During the Ottman era (1500 CE), the Palestinain village was registered under the name Turmus Ayya (Arabic: ترمسعيا) in historical survey records. [6] This name orginates from the Roman era.
Michael Avi-Yonah and Shemuel Yeivin, noting phonetic similarities, have proposed that the name "Turmus" may have derived from the Latin word thermae, a public hot bath. According to this theory, the original name of the site was Ayya, and it is believed that the bath constructed there, presumably during Roman-Byzantine times, led to the addition of the name "Turmus" for the site.[7]
Geography
Turmus Ayya is located 22 kilometres (14 mi) northeast of the city of Ramallah. Its surrounding villages are Sinjil and Khirbet Abu Falah as well as the Israeli settlement of Shilo. Its jurisdiction is about 18,000 acres (73 km2). Turmus Ayya is 720 m above sea level. It is also the northernmost town in the Ramallah District. Turmus Ayya's climate is similar to that of the central West Bank, which is rainy in the winter, and hot and humid in the summer.
History
Potsherds from the late Iron Age (8 -7th century B.C.E.) period and later have been found, and it is estimated that the village has existed continuously since then.[10]
Turmus Ayya is generally accepted as being the Turbasaim in Crusader sources.[11] A little northeast of Turmus Ayya is Khirbet Ras ad-Deir/Deir el-Fikia, believed to be the Crusader village of Dere.[12][13] In 1145, half of the income from both villages were given to the Abbey of Mount Tabor, so that they could maintain the church at Sinjil.[14] In 1175, all three villages; Turmus Ayya, Dere and Sinjil, were transferred to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.[15]
Ottoman era
In 1517, Turmus Ayya was incorporated into the Ottoman Empire with the rest of Palestine, and in 1596 it appeared in the tax registers as being in the Nahiya of Quds of the Liwa of Quds. It had a population of 43 households, all Muslim, and paid taxes on wheat, barley, olive trees, vineyards, fruit trees, goats and/or beehives; a total of 7,200 akçe. 11/24 of the revenue went to a Waqf.[16]
In 1838, Edward Robinson noted that Turmus Aya was within the province of Jerusalem, but the province of Nablus was just north of it.[17] It was further noted that it was situated "on a low rocky mound in the level valley."[18]
In Turmus Ayya's cemetery, several graves have headstones that date back to the Ottoman Era.
French explorer Victor Guérin visited the village in 1870 and found ancient cisterns, a broken lintel with a garland carved upon it and the fragments of a column.[19] He found about seven hundred inhabitants The village was administered by two sheikhs and divided into two different areas. Since the ancient cisterns were almost completely dry, women fetched water from Ain Siloun or Ain Sindjel.[20] An official Ottoman village list from about 1870 showed that "Turmus Aya" had a total of 88 houses and a population of 301, though the population count included men only.[21][22]
In 1882, the PEF's Survey of Western Palestine Turmus Aya was described as "a village on a low knoll, in a fertile plain, with a spring to the south. The village is of moderate size, and surrounded by fruit trees. On the south at the foot of the mound is the conspicuous white dome of the sacred place."[23] In 1896 the population of Turmus Ayya was estimated to be about 834 persons.[24]
In the 1945 statistics the population was 960, all Muslim,[27] while the total land area was 17,611 dunams, according to an official land and population survey.[28] Of this, 3,665 dunams were allocated for plantations and irrigable land, 7,357 for cereals,[29] while 54 dunams were classified as built-up (urban) areas.[30]
The Jordanian census of 1961 found 1,620 inhabitants.[31]
1967-present
Since the Six-Day War in 1967, Turmus Ayya has been under Israeli occupation. According to an Israeli census in 1967, there were 1,562 people. By 1989, the population rose to 5,140.
In December 2014, the town was the site of the death of Palestinian official Ziad Abu Ein during a protest against Israeli occupation.[34]
On November 27th, 2024, Israeli forces forced a couple out of their home at midnight and transformed it into military barracks, overlooking a middle school. [35]
Settler violence
Turmus Ayya is a target of Israeli settler violence.[4][5] According to B'tselem, in the six first months of 2023, Turmus Ayya was attacked ten times by Israeli settlers.[36] On 21 June 2023 hundreds of masked Israeli settlers, responding to the killing of four Israeli civilians in a neighboring settlement, firebombed around 30 houses and 60 cars;[37][38] one Palestinian resident, Omar Qattin (27), was shot dead.[39][40]
An Israel Defense Forces (IDF) spokesperson denounced the attacks as "acts of terror conducted by criminals",[5] adding that such incidents push attacked civilian populations into extremism."[4] In the weeks following
the attack, the IDF placed five suspects in administrative detention.[41]
As of 2023[update], an estimated 80% of the residents are Palestinian binationals with US citizenship.[3] Many of the villagers have moved to the Americas to seek economic opportunity, but they return regularly in order to keep their Palestinian ID. One is Ashraf Rabi, whose family moved to Panama and then the US around 1980, and moved back in 2007, establishing the Turmus Ayya Equestrian Club.[43]
^Röhricht, 1887, p. 206; cited in Finkelstein, 1997, p. 651
^"Foundations and heaps of stones. Ruins of a monastery and chapel, the masonry in the walls rude, the stones drafted in some cases with a rustic boss. The place appears to be Crusading work;" Conder and Kitchener, 1882, SWP II, p. 331
Michon, E. (1913). "Sarcophage representant Bacchus et les Genies des saisons decouvert a Tourmous'aya". Revue Biblique. 10 (1): 111–118. JSTOR44101421.