- Source: Expansion of Jerusalem in the 19th century
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The expansion of Jerusalem outside of the Old City walls, which included shifting the city center to the new neighborhoods, started in the mid-19th century and by the early 20th century had entirely transformed the city. Prior to the 19th century, the main built up areas outside the walls were the complex around King David's Tomb on the southern Mount Zion, and the village of Silwan.
In the mid-19th century, with an area of only one square kilometer, the Old City had become overcrowded and unsanitary, with rental prices on a constant rise. In the mid-1850s, following the Crimean War, institutions including the Russian Compound, Kerem Avraham, the Schneller Orphanage, Bishop Gobat school and the Mishkenot Sha'ananim compound, marked the beginning of permanent settlement outside Jerusalem's Old City walls.
History
In 1855, Johann Ludwig Schneller, a Lutheran missionary who came to Jerusalem at the age of 34, bought a plot of land outside the Old City walls when the area was a complete wilderness. He built a house there but was forced to move his family back inside the walls after several attacks by marauders. When the Ottomans erected outposts along Jaffa Road, between Jerusalem and the port city of Jaffa, and armed guards on horseback patrolled the road, the family returned.
The public institutions were followed by the development of two philanthropically supported Jewish neighborhoods, Mishkenot Shaāananim and Mahane Israel.
Mishkenot Shaāananim (Hebrew: ×ש×× ××Ŗ ש×× × ××) was the first Jewish neighborhood built outside the walls of the Old City of Jerusalem, on a hill directly across from Mount Zion. It was built by Sir Moses Montefiore in 1860 as an almshouse, paid for by the estate of a wealthy Jew from New Orleans, Judah Touro. Since it was outside the walls and open to Bedouin raids, pillage and general banditry rampant in the region at the time, the Jews were reluctant to move in, even though the housing was luxurious compared to the derelict and overcrowded houses in the Old City. As an incentive, people were paid to live there, and a wall was built around the compound with a heavy door that was locked at night. The name of the neighborhood was taken from the Book of Isaiah 32:18: "My people will abide in peaceful habitation, in secure dwellings and in quiet resting places."
Mahane Israel (Hebrew: ××× × ×ש×Ø××), founded in 1867, was the second Jewish neighborhood to be built outside the walls of the Old City. Mahane Israel was a "communal neighborhood" and was built by and for Maghrebi Jews.
Nahalat Shiv'a was the third residential neighborhood built outside the city walls. It was founded in 1869 as a cooperative effort by seven Jerusalem families who pooled their funds to purchase the land and build homes. Lots were cast and Yosef Rivlin won the right to build the first house in the neighborhood.
The neighborhoods that make up the Nachlaot district were established outside the walls in the late 1870s. The first was Mishkenot Yisrael, built in 1875. The name comes from a biblical verse (Numbers 24:5): "How goodly are thy tents, O Jacob/Thy dwellings, O Israel." Mazkeret Moshe was founded by Sir Moses Montefiore in 1882 as an Ashkenazi neighborhood. Ohel Moshe is a Sephardi neighborhood established alongside it.
In 1875, Nissan Beck founded the Jewish neighborhood Kirya Ne'emana, popularly known as Batei Nissan Bak ("Nissan Beck Houses"). Beck bought the land and paid for the construction of the neighborhood, opposite the Damascus Gate of the Old City, under the auspices of Kollel Vohlin. The neighborhood was originally intended for Hasidic Jews, but due to lack of financing, only 30 of the planned 60 houses were constructed. The remainder of the land was apportioned to several other groups: Syrian, Iraqi, and Persian Jews. In the 1890s another neighborhood, Eshel Avraham, was erected next to Kirya Ne'emana for Georgian and Caucasian Jews.
Nahalat Shimon was founded in 1891 by Sephardic and Ashkenazi Jewish Kollels, to house poor Yemenite and Sephardic Jews. The land was purchased in 1890 and the first homes were built soon after, housing 20 impoverished families. The cornerstone of the neighborhood was laid in 1890, near the Tomb of Simeon the Just.
Timeline
Based on Jerusalem and Its Environs: Quarters, Neighborhoods, Villages, 1800ā1948 by Ruth Kark and Michal Oren-Nordheim (2001). The years refer to the time the neighbourhoods actually started being inhabited, not the land purchase and construction phase.
1853: the Bishop Gobat School (est. 1847) moves to a building next to the Protestant Mount Zion Cemetery
1855: British Consul James Finn builds the main house at Abraham's Vineyard (Hebrew: Kerem Avraham), the farm he established for Jewish Jerusalemites
1855ā1856: Johann Ludwig Schneller builds himself a family house, the nucleus of the Syrian Orphanage or Schneller Orphanage, which would take shape in 1860ā61
1860: the Mishkenot Sha'ananim Jewish neighbourhood is built by Moses Montefiore
1860ā1864: the Russian Compound's first building, the women's hospice is being built, followed until 1903 by all the rest
1864: Aga Rashid Nashashibi builds his residence, now known as Ticho House
1865ā1879: the Mahaneh Yisra'el Jewish neighbourhood
1865ā1890s: the Husaini Neighborhood, Muslim Arab, starting in 1865ā76 with the villa of Rabbah Effendi al-Husaini
1869: the Nahalat Shiv'a Jewish neighbourhood
1870s: the Mas'udiya Muslim Arab neighbourhood
1872ā1876: the "Georgian Houses" Jewish neighbourhood facing Damascus Gate
1873: the German Colony gets started with individual houses; the Templer colony follows in 1878
1873: the Beit David Jewish neighbourhood (Yanover Houses)
1874ā1875: the Mea Shearim Jewish neighbourhood
1875: the Even Yisrael Jewish neighbourhood, now part of Nachlaot
1875ā1876: the Mishkenot Yisrael Jewish neighbourhood, now part of Nachlaot
1880s: the Deir Abu Tor mixed Arab neighbourhood
1880s: the Catholic "French Colony": Saint-Louis Hospital (1881ā1883), Notre Dame de France Hospice (1888ā1904)
1882: the American-Swedish Colony, Christian Protestant
1882: the Mazkeret Moshe Jewish neighbourhood, now part of Nachlaot
1882: the Ohel Moshe Jewish neighbourhood, now part of Nachlaot