Cochav Hayarden Crusaders' Fortress Belvoir and National Park
15 km off Beth She'an
IL-10900 Beth She'an
(Nordisrael, Galilaea / Northern Israel, Galilee)
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Info Telefon: (04) 658-1766
Öffnungszeiten/Opening hours
April-September: 8:00-17:00 h
October-March: 8:00-16:00 h.
Sammelschwerpunkte/Main collections
The Crusader fortress was built circa 1140, during the reign of Falk Dango (1142-1131). When the Crusaders originally settled the ridge, they established a fortified agricultural farm here. In 1168, the Order of Hospitalers purchased the land and turned it into one of the most important Crusader fortresses in Eretz Israel. The fortress overlooked the route from the Jordan Valley to Damascus and the route from Nahal Tabor west to the coastal plain and the Via Maris.
The fortress built by the Hospitalers was so strong that it withstood all Saladin's attempts to seize it (1187-89). Only after a year-and-a-half-long siege, when all the land around them had been captured, did the defenders consent to sign the surrender agreement and move to Zur, a city that was still in Crusader hands.
The fortress here is the best restored and only completely excavated Crusader-period fortress in Israel. The fortress is composed of an external castle with a donjon at its center, a five-sided wall, and a twenty-meter-wide, twelve-meter-deep moat. Towers are positioned at the corners of the fortress.
South of the fortress is a sculpture garden with works by Israeli artist Igael Tumarkin.
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