] whose tomb is often said to be an ancient tomb discovered in the old cemetery of the city.


==Twin towns — sister cities== ==Twin towns — sister cities==
{{See also|List of twin towns and sister cities in Israel}} {{See also|List of twin towns and sister cities in Israel}}
Safed is ] with: Safed is ] with:
*{{flagicon|ESP}} ''']''', ], Spain
*{{flagicon|FRA}} ''']''', France (frozen)<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.leparisien.fr/lille-59000/la-ville-de-lille-met-en-veille-son-jumelage-avec-safed-en-israel-07-10-2014-4195033.php|title=La ville de Lille "met en veille" son jumelage avec Safed en Israël|date=31 August 2015|work=leparisien.fr}}</ref>
*{{flagicon|BUL}} ''']''', ]
*{{flagicon|USA}} ''']''', ], United States
*{{flagicon|HUN}} ''']''', ], Hungary *{{flagicon|HUN}} ''']''', ], Hungary
*{{flagicon|POR}} ''']''', ]<ref>{{cite web |title=Geminações de Cidades e Vilas |url=https://www.anmp.pt/anmp/pro/mun1/gem101l0.php?cod_ent=M6300 |publisher=Associação Nacional de Municípios Portugueses |access-date=19 April 2021 |archive-date=20 October 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221020215207/https://www.anmp.pt/anmp/pro/mun1/gem101l0.php?cod_ent=M6300 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
*{{flagicon|FRA}} ''']''', ]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.leparisien.fr/lille-59000/la-ville-de-lille-met-en-veille-son-jumelage-avec-safed-en-israel-07-10-2014-4195033.php|title=La ville de Lille "met en veille" son jumelage avec Safed en Israël|date=31 August 2015|work=leparisien.fr|access-date=11 December 2014|archive-date=18 December 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141218193628/http://www.leparisien.fr/lille-59000/la-ville-de-lille-met-en-veille-son-jumelage-avec-safed-en-israel-07-10-2014-4195033.php|url-status=dead}}</ref>
*{{flagicon|BUL}} ''']''', ]<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151018072534/http://www.g-news.co.il/article.asp?news=9574&article=9574|date=2015-10-18}}</ref>
*{{flagicon|USA}} ''']''', ], United States
*{{flagicon|ESP}} ''']''', ], Spain


== Gallery == == Gallery ==
<gallery> <gallery>
File:Meron 181.jpg|Monument to the soldiers who fought in Israel's War of Independence File:Meron 181.jpg|Monument to the Israeli soldiers who fought in the ]
File:Safed view 02.JPG|View of modern Safed File:Safed 2009.jpg|Safed in 2009
File:Safed view 04.JPG|View of modern Safed File:Safed view 02.JPG|View of Safed
File:Safed1.jpg|View of modern Safed
File:Safed view 01.jpg|View of Safed File:Safed view 01.jpg|View of Safed
File:Safed 01.JPG|Houses in Safed File:Safed 01.JPG|Houses in Safed
File:SafedDSCN4022.JPG|Doorway in Beit Castel gallery, Safed File:SafedDSCN4022.JPG|Doorway in ] gallery, Safed
File:Safed 02.JPG|Street in Safed
File:Safed 03.JPG|View of Safed
File:Agriculture in Jerusalem (Safed).jpg|Fields near Safed
File:Sunrise over safed mrbrklyn.jpg|Sunrise over Safed
File:Eagle over the Jewish Children of Tsfat.jpg|Eagle over the Jewish Children of Tsfat
File:Marketplace in Safed.jpg|View of the souk in Safed
File:Estación de policía británica en Safed, Israel, 2017 05.jpg|British Police Station in Safed
</gallery> </gallery>
] ]]]
] ]]]
]
]]


== References == ==See also==
*] – Safed has its own, the Ottoman clock tower of the "Saraya" (government house), inaugurated in 1900
{{reflist|colwidth=30em|refs=


==Notes==
}}
{{notelist}}

== References ==
{{reflist|colwidth=30em|refs=}}


==Bibliography== ==Bibliography==
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*{{cite book|editor =Barron, J.B.|title = Palestine: Report and General Abstracts of the Census of 1922|url=https://archive.org/details/PalestineCensus1922 | publisher = Government of Palestine | year = 1923}}
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*{{cite book|last1=Drory|first1=Joseph|editor1-last=Winter|editor1-first=Michael|editor2-last=Levanoni|editor2-first=Amalia|title=The Mamluks in Egyptian and Syrian Politics and Society|date=2004|publisher=Brill|isbn=9789004132863|chapter=Founding a New Mamlaka}}
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{{refend}}
*{{cite encyclopedia |last=Franco |first=M. |article=Safed |encyclopedia=The Jewish Encyclopedia: A Descriptive Record of the History, Religion, Literature, and Customs of the Jewish People from the Earliest Times to the Present Day |volume=10 |year=1916 |publisher=Funk and Wagnalls Company |location=New York and London |pages=633–636 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=sr85AQAAMAAJ}}
*{{cite book |title=Village Statistics, April, 1945 |url=http://web.nli.org.il/sites/nli/Hebrew/library/Pages/BookReader.aspx?pid=856390|author=Government of Palestine, Department of Statistics|year=1945}}
*{{cite book |title=Village Statistics of 1945: A Classification of Land and Area ownership in Palestine|url=http://www.palestineremembered.com/Articles/General-2/Story3150.html|first=S.|last=Hadawi|author-link=Sami Hadawi|year=1970|publisher=Palestine Liberation Organization Research Center}}
*{{cite book |last1=Holt |first1=P. M. |title=Early Mamluk Diplomacy, 1260–1290: Treaties of Baybars and Qalāwūn with Christian Rulers |date=1995 |publisher=Brill |location=Leiden and New York |isbn=90-04-10246-9 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=b2oeolaGUCEC}}
*{{cite journal |last1=Layish |first1=Aharon |title="Waqfs" and Ṣūfī Monasteries in the Ottoman Policy of Colonization: Sulṭan Selīm I's "waqf" of 1516 in Favour of Dayr al-Asad |journal=Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London |date=1987 |volume=50 |issue=1 |pages=61–89 |doi=10.1017/S0041977X00053192 |jstor=616894 |s2cid=161757141 }}
*{{cite book |title=Palestine Under the Moslems: A Description of Syria and the Holy Land from A.D. 650 to 1500 |url=https://archive.org/details/palestineundermo00lestuoft |first=G. |last= Le Strange |author-link=Guy Le Strange |year=1890 |publisher=Committee of the ]}}
*{{cite book |last=Lieber |first=Sherman |title=Mystics and missionaries: the Jews in Palestine, 1799–1840 |url= https://archive.org/details/mysticsmissionar0000lieb |url-access=registration |year=1992 |publisher=University of Utah Press |isbn=978-0-87480-391-4 |page=[https://archive.org/details/mysticsmissionar0000lieb/}}
*{{cite book |last1=Luz |first1=Nimrod |title=The Mamluk City in the Middle East: History, Culture, and the Urban Landscape |date=2014 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |location=Cambridge |isbn=978-1-107-04884-3 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XeFSAwAAQBAJ}}
*{{cite book |editor=Mills, E. |title=Census of Palestine 1931. Population of Villages, Towns and Administrative Areas |url=https://archive.org/details/CensusOfPalestine1931.PopulationOfVillagesTownsAndAdministrativeAreas |publisher=Government of Palestine |location=Jerusalem |year=1932}}
*{{cite book |last1=Morgenstern |first1=Arie |translator=Joel A. Linsider |title=Hastening Redemption: Messianism and the Resettlement of the Land of Israel |date=2006 |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=New York |isbn=978-0-19-530578-4 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2dFh-fYvjokC}}
*{{cite book |title=The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem Revisited |first=B. |last=Morris |author-link=Benny Morris |year=2004 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=0-521-00967-7}}
*{{cite book |last1=Petersen |first1=Andrew |title=A Gazetteer of Buildings in Muslim Palestine, Part 1 |date=2001 |publisher=Council for British Research in the Levant |location=London |isbn=978-0-19-727011-0 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Ux_2wXFXYewC}}
*{{cite journal |first=D.|last=Pringle|author-link=Denys Pringle |year=1985 |title=Review Article: Reconstructing the Castle of Safad |journal=Palestine Exploration Quarterly |volume=117 |issue=2 |pages=139–149 |doi=10.1179/peq.1985.117.2.139}}
*{{cite thesis |last=Rhode |first=H.|author-link=Harold Rhode|title=The Administration and Population of the Sancak of Safad in the Sixteenth Century |year=1979 |publisher=Columbia University |type=PhD}}
*{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4vOJ15vTZV4C |title=A House of Many Mansions: The History of Lebanon Reconsidered |first=K.|last=Salibi|author-link=Kamal Salibi |publisher=University of California Press |date=1988 |isbn=978-0-520-07196-4}}
*{{cite journal |last=Schumacher |first=G.|author-link=Gottlieb Schumacher | title = Population list of the Liwa of Akka |journal=Quarterly Statement - Palestine Exploration Fund |volume=20 |pages=169–191 |url=https://archive.org/details/quarterlystateme19pale |year=1888}}
*{{cite book |last=Sharon |first=M. |author-link=Moshe Sharon |title=Corpus Inscriptionum Arabicarum Palaestinae, A |volume= 1|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=j1rSzWgHMjoC |year=1997 |publisher=Brill |isbn=90-04-10833-5}}
*{{cite book |last=Sharon |first=M.|author-link=Moshe Sharon |title=Corpus Inscriptionum Arabicarum Palaestinae, Addendum |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=1d8xHcor0psC |year=2007 |publisher=Brill |isbn=978-90-04-15780-4}}
*{{cite book |last1=Sicker |first1=Martin |title=Reshaping Palestine: From Muhammad Ali to the British Mandate, 1831-1922 |date=1999 |publisher=Praeger |location=Westport and London |isbn=0-275-96639-9 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TWBxUi5fVS0C}}
{{Refend}}


==External links== ==External links==
{{Wikivoyage}} {{Wikivoyage}}
* * {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210802202224/https://www.zefat.muni.il/Pages/default.aspx |date=2021-08-02 }}
* {{he icon}} * {{in lang|he}}
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* Survey of Western Palestine, Map 4: , ; Safed on the ] Map * Survey of Western Palestine, Map 4: , ; Safed on the ] Map


{{Northern District (Israel)}} {{Northern District (Israel)}}
{{Holy sites in Judaism}} {{Holy sites in Judaism}}
{{Largest Israeli cities}}
{{Crusader sites}}
{{Authority control}} {{Authority control}}


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Latest revision as of 07:44, 30 December 2024

City in northern Israel City in Israel
Safed (Tzfat)
  • צְפַת‎
  • صفد
City
Tzfat
Hebrew transcription(s)
 • ISO 259Çpat
 • Translit.Tz'fat
 • Also spelledTsfat, Tzefat, Zfat, Sfat, Ẕefat (official)
Official logo of Safed (Tzfat)
Safed (Tzfat) is located in Northeast IsraelSafed (Tzfat)Safed (Tzfat)Show map of Northeast IsraelSafed (Tzfat) is located in IsraelSafed (Tzfat)Safed (Tzfat)Show map of Israel
Coordinates: 32°57′57″N 35°29′54″E / 32.96583°N 35.49833°E / 32.96583; 35.49833
Country Israel
DistrictNorthern
Sub-districtSafed
Founded1500 BCE
Government
 • MayorYossi Kakon
Elevation850 m (2,790 ft)
Population
 • Total42,117
Ethnicity
 • Jews and others97.9%
 • Arabs2.1%
Websitehttp://www.zefat.muni.il

Safed (also known as Tzfat; Hebrew: צְפַת, Ṣəfaṯ; Arabic: صفد, Ṣafad) is a city in the Northern District of Israel. Located at an elevation of up to 937 m (3,074 ft), Safed is the highest city in the Galilee and in Israel.

Safed has been identified with Sepph (Σέπφ), a fortified town in the Upper Galilee mentioned in the writings of the Roman Jewish historian Josephus. The Jerusalem Talmud mentions Safed as one of five elevated spots where fires were lit to announce the New Moon and festivals during the Second Temple period. Safed attained local prominence under the Crusaders, who built a large fortress there in 1168. It was conquered by Saladin 20 years later, and demolished by his grandnephew al-Mu'azzam Isa in 1219. After reverting to the Crusaders in a treaty in 1240, a larger fortress was erected, which was expanded and reinforced in 1268 by the Mamluk sultan Baybars, who developed Safed into a major town and the capital of a new province spanning the Galilee. After a century of general decline, the stability brought by the Ottoman conquest in 1517 ushered in nearly a century of growth and prosperity in Safed, during which time Jewish immigrants from across Europe developed the city into a center for wool and textile production and the mystical Kabbalah movement. It became known as one of the Four Holy Cities of Judaism. As the capital of the Safad Sanjak, it was the main population center of the Galilee, with large Muslim and Jewish communities. Besides during the fortunate governorship of Fakhr al-Din II in the early 17th century, the city underwent a general decline and by the mid-18th century was eclipsed by Acre. Its Jewish residents were targeted in Druze and local Muslim raids in the 1830s, and many perished in an earthquake in that same decade – through the philanthropy of Moses Montefiore, its Jewish synagogues and homes were rebuilt.

Safed's population reached 24,000 toward the end of the 19th century; it was a mixed city, divided roughly equally between Jews and Muslims with a small Christian community. Its Muslim merchants played a key role as middlemen in the grain trade between the local farmers and the traders of Acre, while the Ottomans promoted the city as a center of Sunni jurisprudence. Safed's conditions improved considerably in the late 19th century, a municipal council was established along with a number of banks, though the city's jurisdiction was limited to the Upper Galilee. By 1922, Safed's population had dropped to around 8,700, roughly 60% Muslim, 33% Jewish and the remainder Christians. Amid rising ethnic tension throughout Mandatory Palestine, Safed's Jews were attacked in an Arab riot in 1929. The city's population had risen to 13,700 by 1948, overwhelmingly Arab, though the city was proposed to be part of a Jewish state in the 1947 UN Partition Plan. During the 1948 war, Arab factions attacked and besieged the Jewish quarter which held out until Jewish paramilitary forces captured the city after heavy fighting, precipitating British forces to withdraw. Most of the city's predominantly Palestinian-Arab population fled or were expelled as a result of attacks by Jewish forces and the nearby Ein al-Zeitun massacre, and were not allowed to return after the war, such that today the city has an almost exclusively Jewish population. That year, the city became part of the then-newly established state of Israel.

Safed has a large Haredi community and remains a center for Jewish religious studies. Safed today hosts the Ziv Hospital as well as the Zefat Academic College. Safed is a major subject in Israeli art, it hosts an Artists' Quarter. Several prominent art movements played a role in the city, most notably the École de Paris. However the Artists' quarter has declined since its golden age in the second half of the 20th century. Due to its high elevation, the city has warm summers and cold, often snowy winters. Its mild climate and scenic views have made Safed a popular holiday resort frequented by Israelis and foreign visitors. In 2022 it had a population of 38,029.

Biblical reference

Legend has it that Safed was founded by a son of Noah after the Great Flood. According to the Book of Judges (Judges 1:17), the area where Safed is located was assigned to the tribe of Naphtali.

It has been suggested that Jesus' assertion that "a city that is set on a hill cannot be hidden" referred to Safed.

History

Antiquity

Safed has been identified with Sepph, a fortified town in the Upper Galilee mentioned in the writings of the Roman-Jewish historian Josephus. Safed is mentioned in the Jerusalem Talmud as one of five elevated spots where fires were lit to announce the New Moon and festivals during the Second Temple period.

Crusader era

Pre-Crusader village and tower

Ruins in the modern day of the Citadel of Safed1871-77 PEF Survey of Palestine mapThe Crusader-Mamluk-era fortress of Safed

There is scarce information about Safed before the Crusader conquest. A document from the Cairo Geniza, composed in 1034, mentions a transaction made in Tiberias in 1023 by a certain Jew, Musa ben Hiba ben Salmun with the nisba (Arabic descriptive suffix) "al-Safati" (of Safed), indicating the presence of a Jewish community living alongside Muslims in Safed in the 11th century. According to the Muslim historian Ibn Shaddad (d. 1285), at the beginning of the 12th century, a "flourishing village" beneath a tower called Burj Yatim had existed at the site of Safed on the eve of the Crusaders' capture of the area in 1101–1102 and that "nothing" about the village was mentioned in "the early Islamic history books". Although Ibn Shaddad mistakenly attributes the tower's construction to the Knights Templar, the modern historian Ronnie Ellenblum asserts that the tower was likely built during the early Muslim period (mid-7th–11th centuries).

First Crusader period

The Frankish chronicler William of Tyre noted the presence of a burgus (tower) in Safed, which he called "Castrum Saphet" or "Sephet", in 1157. Safed was the seat of a castellany (area governed by a castle) by at least 1165, when its castellan (appointed castle governor) was Fulk, constable of Tiberias. The castle of Safed was purchased from Fulk by King Amalric of Jerusalem in 1168. He subsequently reinforced the castle and transferred it to the Templars in the same year. Theoderich the Monk, describing his visit to the area in 1172, noted that the expanded fortification of the castle of Safed was meant to check the raids of the Turks (the Turkic Zengid dynasty ruled the area east of the Kingdom). Testifying to the considerable expansion of the castle, the chronicler Jacques de Vitry (d. 1240) wrote that it was practically built anew. The remains of Fulk's castle can now be found under the citadel excavations, on a hill above the old city.

In the estimation of modern historian Havré Barbé, the castellany of Safed comprised approximately 376 square kilometers (145 sq mi). According to Barbé, its western boundary straddled the domains of Acre, including the fief of St. George de la Beyne, which included Sajur and Beit Jann, and the fief of Geoffrey le Tor, which included Akbara and Hurfeish, and in the southwest ran north of Maghar and Sallama. Its northern boundary was marked by the Nahal Dishon (Wadi al-Hindaj) stream, its southern boundary was likely formed near Wadi al-Amud, separating it from the fief of Tiberias, while its eastern limits were the marshes of the Hula Valley and upper Jordan Valley. There were several Jewish communities in the castellany of Safed, as testified in the accounts of Jewish pilgrims and chroniclers between 1120 and 1293. Benjamin of Tudela, who visited the town in 1170, does not record any Jews living in Safed proper.

Ayyubid interregnum

Safed was captured by the Ayyubids led by Sultan Saladin in 1188 after a month-long siege, following the Battle of Hattin in 1187. Saladin ultimately allowed its residents to relocate to Tyre. He granted Safed and Tiberias as an iqta (akin to a fief) to Sa'd al-Din Mas'ud ibn Mubarak (d. 1211), the son of his niece, after which it was bequeathed to Sa'd al-Din's son Ahmad. Samuel ben Samson, who visited the town in 1210, mentions the existence of a Jewish community of at least fifty there. He also noted that two Muslims guarded and maintained the cave tomb of a rabbi, Hanina ben Horqano, in Safed. The iqta of Safed was taken from the family of Sa'd al-Din by the Ayyubid emir of Damascus, al-Mu'azzam Isa, in 1217. Two years later, during the Crusader siege of Damietta, al-Mu'azzam Isa had the Safed castle demolished to prevent its capture and reuse by potential future Crusaders.

Second Crusader period

As an outcome of the treaty negotiations between the Crusader leader Theobald I of Navarre and the Ayyubid al-Salih Ismail, Emir of Damascus, in 1240 Safed once again passed to Crusader control. Afterward, the Templars were tasked with rebuilding the Citadel of Safed, with efforts spearheaded by Benedict of Alignan, Bishop of Marseille. The rebuilding is recorded in a short treatise, De constructione castri Saphet, from the early 1260s. The reconstruction was completed at the considerable expense of 40,000 bezants in 1243. The new fortress was larger than the original, with a capacity for 2,200 soldiers in time of war, and with a resident force of 1,700 in peacetime. The garrison's goods and services were provided by the town or large village growing rapidly beneath the fortress, which, according to Benoit's account, contained a market, "numerous inhabitants" and was protected by the fortress. The settlement also benefited from trade with travelers on the route between Acre and the Jordan Valley, which passed through Safed.

Mamluk period

The Red Mosque in Safed, 2001. It was originally built by the Mamluk sultan Baybars in 1275, and renovated or expanded by the Ottomans in 1671/72

The Ayyubids of Egypt had been supplanted by the Mamluks in 1250 and the Mamluk sultan Baybars entered Syria with his army in 1261. Thereafter, he led a series of campaigns over several years against Crusader strongholds across the Syrian coastal mountains. Safed, with its position overlooking the Jordan River and allowing the Crusaders early warnings of Muslim troop movements in the area, had been a consistent aggravation for the Muslim regional powers. After a six-week siege, Baybars captured Safed in July 1266, after which he had nearly the entire garrison killed. The siege occurred during a Mamluk military campaign to subdue Crusader strongholds in Palestine and followed a failed attempt to capture the Crusaders' coastal stronghold of Acre. Unlike the Crusader fortresses along the coastline, which were demolished upon their capture by the Mamluks, Baybars spared the fortress of Safed. He likely preserved it because of the strategic value stemming from its location on a high mountain and its isolation from other Crusader fortresses. Moreover, Baybars determined that in the event of a renewed Crusader invasion of the coastal region, a strongly fortified Safed could serve as an ideal headquarters to confront the Crusader threat. In 1268, he had the fortress repaired, expanded and strengthened. He commissioned numerous building works in the town of Safed, including caravanserais, markets and baths, and converted the town's church into a mosque. The mosque, called Jami al-Ahmar (the Red Mosque), was completed in 1275. By the end of Baybars's reign, Safed had developed into a prosperous town and fortress.

Baybars assigned fifty-four mamluks, at the head of whom was Emir Ala al-Din Kandaghani, to oversee the management of Safed and its dependencies. From the time of its capture, the city was made the administrative center of Mamlakat Safad, one of seven mamlakas (provinces), whose governors were typically appointed from Cairo, which made up Mamluk Syria. Initially, its jurisdiction corresponded roughly with the Crusader castellany. After the fall of the Montfort Castle to the Mamluks in 1271, the castle and its dependency, the Shaghur district, were incorporated into Mamlakat Safad. The territorial jurisdiction of the mamlaka eventually spanned the entire Galilee and the lands further south down to Jenin.

The Mamluk mausoleum of Zawiyat Banat Hamid, originally built in 1372

The geographer al-Dimashqi, who died in Safed in 1327, wrote around 1300 that Baybars built a "round tower and called it Kullah ..." after leveling the old fortress. The tower was built in three stories, and provided with provisions, halls, and magazines. Under the structure, a cistern collected enough rainwater to regularly supply the garrison. The governor of Safed, Emir Baktamur al-Jukandar (the Polomaster; r. 1309–1311), built a mosque later called after him in the northeastern section of the city. The geographer Abu'l Fida (1273–1331), the ruler of Hama, described Safed as follows:

was a town of medium size. It has a very strongly built castle, which dominates the Lake of Tabariyyah . There are underground watercourses, which bring drinking-water up to the castle-gate...Its suburbs cover three hills... Since the place was conquered by Al Malik Adh Dhahir from the Franks , it has been made the central station for the troops who guard all the coast-towns of that district."

The native qadi (Islamic head judge) of Safed, Shams al-Din al-Uthmani, composed a text about Safed called Ta'rikh Safad (the History of Safed) during the rule of its governor Emir Alamdar (r. 1372–1376). The extant parts of the work consisted of ten folios largely devoted to Safed's distinguishing qualities, its dependent villages, agriculture, trade and geography, with no information about its history. His account reveals the city's dominant features were its citadel, the Red Mosque and its towering position over the surrounding landscape. He noted Safed lacked "regular urban planning", madrasas (schools of Islamic law), ribats (hostels for military volunteers) and defensive walls, and that its houses were clustered in disarray and its streets were not distinguishable from its squares. He attributed the city's shortcomings to the dearth of generous patrons. A device for transporting buckets of water called the satura existed in the city mainly to supply the soldiers of the citadel; surplus water was distributed to the city's residents. Al-Uthmani praised the natural beauty of Safed, its therapeutic air, and noted that its residents took strolls in the surrounding gorges and ravines.

The Black Death brought about a decline in the population in Safed from 1348 onward. There is little available information about the city and its dependencies during the last century of Mamluk rule (c. 1418 – c. 1516), though travelers' accounts describe a general decline precipitated by famine, plagues, natural disasters and political instability.

Ottoman era

Sixteenth-century prosperity

The Red Mosque

The Ottomans conquered Mamluk Syria following their victory at the Battle of Marj Dabiq in northern Syria in 1516. Safed's inhabitants sent the keys of the town citadel to Sultan Selim I after he captured Damascus. No fighting was recorded around Safed, which was bypassed by Selim's army on the way to Mamluk Egypt. The sultan had placed the district of Safed under the jurisdiction of the Mamluk governor of Damascus, Janbirdi al-Ghazali, who defected to the Ottomans. Rumors in 1517 that Selim was slain by the Mamluks precipitated a revolt against the newly appointed Ottoman governor by the townspeople of Safed, which resulted in wide-scale killings, many of which targeted the city's Jews, who were viewed as sympathizers of the Ottomans. Safed became the capital of the Safed Sanjak, roughly corresponding with Mamlakat Safad but excluding most of the Jezreel Valley and the area of Atlit, part of the larger province of Damascus Eyalet.

In 1525/26, the population of Safed consisted of 633 Muslim families, 40 Muslim bachelors, 26 Muslim religious persons, nine Muslim disabled, 232 Jewish families, and 60 military families. In 1549, under Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent, a wall was constructed and troops were garrisoned to protect the city. In 1553/54, the population consisted of 1,121 Muslim households, 222 Muslim bachelors, 54 Muslim religious leaders, 716 Jewish households, 56 Jewish bachelors, and 9 disabled persons. At least in the 16th century, Safed was the only kasaba (city) in the sanjak and in 1555 was divided into nineteen mahallas (quarters), seven Muslim and twelve Jewish. The total population of Safed rose from 926 households in 1525–26 to 1,931 households in 1567–1568. Among these, the Jewish population rose from a mere 233 households in 1525 to 945 households in 1567–1568. The Muslim quarters were Sawawin, located west of the fortress; Khandaq (the moat); Ghazzawiyah, which had likely been settled by Gazans; Jami' al-Ahmar (the Red Mosque), located south of the fortress and named for the local mosque; al-Akrad, which dated to the Middle Ages and continued to exist through the 19th century, and whose inhabitants mainly were Kurds; al-Wata (the lower), the southernmost quarter of Safed and situated below the city; and al-Suq, named after the market or mosque located within the quarter. The Jewish quarters were all situated west of the fortress. Each quarter was named for the place of origin of its inhabitants: Purtuqal (Portugal), Qurtubah (Cordoba), Qastiliyah (Castille), Musta'rib (Jews of local, Arabic-speaking origin), Magharibah (northwestern Africa), Araghun ma' Qatalan (Aragon and Catalonia), Majar (Hungary), Puliah (Apulia), Qalabriyah (Calabria), Sibiliyah (Seville), Taliyan (Italian) and Alaman (German).

Hebrew book printed by Eliezer Ashkenazi in 1579

In the 15th and 16th centuries there were several well-known Sufis (mystics) of ibn Arabi living in Safed. The Sufi sage Ahmad al-Asadi (1537–1601) established a zawiya (Sufi lodge) called Sadr Mosque in the city. Safed became a center of Kabbalah (Jewish mysticism) during the 16th century.

After the expulsion of the Jews from Spain in 1492, many prominent rabbis found their way to Safed, among them the Kabbalists Isaac Luria and Moses ben Jacob Cordovero; Joseph Caro, the author of the Shulchan Aruch; and Solomon Alkabetz, composer of the Shabbat hymn "Lekha Dodi".

The kabbalistic response to the trauma of the exile varied widely, ranging from a quietistic approach adopted by the Italian and North African kabbalists, to a more activist apocalyptic approach which sought signs of the imminent redemption. The expulsion was seen by many as the tribulation that would herald the beginning of the messianic age as foretold in rabbinic literature. The spiritualization of religious life culminated in the creative outburst of religious innovation in Safed in the second half of the sixteenth century as a response to the expulsion. This spiritual revolution spread from Safed and transformed the practice of Judaism throughout the Jewish world.

The influx of Sephardic Jews—reaching its peak under the rule of sultans Suleiman the Magnificent and Selim II—made Safed a global center for Jewish learning and a regional center for trade throughout the 15th and 16th centuries. Sephardi Jews and other Jewish immigrants by then outnumbered Musta'arabi Jews in the city.

During this period, the Jewish community developed the textile industry in Safed, transforming the town into an important and lucrative wool production and textile manufacturing centre. There were more than 7000 Jews in Safed in 1576 when Murad III proclaimed the forced deportation of 1000 wealthy Jewish families to Cyprus to boost the island's economy. There is no evidence that the edict or a second one issued the following year for removing 500 families, was enforced. In 1584, there were 32 synagogues registered in the town.

A Hebrew printing press, the first in West Asia, was established in Safed in 1577 by Eliezer ben Isaac Ashkenazi of Prague and his son, Isaac.

Political decline, attacks and natural disasters

Originally built as a caravanserai by the Ottomans in the mid-1700s, the "Saraya" (house of the governor) currently serves as a community centre

By the early part of the 17th century, Safed was a small town. In 1602, the paramount chief of the Druze in Mount Lebanon, Fakhr al-Din II of the Ma'n dynasty, was appointed the sanjak-bey (district governor) of Safed, in addition to his governorship of neighbouring Sidon-Beirut Sanjak to the north. In the preceding years, the Safed Sanjak had entered a state of ruin and desolation and was often the scene of conflict between the local Druze and Shia Muslim peasants and the Ottoman authorities. By 1605, Fakhr al-Din had established peace and security in the sanjak, with highway brigandage and Bedouin raids having ceased under his watch. Trade and agriculture consequently thrived and the population prospered. He formed close relations with the city's Sunni Muslim ulama (religious scholars), particularly the mufti, al-Khalidi al-Safadi of the Hanafi school of fiqh (Islamic jurisprudence), who became his practical court historian.

The Ottomans drove Fakhr al-Din into European exile in 1613, but his son Ali became governor in 1615. Fakhr al-Din returned to his domains in 1618 and five years later regained the governorship of Safed, which the Ma'n dynasty had lost, after his victory against the governor of Damascus at the Battle of Anjar. In c. 1625, the orientalist Franciscus Quaresmius spoke of Safed being inhabited "chiefly by Hebrews, who had their synagogues and schools, and for whose sustenance contributions were made by the Jews in other parts of the world." According to the historian Louis Finkelstein, the Jewish community of Safed was plundered by the Druze under Mulhim ibn Yunus, nephew of Fakhr al-Din. Five years later, Fakhr al-Din was routed by the Ottoman governor of Damascus, Mulhim abandoned Safed, and its Jewish residents returned.

The Druze again attacked the Jews of Safed in 1656. During the power struggle between Fakhr al-Din's heirs (1658–1667), each faction attacked Safed. In the intra-communal turmoil among the Druze following the death of Mulhim, the 1660 destruction of Safed targeted the Jews there and in Tiberias; only a few of the former Jewish residents returned to the city before 1662. Survivors relocated mainly to Sidon or Jerusalem.

Safed Sanjak and the neighbouring Sidon-Beirut Sanjak to the north were administratively separated from Damascus in 1660 to form the Sidon Eyalet, of which Safed was briefly the capital. The province was created by the imperial government to check the power of the Druze of Mount Lebanon, as well as the Shia of Jabal Amil.

As nearby Tiberias remained desolate for several decades, Safed gained a key position among Galilean Jewish communities. In 1665, the Sabbatai Sevi movement arrived in Safed. In the 1670s, the account of the Turkish traveller Evliya Çelebi recorded that Safed contained three caravanserais, several mosques, seven zawiyas, and six hammams. The Red Mosque was restored by Safed's governor Salih Bey in 1671/72, at which point it measured about 120 by 80 feet (37 m × 24 m), had all masonry interior, a cistern to collect rainwater in the winter for drinking and a tall minaret over its southern entrance; the minaret had been destroyed before the end of the 17th century.

The Tiberias-based sheikh Zahir al-Umar of the local Arab Zaydan clan, whose father Umar al-Zaydani had been the governor and tax farmer of Safed in 1702–1706, wrested control of Safed and its tax farm from its native strongman, Muhammad Naf'i, through military pressure and diplomacy by 1740. The Naf'i, Shahin, and Murad families continued to farm the taxes of Safed and its countryside into the 1760s as Zahir's subordinates. By the 1760s, Zahir entrusted Safed to his son Ali, who made the town his headquarters. After Zahir was killed by Ottoman imperial forces, the governor of Sidon, Jazzar Pasha, moved to oust Zahir's sons from their Galilee strongholds. Ali made a final, unsuccessful stand against Jazzar Pasha from Safed, which was afterward captured and garrisoned by the governor. The simultaneous rise of Acre, established by Zahir as his capital in 1750 and which served as the capital of the Sidon Eyalet under Jazzar Pasha (1775–1804) and his successors, Sulayman Pasha al-Adil (1805–1819) and Abdullah Pasha (1820–1831), contributed to the political decline of Safed. It became a subdistrict center with limited local influence, belonging to the Acre Sanjak .

Underdevelopment and a series of natural disasters further contributed to Safed's decline during the 17th–mid-19th centuries. An outbreak of plague decimated the population in 1742 and the Near East earthquakes of 1759 left the city in ruins, killing 200 residents. An influx of Russian Jews in 1776 and 1781, and of Lithuanian Jews of the Perushim movement in 1809 and 1810, reinvigorated the Jewish community. In 1812, another plague killed 80% of the Jewish population. Following Abdullah Pasha of Acre's ordered killing of his Jewish vizier Haim Farhi, who served the same post under Jazzar and Sulayman, the governor imprisoned the Jewish residents of Safed on 12 August 1820, accusing them of tax evasion under the concealment of Farhi; they were released upon paying a ransom. The war between Abdullah Pasha and the influential Farhi brothers in Constantinople and Damascus in 1822–1823 prompted Jewish flight from the Galilee in general, though by 1824 Jewish immigrants were steadily moving to the city.

The forces of Muhammad Ali of Egypt wrested control of the Levant from the Ottomans in 1831 and in the same year many Jews who had fled the Galilee, including Safed, under Abdullah Pasha returned as a result of Muhammad Ali's liberal policies toward Jews. Safed was raided by Druze in 1833 at the approach of Ibrahim Pasha, the Egyptian governor of the Levant. In the following year, the Muslim notables of the city, led by Salih al-Tarshihi, opposed to the Egyptian policy of conscription, joined the peasants' revolt in Palestine. During the revolt, rebels plundered the city for over thirty days. Emir Bashir Shihab II of Mount Lebanon and his Druze fighters entered its environs in support of the Egyptians and compelled Safed's leaders to surrender. The Galilee earthquake of 1837 killed about half of Safed's 4,000-strong Jewish community, destroyed all fourteen of its synagogues and prompted the flight of 600 Perushim for Jerusalem; the surviving Sephardic and Hasidic Jews mostly remained. Among the 2,158 residents of Safed who had died, 1,507 were Ottoman subjects, the rest foreign citizens. The Jewish quarter was situated on the hillside and was particularly hard hit; the southern and Muslim section of the town experienced considerably less damage. The following year, in 1838, Druze rebels and local Muslims raided Safed for three days.

Tanzimat reforms and revival

Safed in the 19th century

Ottoman rule was restored across the Levant in 1840. The Empire-wide Tanzimat reforms, which were first adopted in the 1840s, brought about a steady rise in Safed's population and economy. In 1849 Safed had a total estimated population of 5,000, of whom 2,940-3,440 were Muslims, 1,500-2,000 were Jews and 60 were Christians. The population was estimated at 7,000 in 1850–1855, of whom 2,500-3,000 were Jews. The Jewish population increased in the last half of the 19th century by immigration from Persia, Morocco, and Algeria. Moses Montefiore (d. 1885) visited Safed seven times and financed much of the rebuilding of Safed's synagogues and Jewish houses.

In 1864 the Sidon Eyalet was absorbed into the new province of Syria Vilayet. In the new province, Safed remained part of the Acre Sanjak and served as the center of a kaza (third-level subdivision), whose jurisdiction covered the villages around the city and the subdistrict of Mount Meron (Jabal Jarmaq). In the Ottoman survey of Syria in 1871, Safed had 1,395 Muslim households, 1,197 Jewish households and three Christian households. The survey recorded a relatively high number of businesses in the city, namely 227 shops, fifteen mills, fourteen bakeries and four olive oil factories, an indicator of Safed's long-established role as an economic hub for the people of the Upper Galilee, the Hula Valley, the Golan Heights and parts of modern-day South Lebanon. Through the late 19th century, Safed's merchants served as middlemen in the Galilee grain trade, selling the wheat, pulses and fruit grown by the peasants of the Galilee to the traders of Acre, who in turn exported at least part of the merchandise to Europe. Safed also maintained extensive trade with the port of Tyre. The bulk of trade in Safed, which was traditionally dominated by the city's Jews, largely passed to its Muslim merchants during the late 19th century, particularly trade with the local villagers; Muslim traders offered higher credit to the peasants and were able to obtain government assistance for debt repayments. The wealth of Safed's Muslims increased and a number of the city's leading Muslim families made an opportunity from the Ottoman Land Code of 1858 to purchase extensive tracts around Safed. The major Muslim landowning clans were the Soubeh, Murad and Qaddura. The latter owned about 50,000 dunams toward the end of the century, including eight villages around Safed.

Muslim quarter of Safed circa 1908

In 1878 the municipal council of Safed was established. In 1888 the Acre Sanjak, including the Safed Kaza, became part of the new province of Beirut Vilayet, an administrative state of affairs which persisted until the Empire's fall in 1918. The centralization and stability brought by the imperial reforms solidified the political status and practical influence of Safed in the Upper Galilee. The Ottomans developed Safed into a center for Sunni Islam to counterbalance the influence of non-Muslim communities in its environs and the Shia Muslims of Jabal Amil. Along with the three major landowning families, the Muslim ulema (religious scholarly) families of Nahawi, Qadi, Mufti and Naqib comprised the urban elite (a'yan) of the city. The Sunni courts of Safed arbitrated over cases in Akbara, Ein al-Zeitun and as far away as Mejdel Islim. According to the late 19th-century account of British missionary E. W. G. Masterman, the Muslim families of Safed included Kurds, Damascenes, Algerians, Bedouin from the Jordan Valley, and people from the villages around Safed. Many Damascenes had been settled in the city by Baybars when he conquered Safed in 1266. Until the late 19th century the Muslims of Safed maintained strong social and cultural connections with Damascus. The government settled Algerian and Circassian exiles in the countryside of Safed in the 1860s and 1878, respectively, possibly in an effort to strengthen the Muslim character of the area. At least two Muslim families in the city itself, Arabi and Delasi, were of Algerian origin, though they accounted for a small proportion of the city's overall Muslim population. Masterman noted that the Muslims of Safed were conservative, "active and hardy", who "dress well and move about more than the people from the region of southern Palestine". They lived mainly in three quarters of the city: al-Akrad, whose residents were mostly laborers, Sawawin, home to the Muslim a'yan households and the city's Catholic community, and al-Wata, whose inhabitants were largely shopkeepers and minor traders. The entire Jewish population lived in the Gharbieh (western) quarter.

Melkite Greek Catholic Church in Safed

Safed's population reached over 15,000 in 1879, 8,000 of whom were Muslims and 7,000 Jews. A population list from about 1887 showed that Safad had 24,615 inhabitants; 2,650 Jewish households, 2,129 Muslim households and 144 Roman Catholic households. Arab families in Safed whose social status rose as a result of the Tanzimat reforms included the Asadi, whose presence in Safed dated to the 16th century, Hajj Sa'id, Hijazi, Bisht, Hadid, Khouri, a Christian family whose progenitor moved to the city from Mount Lebanon during the 1860 civil war, and Sabbagh, a long-established Christian family in the city related to Zahir al-Umar's fiscal adviser Ibrahim al-Sabbagh; many members of these families became officials in the civil service, local administrations or businessmen. When the Ottomans established a branch of the Agricultural Bank in the city in 1897, all of its board members were resident Arabs, the most influential of whom were Husayn Abd al-Rahim Effendi, Hajj Ahmad al-Asadi, As'ad Khouri and Abd al-Latif al-Hajj Sa'id. The latter two also became board members of the Chamber of Commerce and Agriculture branch opened in Safed in 1900. In the last decade of the 19th century, Safed contained 2,000 houses, four mosques, three churches, two public bathhouses, one caravanserai, two public sabils, nineteen mills, seven olive oil presses, ten bakeries, fifteen coffeehouses, forty-five stalls and three shops.

Mandatory Palestine

2018 street map overlaid on 1942 map 1942 map without overlaySafed street map (date 2018, white text and light grey streets) overlaid on a Survey of Palestine map (date 1942, black text, red urban areas and black streets), showing the relative locations of Safed to its three Mandate-era satellite villages: Al-Zahiriyya al-Tahta, Ein al-Zeitun and Biriyya.

Safed was the centre of Safad Subdistrict. According to a census conducted in 1922 by the British Mandate authorities, Safed had a population of 8,761 inhabitants, consisting of 5,431 Muslims, 2,986 Jews, 343 Christians and others. Safed remained a mixed city during the British Mandate for Palestine and ethnic tensions between Jews and Arabs rose during the 1920s. During the 1929 Palestine riots, Safed and Hebron became major clash points. In the Safed massacre 20 Jewish residents were killed by local Arabs. Safed was included in the part of Palestine recommended to be included in the proposed Jewish state under the United Nations Partition Plan for Palestine.

By 1948 the city was home to about 12,000 Arabs and about 1,700 Jews, mostly religious and elderly. On 5 January 1948, Arabs attacked the Jewish Quarter. In February 1948, during the civil war, Muslim Arabs attacked a Jewish bus attempting to reach Safed, and the Jewish quarter of the town came under siege by the Muslims. British forces that were present did not intervene. According to Martin Gilbert, food supplies ran short. "Even water and flour were in desperately short supply. Each day, the Arab attackers drew closer to the heart of the Jewish quarter, systematically blowing up Jewish houses as they pressed in on the central area."

On April 16, the same day that British forces evacuated Safed, 200 local Arab militiamen, supported by over 200 Arab Liberation Army soldiers, tried to take over the city's Jewish Quarter. They were repelled by the Jewish garrison, consisting of some 200 Haganah fighters, men and women, boosted by a Palmach platoon.

The Palmach ground attack on the Arab section of Safed took place on 6 May, as a part of Operation Yiftach. The first phase of the Palmach plan to capture Safed, was to secure a corridor through the mountains by capturing the Arab village of Biriyya. The Arab Liberation Army placed artillery pieces on a hill adjacent to the Jewish quarter and started its shelling. The Palmach's Third Battalion failed to take the main objective, the "citadel", but "terrified" the Arab population sufficiently to prompt further flight, as well as urgent appeals for outside help and an effort to obtain a truce.

The secretary-general of the Arab League Abdul Rahman Hassan Azzam stated that the goal of Plan Dalet was to drive out the inhabitants of Arab villages along the Syrian and Lebanese frontiers, particularly places on the roads by which Arab regular forces could enter the country. He noted that Acre and Safed were in particular danger. However, the appeals for help were ignored, and the British, now less than a week away from the end of the British Mandate of Palestine, also did not intervene against the second and final Haganah attack, which began on the evening of 9 May, with a mortar barrage on key sites in Safed. Following the barrage, Palmach infantry, in bitter fighting, took the citadel, Beit Shalva and the police fort, Safed's three dominant buildings. Through 10 May, Haganah mortars continued to pound the Arab neighbourhoods, causing fires in the marked area and in the fuel dumps, which exploded. "The Palmah 'intentionally left open the exit routes for the population to "facilitate" their exodus...' " According to Gilbert, "The Arabs of Safed began to leave, including the commander of the Arab forces, Adib Shishakli (later Prime Minister of Syria). With the police fort on Mount Canaan isolated, its defenders withdrew without fighting. The fall of Safed was a blow to Arab morale throughout the region... With the invasion of Palestine by regular Arab armies believed to be imminent – once the British had finally left in eleven or twelve days' time – many Arabs felt that prudence dictated their departure until the Jews had been defeated and they could return to their homes. According to Abbasi, the exodus of the Arabs of Safed had three phases. The first was due to the departure of the British compounded by the failure of an attack on the Jewish quarter and a disagreement between the Jordanian and Syrian commanders. The second was due to the fall of nearby Ein al-Zeitun and the massacre that Jewish forces committed there. The third was due to the deliberate creation of panic by Jewish forces.

Some 12,000 Arabs, with some estimates reaching 15,000, fled Safed and were a "heavy burden on the Arab war effort". Among them was the family of Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas. The city was fully under the control of Jewish paramilitary forces by May 11, 1948.

Early in June, Jewish dignitaries from Safed journeyed to Tel Aviv to ask the government to block the return of Arabs to the city, threatening to abandon it if the latter were allowed back. They reasoned that since most of the Arabs' property had been seized or stolen in the meantime, the Jewish community would be unable to withstand the pressure of the returnees' demands for restitution.

  • Safad 1937 Safad 1937
  • Mandate Police station at Mount Canaan, above Safed (1948) Mandate Police station at Mount Canaan, above Safed (1948)
  • Safed (1948) Safed (1948)
  • Safed Citadel (1948) Safed Citadel (1948)
  • Safad Municipal Police Station after the battle (1948) Safad Municipal Police Station after the battle (1948)
  • Bussel House, Safad, 11 April 1948: Yiftach Brigade headquarters Bussel House, Safad, 11 April 1948: Yiftach Brigade headquarters
  • View of Safed from Mount Canaan (1948) View of Safed from Mount Canaan (1948)
  • Mandate administration building on the eastern outskirts of Safed (1948) Mandate administration building on the eastern outskirts of Safed (1948)
  • Yiftach Brigade, with their Hotchkiss machine guns, based at Bussel House, 1948 Yiftach Brigade, with their Hotchkiss machine guns, based at Bussel House, 1948
  • Druze parading in Safed after the Palmach victory in 1948 Druze parading in Safed after the Palmach victory in 1948

State of Israel

In 1974, 25 Israeli Jews (mainly school children) from Safed, were killed in the Ma'alot massacre. Over 1990s and early 2000s, the town accepted thousands of Russian Jewish immigrants and Ethiopian Beta Israel. In July 2006, "Katyusha" rockets fired by Hezbollah from Southern Lebanon hit Safed, killing one man and injuring others. Many residents fled the town for the duration of the conflict. On July 22, four people were injured in a rocket attack.

The town has retained its unique status as a Jewish studies centre, incorporating numerous facilities. In 2010, eighteen senior rabbis led by the chief rabbi of Safed, Shmuel Eliyahu, issued an edict urging the city's residents not to rent or sell property to Arabs, warning of an "Arab takeover"; Arabs constitute a fractional proportion of the population, and the statement was generally perceived to be directed at the 1,300 Arab students enrolled at Zefat Academic College.

Demographics

In 2008, the population of Safed was 32,000. According to CBS figures in 2001, the ethnic makeup of the city was 99.2% Jewish and non-Arab, with no significant Arab population. 43.2% of the residents were 19 years of age or younger, 13.5% between 20 and 29, 17.1% between 30 and 44, 12.5% from 45 to 59, 3.1% from 60 to 64, and 10.5% 65 years of age or older.

The city is home to a relatively large community of Haredi Jews. The village of Akbara in the city's southwestern outskirts, which had a population of about 500 Arab Muslims, most of whom belonged to a single clan, the Halihal, is under Safed's municipal jurisdiction.

Seismology

The city is located above the Dead Sea Transform, and is one of the cities in Israel most at risk of earthquakes (along with Tiberias, Beit She'an, Kiryat Shmona, and Eilat).

Geography

Safed is 40 kilometers (25 mi) east of Acre and 20 kilometers (12 mi) north of Tiberias.

Climate

Safed has a Mediterranean climate (Köppen climate classification: Csa) with hot, dry summers and cool, rainy and occasionally snowy winters. The city receives 682 mm (27 in) of precipitation per year. Summers are rainless and hot with an average high temperature of 31 °C (88 °F) and an average low temperature of 20 °C (68 °F). Winters are cool and wet, and precipitation is occasionally in the form of snow. Winters have an average high temperature of 10 °C (50 °F) and an average low temperature of 5 °C (41 °F).

Climate data for Safed (Har Kenaan) (2004-2022, extremes 1939–present)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 21.7
(71.1)
26.7
(80.1)
30.9
(87.6)
34.5
(94.1)
38.1
(100.6)
40.0
(104.0)
39.0
(102.2)
42.0
(107.6)
40.6
(105.1)
36.0
(96.8)
30.1
(86.2)
24.4
(75.9)
42.0
(107.6)
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 10.3
(50.5)
12.2
(54.0)
15.6
(60.1)
20.5
(68.9)
25.3
(77.5)
28.6
(83.5)
30.6
(87.1)
30.4
(86.7)
28.5
(83.3)
24.8
(76.6)
18.1
(64.6)
12.6
(54.7)
21.4
(70.5)
Daily mean °C (°F) 7.6
(45.7)
9.1
(48.4)
11.7
(53.1)
15.9
(60.6)
20.1
(68.2)
23.1
(73.6)
25.2
(77.4)
25.2
(77.4)
23.4
(74.1)
20.4
(68.7)
14.8
(58.6)
10.0
(50.0)
17.2
(63.0)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) 5.0
(41.0)
6.0
(42.8)
7.9
(46.2)
11.3
(52.3)
14.9
(58.8)
17.6
(63.7)
19.9
(67.8)
20.0
(68.0)
18.4
(65.1)
15.9
(60.6)
11.4
(52.5)
7.3
(45.1)
13.0
(55.3)
Record low °C (°F) −6.4
(20.5)
−9.0
(15.8)
−3.4
(25.9)
0.2
(32.4)
5.7
(42.3)
8.7
(47.7)
12.2
(54.0)
13.0
(55.4)
10.7
(51.3)
5.9
(42.6)
−1.7
(28.9)
−3.2
(26.2)
−9.0
(15.8)
Average rainfall mm (inches) 182.1
(7.17)
122.9
(4.84)
61.4
(2.42)
34.8
(1.37)
12.3
(0.48)
0.1
(0.00)
0.0
(0.0)
0.8
(0.03)
3.3
(0.13)
21.3
(0.84)
72.3
(2.85)
143.4
(5.65)
654.7
(25.78)
Average rainy days (≥ 0.1 mm) 14.3 11.3 9.7 5.0 2.9 0.2 0.0 0.1 1.1 4.3 7.8 11.3 67.9
Source: Israel Meteorological Service

Education

Beit Knesset Abuhav, one of the city's historic synagogues
Street art in Safed

According to CBS, the city has 25 schools and 6,292 students. There are 18 elementary schools with a student population of 3,965, and 11 high schools with a student population of 2,327. 40.8% of Safed's 12th graders were eligible for a matriculation (bagrut) certificate in 2001. The Zefat Academic College, originally an extension of Bar-Ilan University, was granted independent accreditation by Israel's Council of Higher Education in 2007. For the 2011–2012 school year, the college began a program designed specifically for Haredi Judaism. It was created in order to allow haredi women living in the Upper Galilee access to higher education, while still maintaining strict religious practice. The program accomplishes this goal through separate classes for male and female students. The classes are also taught during certain hours as to allow women to fulfill other aspects of their religiosity.

In October 2011, Israel's fifth medical school opened in Safed, housed in a renovated historic building in the centre of town that was once a branch of Hadassah Hospital. The Azrieli Faculty of Medicine opened in 2011 as an extension of Bar-Ilan University, created to train physicians in the Upper Galilee region. The schools conducts clinical instructions in six hospitals in the region:

On March 8, 2021, the Israeli Prime-Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced that Israel is to establish its 10th university in Safed, after a growing need for a university in the northern district of Israel. Plans have been in place to establish a university in the Galilee since 2005, but no progress was made until 2015 when Netanyahu vowed to start working on the project during a Galilee Conference.

As one of Judaism's Holy Cities, Safed hosts several Yeshivas. The Haredi Yeshivat Tzfat and associated institutions are headed by Rabbi Mordechai Kaplan. The Religious Zionist Hesder Yeshiva of Tzfat was founded in 1997 by Rabbi Benyahu Broner and is today headed by Rabbi Shemuel Eliyahu with approximately 120 students. For women, Sharei Bina is a midrasha (seminary) offering a one-year post high school program, with an increased focus on Jewish spirituality - including formal study of Kabbalistic topics. Chabad has several institutions including Machon Alte for women, and the advanced Kollel Tzemach Tzedek.

The Livnot U'Lehibanot program in Safed provides an open, non-denominational atmosphere for young Jewish adults that combines volunteering, hiking and study with exploring Jewish heritage.

Culture

Beit Castel gallery in the artists' colony

Artists' colony

Main article: Artists Quarter of Safed

In the 1950s and 1960s, Safed was known as Israel's art capital. An artists' colony established in the old Arab quarter was a hub of creativity that drew artists from around the country, among them Yitzhak Frenkel, Yosl Bergner, Moshe Castel, Menachem Shemi, Shimshon Holzman and Rolly Schaffer.

In honor of the opening of the Glitzenstein Art Museum in 1953, the artist Mane Katz donated eight of his paintings to the city. Today the area contains a large number of galleries and workshops run by individual artists and art vendors. There are several museums and galleries that function in the historical homes of major Israeli artists such as the Frenkel Frenel Museum and the Beit Castel gallery (in Moshe Castel's former home).

Music

In the 1960s, Safed was home to the country's top nightclubs, hosting the debut performances of Naomi Shemer, Aris San, and other singers. Nowadays, Safed has been hailed as the klezmer capital of the world, hosting an annual Klezmer Festival that attracts top musicians from around the globe. A school of world music, especially eastern music called Maqamat operates in the Artists' Quarter of Safed.

Museums

  • The Beit Hameiri museum documents Safed's Jewish community over the past 200 years.
  • The Museum of the Art of Printing displays the first Hebrew printing press.

Historic sites

Scottish church in Safed
Citadel Hill

The Citadel Hill, in Hebrew HaMetzuda, rises east of the Old City and is named after the huge Crusader and then Mamluk castle built there during the 12th and 13th centuries, which continued in use until being totally destroyed by the 1837 earthquake. Its ruins are still visible. On the western slope beneath the ruins stands the former British police station, still pockmarked by bullet holes from the 1948 war.

Old Jewish Quarter

Before 1948, most of Safed's Jewish population used to live in the northern section of the old city. Currently home to 32 synagogues, it is also referred to as the synagogue quarter and includes synagogues named after prominent rabbis of the town: the Abuhav, Alsheich, Karo and two named for Rabbi Isaac Luria: one Ashkenazi, the other Sephardi.

Mamluk-period buildings

Further south are two monumental Mamluk-period buildings:

  • the Red Mosque with a khan (1276)
  • the Mamluk mausoleum, now used by freemasons. The mausoleum was built for a Mamluk na'ib (governor) of Safed, Muzaffar ad-Din Musa ibn Hajj al-Ruqtay Musa Muzaffar al-Din ibn Ruqtay al-Hajj, who died in AH 762/AD 1360–61).

Southeast of the Artists' Quarter is the Saraya, the fortified governor's residence built by Zahir al-Umar (1689/90–1775).

A report about the "obliteration of non-Jewish historic sites in Safed" mentions a mausoleum, an ancient grave and an ancient mosque that was converted into a clubhouse.

Notable people

Main article: List of notable people from Safed

Twin towns — sister cities

See also: List of twin towns and sister cities in Israel

Safed is twinned with:

Gallery

  • Monument to the Israeli soldiers who fought in the 1948 Arab–Israeli War Monument to the Israeli soldiers who fought in the 1948 Arab–Israeli War
  • Safed in 2009 Safed in 2009
  • View of Safed View of Safed
  • View of Safed View of Safed
  • Houses in Safed Houses in Safed
  • Doorway in Beit Castel gallery, Safed Doorway in Beit Castel gallery, Safed
Panorama Safed and Mount Meron
View to the east and Sea of Galilee

See also

  • List of clock towers – Safed has its own, the Ottoman clock tower of the "Saraya" (government house), inaugurated in 1900

Notes

  1. Abbas is quoted as saying "People were motivated to run away... They feared retribution from Zionist terrorist organizations – particularly from the Safed ones. Those of us from Safed especially feared that the Jews harbored old desires to avenge what happened during the 1929 uprising.... They realized the balance of forces was shifting and therefore the whole town was abandoned on the basis of this rationale – saving our lives and our belongings." In 2012 Abbas stated "I visited Safed before once. I want to see Safed. It's my right to see it, but not to live there."

References

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