Garis (Galilee)


Garis,, alternative spellings Garsis; Garisme, was a Jewish village in Lower Galilee, situated ca. 4 km. from Sepphoris. The village, although now a ruin, features prominently in the writings of Josephus, where it served temporarily as the place of residence for Josephus during the First Jewish Revolt. In the early stages of the war, Josephus, with the Galileans who were put under his command, cast up a bank around the village, in anticipation of a Roman assault upon the town.
And indeed this sight of the general brought many to repent at their revolt, and put them all into a consternation; for those that were in Josephus's camp, which was at the city called Garis, not far from Sepphoris, when they heard that the war was come near them, and that the Romans would suddenly fight them hand to hand, dispersed themselves and fled....

Etymology

The Hebrew name of the village is said to have been ʻAris, having the connotation of "trellised vine;" "grape arbor;" "espalier." The Greek word used in this toponym is Γαρεις, the Gamma said to be of the same ancient usage as found in Greek transliterations of the Hebrew words Gaza = עזה and Gabara = ערב.

Identification

Historical geographers are divided as to the site's location. Samuel Klein thought that the ancient village of Garis was to be identified with Khirbet Cana, a ruin about east of Sepphoris and which now bears the same name as the adjacent village of Cana, although intrinsically different. Klein was the first to identify its Hebrew name with Kefar ʻArīs mentioned in the Tosefta. Victor Guérin thought that the site of Garis was to be identified with Tell Bedeiwîyeh, now a large mound with ruins of a small Khân and a well at its foot, located ca. northwest of Sepphoris. Likewise, the historian and archaeologist, Nikos Kokkinos, surmised that it may have been the ruin Tel Hannaton, being the same place as described by Guérin under its Arabic name, Tell Bedeiwîyeh. William F. Albright held a differing view, thinking that Tell Bedeiwîyeh was the ancient town of Asochis.

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