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Israel as a piece of land has been conquered over 10 times. You may wish to be more specific. Usually, though, the land was conquered either for its strategic value of being the land-bridge between North Africa and Asia or for its holy sites in Jerusalem.

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10y ago
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8y ago

The Diaspora (scattering of the Jewish people) began.

The prophets had constantly warned the Israelites that ignoring the Torah would result in exile.
1) Around 2600 years ago, the Assyrians forcibly exiled the Ten Israelite tribes to points unknown. A small percentage of each of these tribes is still among us, but most of them were exiled and didn't return.
2) Around 2500 years ago, the Babylonians destroyed the First Temple and forcibly exiled the remainder of Israel's population to Babylonia. (See: The Destruction)
While the Jews were permitted to return to Israel (Judea) seventy years later, and tens of thousands did so (and rebuilt the Temple), most of them remained in Babylonia, while others began to settle in North Africa, southern Europe, the Crimea, throughout the Near East and elsewhere.


3) In 68 CE, the Romans destroyed the Second Temple. The Romans did not force the Jews out of Judea in a single expulsion. Rather, the Romans expelled them from Jerusalem only; and the rest of Judea lost its Jews slowly, over a period of centuries, as living there became too harsh. Even then, we have records of Jewish communities who lived in Judea (Palestine) during the entire period of the last two millenia. (See:History of the Jews in Israel)


Those Jews who left Judea went to southern Europe, North Africa, Arabia, the Near East, and (slowly) further afield (especially throughout Europe).

See also:

Jewish history timeline

Where do Jews live today?


Related topic:
The diaspora (scattering) was difficult for us:

1) Because certain mitzvot (such as those related to agriculture in the Holy Land) now became suspended for the duration of the exile.


2) Because of the impediment to communication between the various communities. This could lead to the development of rivaling groups, each claiming to be authentic.

(See for example: What are the Karaites?)


3) Because the Jews were now a minority among other nations, who were sometimes quite hostile.


4) Along with the Torah, the Land of Israel (Judea) and the Holy Temple had been central to Judaism. It now was to be seen whether Torah-observance could be maintained on the high level that those ideal factors had been conducive to.


Related topic:
How did the diaspora affect the Jews?
To a certain extent, the diaspora caused the various Jewish communities to take on minor aspects of their host countries.
The religion itself was affected little, if at all, since all Jews share the same Torah and Talmud, and differences within halakhah (Jewish laws) are relatively small. In addition, the Jews were dissuaded from assimilating because the Romans were the polar opposite of Judaism; plus the fact that some of their greatest historians spewed diatribes of hate against the Jews.However, in secondary matters of culture such as pronunciation, mannerisms, and introduction of new vocabulary, every community is influenced somewhat by the others among whom they dwell; so some traits of our regions of residence have rubbed off on us. Examples are the differences in pronunciation and accent (for the Hebrew alphabet), differences in dress, and minor differences in customs.

See also:

Maintaining Judaism during the exile

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13y ago

because they had a important location So sorry you couldn't get the answer sooner!

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10y ago

Because of God's assistance (Exodus ch.23, Joshua ch.9-10).

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3y ago

ME was

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Q: Why was Israel conquered?
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Related questions

Who is Israel conquered by?

The Modern State of Israel is not yet conquered.


What date was Israel conquered by the Assyrians?

Israel was conquered in 722 BCE.


Who did the assyrian's conquered?

they conquered the Babylonians


Was Israel conquered in 1997?

No. Israel had no military activity in 1997.


What country captured Israel first Babylon or Assyria?

Assyria conquered the Ten Tribes 133 years before the Babylonians conquered all of Israel.


Who conquered Israel on behalf of the Romans?

If you mean the final conquest, it was Vespasian who conquered the territory and his son Titus conquered Jerusalem.


What nations conquered Israel in the Old Testament?

During the Old Testament period, Israel was conquered by several nations, including the Assyrians, Babylonians, Persians, Greeks, and Romans. These conquests resulted in periods of exile and subjugation for the Israelites.


What were three nations that conquered the Hittites?

The 3 nations that conquered the Hittites were Israel, Egypt, and Canaan.


Who conquered ancient Israel?

Alot of people conquered Israel but the most notorious one was Saladin's empire in Egypt after all that happen European colonies happened and Israel got its Independence in 1948


What empire conquered israel and judah?

Assyria conquered Israel, then Babylon conquered Assyria and Judah, then Persia conquered Babylon, then the Seuclid Empire conquered Judah, then the Judeans revolted, then Rome conquered Judah, then the Islamic Caliphate conquered the Byzantine Empire (the remains of the Roman Empire). The Ottoman Empire conquered Judah from the Cusaders who had conquered it from its Islamic rulers. Then the British Empire took it from the Ottomans.


What empire conquered the northern kingdom of Israel and when?

The Assyrian Empire conquered the northern kingdom of Israel in 722 BCE, renaming it as the Assyrian province of Samaria.


Who conquer isarael?

Ancient Israel was conquered by the Romans in 63 BC.