Isfay al-Tahta
Isfay al-Tahta is a small Palestinian herding hamlet in the South Hebron Hills, within the Masafer Yatta cluster of communities in the Hebron Governorate of the southern West Bank. Like other Masafer Yatta localities, it lies in Area C; since the 1980s, much of the surrounding area has been designated Firing Zone 918, constraining planning, service connections and access to land. It is distinct from the nearby, higher-lying hamlet of Isfay al-Fauqa.
Geography
Isfay al-Tahta stands at about 635 metres above sea level at approximately, in the arid uplands east of Yatta. It is one of several paired localities in the South Hebron Hills, with Isfay al-Fauqa situated nearby on higher ground. The hamlet forms part of the dispersed cave-dwelling and herding landscape that characterizes Masafer Yatta.History
In the 14th century Isfay was called al-Safiyah and it is mentioned, alongside neighboring Jinba, as a stop on the Gaza-Hebron-al-Karak road.Isfay and its caves appear on the map of the 1870s Survey of Western Palestine
The broader Masafer Yatta region has long supported semi-sedentary pastoralism adapted to caves and cistern-based water storage; families in Isfay al-Tahta maintain herding livelihoods and seasonal use of rangelands consistent with this pattern.
Isfay is a hamlet of Masafer Yatta where families traditionally resided in caves alongside stone animal pens and cultivated terraces. Though not always listed in every historical survey due to its small size, the village appears in several demographic and geographic studies from the late Ottoman and Mandate periods. Oral history and archaeological remains confirm its permanence as part of the Yatta hinterland.