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Monastery of Martyrius

Christian monasteries established in the 5th centuryChristian monasteries in the West BankJudaean Desert
Maale Adumim St Martyrius monastery 370
Maale Adumim St Martyrius monastery 370

Monastery of Martyrius, whose ruins, known as Khirbet el-Murassas in Arabic, have been excavated in the centre of the West Bank settlement and city of Ma'ale Adumim, was one of the most important centres of monastic life in the Judean Desert during the Byzantine period. It was active between the second half of the 5th and the mid-7th century.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Monastery of Martyrius (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Monastery of Martyrius
Midbar Yehuda, Maale Adumim HaNehalim

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Latitude Longitude
N 31.779180555556 ° E 35.300316666667 °
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מנזר מרטיריוס

Midbar Yehuda
Maale Adumim, HaNehalim
Judea and Samaria, Palestinian Territories
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Maale Adumim St Martyrius monastery 370
Maale Adumim St Martyrius monastery 370
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E1 (West Bank)
E1 (West Bank)

E1 (short for East 1) (Hebrew: מְבַשֶּׂרֶת אֲדֻמִּים, romanized: Mevaseret Adumim, lit. 'Herald of Adumim') – also called the E1 area, E1 zone or E1 corridor – is an area of the West Bank within the municipal boundary of the Israeli settlement of Ma'ale Adumim. It is located adjacent to and northeast of East Jerusalem and to the west of Ma'ale Adumim. It covers an area of 12 square kilometres (4.6 sq mi), which is home to a number of Bedouin communities including the village of Khan al-Ahmar and their livestock as well as a large Israeli police headquarters. The Palestinian tent site of Bab al Shams, which was established for several days in early 2013, also lay within this area. There is an Israeli plan for construction in E1, frozen since at least 2009 under international pressure. The plan is not synonymous with the expansion of Ma'ale Adumim, and was initially conceived by Yitzhak Rabin in 1995.Construction in E1 is controversial. Critics say that the plan aims at preventing any possible expansion of East Jerusalem by creating a physical link between Ma'ale Adumim and Jerusalem, and that it would effectively complete a crescent of Israeli settlements around East Jerusalem dividing it from the rest of the West Bank and its Palestinian population centres, and create a continuous Jewish population between Jerusalem and Ma'ale Adumim. It would also nearly bisect the West Bank, jeopardizing the prospects of a contiguous Palestinian state. Palestinians describe the E1 plan as an effort to Judaize Jerusalem.The international community considers Israeli settlements in the West Bank illegal under international law, but the Israeli government disputes this.