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Dafna
Dafna (Hebrew: דפנה) is a kibbutz in the Upper Galilee in northern Israel. Located seven kilometres east of Kiryat Shmona and surrounded by three streams of the Dan River, it falls under the jurisdiction of Upper Galilee Regional Council. In 2024 it had a population of 1,038.
Dafna was founded on 3 May 1939 as a Tower and Stockade settlement, the first such settlement in the northern Hula Valley. Dafna, Beit Hillel, She'ar Yashuv and Dan were known as the "Ussishkin Fortresses", named after Menahem Ussishkin.
Dafna derives from the ancient site of Daphne mentioned in classical sources. The name Daphne (Δάφνη), meaning “laurel” or “bay tree” in Greek, is attested by Josephus as a geographic designation associated with the marshes and springs of the Hula Valley. Ottoman tax registers from 1535 preserve the toponym as Mezraʿa-i Dafna, demonstrating direct continuity of the name into the early modern period, while nineteenth-century surveys record variants such as Khirbet Dafna and Ard Dafnā. This evidence indicates sustained toponymic transmission rather than later reintroduction or scholarly identification.
Early Roman pottery fragments have been found in an excavation in Dafna.
Edward Robinson, who visited in 1852, identified Daphne with a "low mound of rubbish with cut stones, evidently the remains of a former town" called Difneh that he encountered while riding south from Tel el-Qadi to Mansura.
The Survey of Western Palestine identified Daphne with Khirbet Dufnah, meaning "the ruin of Daphne (oleander)".
An Arab settlement was founded sometime between 1858 and 1878. Difnah was listed as a village by the Mandate government in 1924. At the time of the 1931 census, Dafna had 66 occupied houses and a population of 318 Muslims and one Christian. At the beginning of 1939, the village was pillaged by bedouin, causing most of the population to leave. The land was soon purchased by the Jewish National Fund. The JNF was represented in the negotiations by the same man, Kamel Hussein, who had earlier led the raid on Tel-Hai in which Josef Trumpeldor was killed.
The original Jewish residents were immigrants mostly from Poland and Lithuania. By the 1944/45 statistics, Dafna had a population of 380 Jews with a total land area of 2,663 dunams, of which Jews owned 2,189 dunams. Of this, a total of 2,385 dunams of land were irrigated or used for plantations, 5 dunums were used for cereals; while 50 dunams were classified as built-up (or Urban) area.
Hub AI
Dafna AI simulator
(@Dafna_simulator)
Dafna
Dafna (Hebrew: דפנה) is a kibbutz in the Upper Galilee in northern Israel. Located seven kilometres east of Kiryat Shmona and surrounded by three streams of the Dan River, it falls under the jurisdiction of Upper Galilee Regional Council. In 2024 it had a population of 1,038.
Dafna was founded on 3 May 1939 as a Tower and Stockade settlement, the first such settlement in the northern Hula Valley. Dafna, Beit Hillel, She'ar Yashuv and Dan were known as the "Ussishkin Fortresses", named after Menahem Ussishkin.
Dafna derives from the ancient site of Daphne mentioned in classical sources. The name Daphne (Δάφνη), meaning “laurel” or “bay tree” in Greek, is attested by Josephus as a geographic designation associated with the marshes and springs of the Hula Valley. Ottoman tax registers from 1535 preserve the toponym as Mezraʿa-i Dafna, demonstrating direct continuity of the name into the early modern period, while nineteenth-century surveys record variants such as Khirbet Dafna and Ard Dafnā. This evidence indicates sustained toponymic transmission rather than later reintroduction or scholarly identification.
Early Roman pottery fragments have been found in an excavation in Dafna.
Edward Robinson, who visited in 1852, identified Daphne with a "low mound of rubbish with cut stones, evidently the remains of a former town" called Difneh that he encountered while riding south from Tel el-Qadi to Mansura.
The Survey of Western Palestine identified Daphne with Khirbet Dufnah, meaning "the ruin of Daphne (oleander)".
An Arab settlement was founded sometime between 1858 and 1878. Difnah was listed as a village by the Mandate government in 1924. At the time of the 1931 census, Dafna had 66 occupied houses and a population of 318 Muslims and one Christian. At the beginning of 1939, the village was pillaged by bedouin, causing most of the population to leave. The land was soon purchased by the Jewish National Fund. The JNF was represented in the negotiations by the same man, Kamel Hussein, who had earlier led the raid on Tel-Hai in which Josef Trumpeldor was killed.
The original Jewish residents were immigrants mostly from Poland and Lithuania. By the 1944/45 statistics, Dafna had a population of 380 Jews with a total land area of 2,663 dunams, of which Jews owned 2,189 dunams. Of this, a total of 2,385 dunams of land were irrigated or used for plantations, 5 dunums were used for cereals; while 50 dunams were classified as built-up (or Urban) area.