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・ Nahiya Bir al-Helou al-Wardiya
・ Nahiya Markada
・ Nahiya Ras al-Ayn
・ Nahiya Tell Hamis
・ Nahiya Tell Tamer
・ Nahiyah
・ Nahiye (Ottoman)
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・ Nahiyeh, East Azerbaijan
・ Nahiyeh, Mazandaran
・ Nahiz
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Naharayim
・ Nahargarh Fort
・ Nahari language
・ Nahari Station
・ Nahari, Kōchi
・ Nahari, Madhubani
・ Naharin
・ Nahariya
・ Nahariya Railway Station
・ Nahariya train station suicide bombing
・ Naharjan Rural District
・ Naharkatiya
・ Naharkatiya College
・ Naharkot
・ Naharlagun


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Naharayim : ウィキペディア英語版
Naharayim

Naharayim ((ヘブライ語:נהריים) literally "Two rivers") or Baqoura ((アラビア語:الباقورة)) is a site on the border between Israel and Jordan where the Yarmouk River flows into the Jordan River. An hydroelectric power-plant had operated at Naharayim from 1932. The plant, established by Pinhas Rutenberg, produced much of the energy consumed in the Mandatory Palestine until the 1948 Palestine war. The canals and dams built for the power-plant created a man-made island.
==History==
Pinhas Rutenberg, a Ukrainian-born Zionist and engineer immigrated to Palestine in 1919. After submitting a plan to the Zionist movement for the establishment of 13 hydroelectric power stations and securing financing for the plan, he was awarded a concession from the British Mandatory government to generate electricity, first from the Yarkon River near Tel Aviv, and shortly thereafter, utilizing all the running water in western Palestine.
The Naharayim site was chosen for the strong water flow and the possibility of regulating the flow through storage in the Sea of Galilee during the winter rainy season and release of the water reserves in the summer. Construction began in 1927 and continued for five years, providing employment for 3,000 workers. The site was named Naharayim, Hebrew for "Two Rivers."〔
In the days before Israeli independence, Naharayim was the proposed venue for two meetings between Golda Meir and king Abdullah, in an attempt by the Jewish leadership to head off Jordanian participation in the war. The families of the employees were evacuated in April 1948, leaving behind only workers with Jordanian ID cards.
In violation of international law and a November 1947 agreement between Meir and Abdullah, the Arab Legion's 4th Battalion launched a mortar and artillery attack on the Naharayim police fort and Kibbutz Gesher on April 27-29, 1948. The attack paved the way for the pan-Arab invasion of Palestine. On the evening of April 27, the Legion began shelling the fort and kibbutz, stepping up the attack the following day. Many of the kibbutz buildings were destroyed.〔(''The Road to Jerusalem: Glubb Pasha, Palestine and the Jews'', Benny Morris )〕

On the morning of April 29, a Legion officer demanded the evacuation of the fort, but was turned down. After protests to the British Mandate administration, the shelling was halted, and Abdullah was reprimanded for "aggression against Palestine territory."〔(''The Road to Jerusalem: Glubb Pasha, Palestine and the Jews'', Benny Morris )〕 In the wake of the attack 50 children of the kibbutz were evacuated to a 19th-century French monastery adjacent to Rambam Hospital in the Bat Galim neighborhood of Haifa, where they lived for the next 22 months.〔(Rambam history )〕
An Iraqi brigade invaded at Naharayim on May 15, 1948, in an unsuccessful attempt to take the kibbutz and fort.〔(The Road to Jerusalem: Glubb Pasha, Palestine and the Jews )〕 The power plant was occupied and looted by the Iraqi forces.〔(''Jewish-Transjordanian Relations 1921-1948,'' Yoav Gelber )〕
To prevent Iraqi tanks from attacking Jewish villages in the Jordan Valley, the sluice gates of the Degania dam were opened. The rush of water, which deepened the river at this spot, was instrumental in blocking the Iraqi-Jordanian incursion.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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