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Shefa-'Amr
Shefa-'Amr, also Shfar'am ((アラビア語:شفاعمرو), (unicode:Šafā ʻAmr), , (unicode:Šəfarʻam)) is a predominantly Arab city in the North District of Israel. According to the Israel Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), at the end of 2012 the city had a population of 38,300. The city population is composed out of a rich religious mosaique of a Sunni Muslim majority, alongside large Christian and Druze minorities.〔(【引用サイトリンク】publisher=Israel Central Bureau of Statistics )〕 ==Etymology== In the Roman Era, the town was known as "Shofar Am", Hebrew for "horn of a nation". It is thought that this name is derived from that of the Jewish Sanhedrin, which for a time was located in the city and was considered the nation's horn. Alternatively, the name could be based on the literary Hebrew word ''shefer'' (), meaning "beauty" or "goodness", i.e. "the beauty of the people". According to a popular Arab legend, the Arab general Amr Ibn Al-Aas was cured of an illness after drinking the local water. Upon seeing their commander's recovery, his soldiers cheered "Shofiya Amr" (Arabic for "Amr was healed"), and that was the source of the name. The spring from which he allegedly drank is located southeast of the city. Others allege that the name "Shfar-am" was changed to an Arabic form "Shefa-'Amr" in the Mamluk period. According to Palmer, it is a corruption of the word Shafram.〔Palmer, 1881, (p. 116 )〕
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