Eshtemoa synagogue


The Eshtemoa Synagogue, located 15 km south of Hebron in as-Samu, West Bank, refers to the remains of an ancient Jewish synagogue dating from around the 4th–5th century CE.

History

, identified as modern as-Samu, was an ancient city named in the Bible. During Roman and Byzantine period, Eshtemoa was described as a large Jewish village.
The Jerusalem Talmud recalls a man who lived there, named Ḥasa of Eshtemoa.
The remains of the synagogue were identified by L. A. Mayer and A. Reifenberg in 1934, in which site they describe a recess in the wall, once used as a Torah Ark. In 1969–70, a full excavation of the site revealed that the building occupied the most prominent site in the village. It was built in "broadhouse" style without columns and measured by. Entry was by any of three doors along its eastern side and one of the three niches recessed into the northern wall functioned as the Torah Ark. The building housed a mosaic floor and displayed external ornamental carvings. Four seven-branched menorahs were discovered carved onto door lintels and one of them is displayed in Jerusalem's Rockefeller Museum.
After the Muslim conquest, the synagogue was converted into a mosque and a mihrab was added. The western wall is still standing to a height of. Many architectural elements of the building have been reused in the modern village.