Umm el-Qanatir
Umm el-Qanatir, also spelled Umm el-Kanatir, recent Israeli name Ein Keshatot, is a former ancient Jewish synagogue and archaeological site, located on the Golan Heights, in modern-day Israel, whose main phase is dated to the mid-5th–8th centuries. Excavations have revealed a Roman-period Pagan and later Jewish settlement, who left behind the ruins of a synagogue when they abandoned the town after it being destroyed by the catastrophic 749 earthquake. The archaeological site is located east of the Dead Sea Transform, and southwest of Natur.
Identification attempts based on Jewish sources have led to two possible ancient names: Kantur, mentioned by Rabbi Menachem di Luzano in his book Ma'arikh ; and Qamtra, the name of a place mentioned in the Talmud and with a Jewish past dating back to the Byzantine period.
Etymology
The Arabic word qantara, pl. qanatir, can mean arch, a bridge built of stone or masonry, an aqueduct or a dam, and a high building.The name of the site derives from its location 200 metres from a natural spring that flows from the cliff into three basins that were once topped by monumental basalt arches, one of which has survived.
Some Israeli authorities are starting to use the new Hebrew name of Ein Keshatot, such as seen on official postage stamps. The site is also being advertised as Rehavam's Arches, so named after former Israeli Minister of Tourism, Rehavam Ze'evi.
History
Ancient town: Pagan, then Jewish
The site is believed to have been a Pagan Roman town that venerated the nearby spring. Jews began to settle in the vicinity in 23 BCE. Early Jewish inhabitants of Umm el-Qanatir established a flax industry there, using the water for washing and whitening flax from which they wove fine cloth. The textiles were sold to wealthy residents in the nearby towns of Sussita and Beit Saida. The villagers may have engaged in mixed farming, and raised sheep and olives, although no terracing has been found.The catastrophic 749 earthquake brought the settlement to an end.