Top 10 similar words or synonyms for butayha

samiriyya    0.878540

butaymat    0.853721

ghazzawiyya    0.848822

buwayziyya    0.847404

murassas    0.842764

itrah    0.840004

ghubayya    0.838236

kafat    0.836099

qudayriyya    0.833102

janudiyah    0.832390

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for butayha

Article Example
Al-Butayha Today the village lands are occupied by the settlement of Almagor, which was established in 1961. A popular picnicking spot, Park ha-Yarden ("Jordan River Park"), is now located just 200 metres south of the site. Today only black basalt walls of destroyed houses remain of the village of Al-Butayha, with many trees such as palms, olive, and tall eucalyptus trees growing in the area.
Al-Butayha Al-Butayha was situated in a hilly area next to the border with Syria, approximately 0.25 km east of the Jordan River and 2 km from Lake Tiberias. The name means "marshland" in Arabic, in reference to the vast stretch of land in the area. In 1459 the village was visited by the Arab geographer al-Qalqashandi.
Al-Butayha Al-Butayha () was a Palestinian Arab village in the Safad Subdistrict. It was depopulated during the 1947–1948 Civil War in Mandatory Palestine on May 4, 1948 by the Palmach's First Battalion during Operation Matateh. It was located 13 km southeast of Safad, quarter of a mile east of the Jordan River, a little northeast of the northern tip of the Sea of Galilee. Many of the inhabitants were forced into Syria.
Al-Butayha It was classified as a hamlet by the Palestine Index Gazetteer. By 1944/45 the village was counted with Arab al-Shamalina, and together they occupied an area of 16,690 dunums, with 3,842 dunums allocated to cereal farming, 238 dunums under irrigation or used for orchards, while 12,610 dunams were classified as non-cultivable land.
Al-Butayha On May 4, 1948, the village was attacked by the forces of Haganah’s during Operation Matateh ('Operation Broom'), part of Operation Yiftach, an offensive to clear all Arab settlement from an area north of Lake Tiberias and west of the Jordan River. Their orders were to "destroy any points of assembly for invading forces from the east”.