The area was originally inhabited by the Canaanites, followed by the Hebrews (later called Jews), then the Romans, then the Christians and Muslims moved in, and finally, the Jews began to return starting in the 19th century,.
Palestine and Babylon
In the Year 70, The Romans renamed it Palestine, after an enemy of the Jews (the Phillistines).
In the Year 70, The Romans renamed it Palestine, after an enemy of the Jews (the Phillistines).
There is no exact year that Jews started going to Israel/Palestine when they had not been migrating before. Migration picked up immensely in 1919 because Jews finally had legal permission to migrate to Palestine, but migration has waxed and waned since that point and existed before that point.
Very few Jews went to Ottoman Palestine in the 1840s, since Zionism had not yet developed and Jews generally preferred to stay were they were or go to the United States. Those Jews who went to Ottoman Palestine bought land and settled much like the people already there.
The Exile of Jews from palestine is known as the Diaspora
Because Palestine keeps attacking the Jews.
The map (see link below) shows a country called Palestine. Some Jews invaded in 1948 and changed the name to Israel. They took more and more land until there was just a small area called Gaza for the surviving Palestinians to live in. Israel didn't have Gaza first, Palestine had Palestine first.
no
There have always been Jews in Palestine. They were not the majority between the years 132 CE and 1949 CE.
No. Jews had already been migrating to Israel/Palestine in substantial numbers since 1919.
The declaration gave the Jews of Palestine the hope that they might one-day have a country of their own.