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Al-Khalasa

All accuracy disputesArab villages depopulated during the 1948 Arab–Israeli WarFormer populated places in West AsiaPages with non-numeric formatnum argumentsVague or ambiguous time from July 2021
Khalasa well
Khalasa well

Al-Khalasa (Arabic: الخلصة, romanized: al-Khalasah; Hebrew: אל-ח'אלצה, al-Khalatsah), was a Palestinian village, located 23 kilometers southwest of the town of Beersheba. The village stood at the site of an ancient town from the Nabatean, Roman, Byzantine, and the beginning of the Early Muslim period. The ancient city, founded by the Nabateans, is known from Greek and Roman sources as "Halasa" or "Chellous", and later as "Elusa", one of the Byzantine administrative centers in the Negev Desert. Still important in the century of the Muslim conquest, it was deserted not long after. The site was repopulated by Bedouin in the early twentieth century, after western archaeologists took an interest in it. In October 1948, it was captured by Israel during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War. The population of al-Khalasa is unknown, but all of the inhabitants were Muslims, from the al-Azizma tribe.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Al-Khalasa (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Al-Khalasa
222, Ramat Negev Regional Council

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 31.097222222222 ° E 34.6525 °
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חורבות חלוצה

222
Ramat Negev Regional Council
South District, Israel
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Khalasa well
Khalasa well
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