Tomb of Jesse and Ruth
The tomb of Jesse and Ruth is an ancient tomb with a small Jewish synagogue, located within the ruin of Deir Al Arba'een in the Tel Rumeida section of Hebron. Francesco Quaresmi in the early 17th century reported that Turks and Orientals generally believed the structure contained the tombs of Jesse and Ruth. According to Moshe Sharon, According to Jewish tradition, the tomb of Jesse and Ruth is a sacred site. The place is in area H2 of Hebron, under Israeli control.
The small synagogue is located in the room adjacent to the tomb and it receives visitors throughout the year, especially on the Jewish holiday of Shavuot, in which the Book of Ruth is read.
History
Mamluk period
One of the earliest known references to the tomb comes from an unnamed student of the Ramban who visited the site between 1289 and 1290. He wrote of visiting the "cave of Jesse's grave" on a hilltop near the Cave of Machpela and the ancient Jewish Cemetery of Hebron. Yaakov HaShaliach, a Jewish traveller, mentions visiting the grave of Jesse, father of David in Hebron in the year 1235, but he does not specify the burial place. Rabbi Ovadia of Bertinoro mentions praying there in his travel writings.Ottoman era
In 1522, Rabbi Moses ben Mordecai Bassola wrote,Yihus HaAvos V'Neviim a book from 1537 refers to the site as "a handsome building up on the mount, where Jesse, the King David's father is buried." It includes a drawing of the site, and notes an "ancient Israelite burial ground" nearby and Crusader courtyard.
Karaite travellers wrote of the site, Samuel ben David of Crimea in 1642, and Benjamin Ben-Eliyahu in 1785.,
The first known written reference to the site housing the tomb of both Jesse and Ruth comes from the 1835 book Love of Jerusalem by Haim Horwitz, referencing local oral traditions.
Menachem Mendel of Kamenitz wrote in 1839,
British Mandate
During the British Mandate era, the Tomb of Jesse and Ruth was recognized as one of the many historic sites associated with Jewish tradition in the Land of Israel. The site was visited and described by several scholars, geographers, and archaeologists who documented its condition and folklore at the time. The French Dominican archaeologist and scholar Louis-Hugues Vincent, who lived and worked in Jerusalem, made extensive studies of ancient sites in the region during the early 20th century. In his seminal two volume work on Hebron, published in 1923, Vincent discussed the ruins of Deir al-Arbaʿeen: the complex within which the tomb traditionally ascribed to Jesse and Ruth is located. His work provided one of the earliest modern archaeological descriptions of the structure and its local traditions, situating it within the broader historical landscape of Hebron.In 1935, the noted Israeli geographer and travel writer Zev Vilnay visited the tomb as part of his survey of holy places in the Land of Israel. Vilnay recorded that local custodians at the site claimed the tomb once connected by a subterranean passage to the nearby the Cave of the Patriarchs. According to his account, this supposed passageway was filled in during the First World War, and the entrance was no longer known by the time he visited.
Archaeologist Jacob Pinkerfield also examined the site during the Mandate period. Pinkerfield included discussions of the tomb and its synagogue in his 1945/46 book The Synagogues in Eretz Yisra’el, in which he surveyed ancient synagogue sites and Jewish sacred places throughout the country. His observations contributed to recognizing the site’s dual character as both a burial tradition and a place of historical Jewish worship.