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Golan Heights

Definition: Golan Heights

Golan Heights

Noun

1. A fortified hilly area between southern Lebanon and southern Syria; "artillery on the Golan Heights can dominate a large area of Israel".

Source: WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
 

 

Specialty Definition: Golan Heights

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

The Golan Heights is a plateau on the border of Israel, Lebanon, Jordan and Syria. It is one of the territories captured by Israel during the Six-Day War. The Golan Heights are still claimed by Syria.

Formed of volcanic rock it rises up to 1700 ft above the surrounding land, it drops off to the west to the Sea of Galilee, and the Jordan River, and to the south to the Yarmouk River. The Golan is usually divided into three regions: northern (between Nahals Sa'ar and Gilabon), central (between Nahals Gilabon and Dilayot), and southern (between Nahal Dilayot and the Yarmouk Valley).

               Sites in Blue are Israeli settlement communities.
               Sites in Black are Syrian communities.

Current status

The Heights were controlled by the Israeli army from 1967 until 1981 when the Knesset annexed the land with The Golan Heights Law. This annexation has not been internationally recognized, and the Golan is generally considered occupied territory. The 1981 law awarded Israeli citizenship to the Syrian citizens who remained in the area after the 1967 war.

A UN force - UNDOF (Disengagement Observer Force) was established in 1974 to supervise the implementation of the agreement and maintain the ceasefire with an area of separation.

The Syrian and Israeli governments are still contesting the ownership of the Heights but have not used overt military force since 1974. The great strategic value of the Heights both militarily and as a source of water means that a deal is uncertain.

Ancient History

Like a number of other regions, this area has been contested for thousands of years. During the 3rd Millennium BCE the Ammorites dominated and inhabited the Golan until the 2nd Millennium when they were substituted by the Arameans. Later known as Bashan, the area was contested between Israel (the northern of the two Jewish kingdoms extant at that time) and the Aramean kingdom since the 800s BCE. King Ahab of Israel (reigned 874-852 BCE) defeated Ben-Hadad I in the southern Golan.

In the 700s BCE the Assyrians gained control of the area, but were later replaced by the Babylonian and the Persian Empire. In the 5th century BCE, the region was settled by returning Jewish exiles from Babylon (modern Iraq).

In the 4th cenury BCE, the area came under the control of Alexander the Great and remained under Hellenestic rule, until captured by the Romans. In the mid 2nd century BCE, Judah Maccabee aided the local Jewish communities when they came under attack, although the area itself was not in Jewish hands.

The area was named Golan following the Roman occupation - The Greeks referred to the area as "Gaulanitis", the term used by the Romans, which led to the word "Golan". After the partioning of the Roman Empire in 391 AD, the Golan Heights became part of the Byzantine Empire. In 636, the area came under Arab control and quickly under the control of the Caliph in Baghdad. In the 15th and 16th C, Druze began to settle the northern Golan and the slopes of Mount Hermon. Sudanese, Algerians, Turkomans and Samarian Arabs also settled on the Heights. In the 16th centrury, the Ottoman Turks came in control of the area, and remained so until the end of World War I.

In the 1880s, a Jewish community called Ramataniya was started; it failed within a year.

History since World War I

According to the Franco-British Boundary Agreement of December 1920, most of the Golan Heights was ceded to French control. However, due to the actual presence of the British and delay in demarcating the border, the transfer did not occur until 1923 (the year after the British Mandate of Palestine came into being). In accordance with the same agreement, a nearby parcel of land that included the ancient site of Dan was transferred from Syria to Palestine early in 1924. The Golan Heights thus became part of the French Mandate of Syria and, when that mandate ended in 1944, part of Syria.

After the 1948-49 Arab-Israeli War, the Syrians fortified on the Heights, from which they shelled civilian targets in Israel and launched other attacks for the next eighteen years. 140 Israelis were killed and many more were injured in these attacks from 1949 to 1967. Although the Mixed Armistice Commission (which oversaw the implementation of the Israel-Syria Armistice Agreement) reported violations of the agreement by both sides, none of them involved Israeli attacks on civilian Syrian targets.

After the 1948-49 Arab-Israeli War, the Golan Heights were partly demilitarized by the Israel-Syria Armistice Agreement. Over the following years the Mixed Armistice Commission reported many violations by each side.

During the Six-Day War (1967), the IDF captured the Golan Heights on 9-10 June. The area which came under Israeli control as a result of the war is two geologically distinct areas: the Golan Heights proper (1,070 km2) and the slopes of the Mt. Hermon range (100 km2).

Before the Six-Day War the strategic heights of the Golan, which are approximately 3000 ft. above pre-1967 Israel, were used to frequently bombard civilian Israeli farming communities far below them, although Moshe Dayan (Israeli Defense Minister during the 1967 war) would later state that it was most often the result of Israeli provocations, albeit ones that occured within Israeli territory.

Most of the Golans' inhabitants, mainly Syrian Arabs, fled during the Six-Day War. For various political reasons, they have not been allowed to return. This has led to the splitting of many families.

Israel began settling the Golan almost immediately following the war. Kibbutz Merom Golan was founded in July 1967. By 1970 there were 12 Jewish communities on the Golan and by 2000 there were 33 settlements holding around 14,000 people. During the Yom Kippur War in 1973, Syrian forces captured parts of the Heights, before being pushed back beyond the border by a Israeli counterattack. Israel and Syria signed a ceasefire agreement in 1974 that left the Heights in Israeli hands with a demilitarized zone in Syrian civil, but not military control.

See also: UN Security Council Resolution 242, Six Day War, Yom Kippur War, Israeli settlement

External links

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Commercial Usage: Golan Heights

DomainTitle

Books

  • Jews, Pagans, and Christians in the Golan Heights (reference)

  • U.S. Official Statements: The Golan Heights (An Isp Series) (reference)

  • US forces on the Golan Heights and Israeli-Syrian security arrangements (reference)

    (more book examples)

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

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Non-Fiction Usage: Golan Heights

SubjectTopicQuote

Civil Liberties

Syria

The Government restricts travel near the Golan Heights. (references)

Economic History

Egypt

Israel also occupied the Sinai Peninsula, the Gaza Strip, the West Bank, and the Golan Heights. (references)

Syria

In December 1981, the Israeli Knesset voted to extend Israeli law to the part of the Golan Heights over which Israel retained control. (references)

Human Rights

Lebanon

In October 2000, Hizballah guerillas kidnaped 3 Israeli soldiers on patrol in the Sheb'a Farms area of the Golan Heights, and demanded that the Israeli Government release Lebanese political detainees held in Israeli prisons in return for the soldiers' release. (references)

Lebanon

On January 26, two members of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command (PFLP-GC) were killed and a third wounded by Israeli forces near Bastara Farm in Lebanon, which borders Sheb'a Farms (part of the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, which Lebanon claims as its territory). (references)

Political Economy

Lebanon

The withdrawal of the Israeli forces reduced level of conflict between Hizballah and the Israelis, although Lebanon in October began asserting a claim to Sheba farms, a small area of the Golan heights which Israel captured from Syria in 1967. Since that time, Hizballah has captured 3 Israeli soldiers and killed 3 others in sporadic attacks on this area. (references)

Worker Rights

Israel and the occupied territories

Labor laws apply to Palestinians in East Jerusalem and to the Syrian Druze living on the Golan Heights. (references)

Source: compiled by the editor from ICON Group International, Inc.; see credits.

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Frequency of Internet Expressions: Golan Heights

The following statistics estimate the number of searches per day across the major English-language search engines as identified by various trade publications. Hyperlinks lead to commercial use of the expression at Amazon.com.
 
ExpressionFrequency
per Day

golan heights

47

golan heights map

5
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

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Modern Translation: Golan Heights

Language Translations for "Golan Heights"; alternative meanings/domain in parentheses.

French

  

golan. (various references)

   

Japanese Kanji 

  

ゴラン高原 (golf, golf bag, golf club, golf links, golf swing, golf wear, golf window, golfer, gorge, gorilla). (various references)

   

Japanese Katakana 

  

ゴランこうげん. (various references)

   

Pig Latin

  

olangay eightshay.(various references)

Source: compiled by the editor from various translation references.

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Anagrams: Golan Heights

Scrabble® Enable2K-Verified Anagrams

Words within the letters "a-e-g-g-h-h-i-l-n-o-s-t"

-3 letters: athelings, gangliest, gelations, hailstone, hosteling, legations, loathings, sheathing.

-4 letters: anethols, antilogs, atheling, elations, ethanols, gahnites, gaslight, gasoline, gelating, gelatins, gelation, genitals, ghosting, gigatons, gloating, halogens, healings, histogen, holstein, hotlines, insheath, insolate, lathings, latigoes, leashing, legating, legation, lightens, loathing, loggiest, naggiest, neoliths, otalgies, seagoing, shealing, shoaling, solating, stealing, tangelos, toenails.

-5 letters: ageings, agelong, agonies.

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

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Copyright © Philip M. Parker, INSEAD. Terms of Use.