Yarden River Valley
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The Yarden River Valley (Hebrew: עֵמֶק הַיַרְדֵּן, Emek HaYarden; Latin: Cultivida), alternately referred to as the Yarden Valley, is the drainage basin of the Yarden River in Northwest Scipia. The Valley begins around the watershed of the Kinneres Sea (the headwaters of the Yarden River) and follows the course of the river until its end in the Great Salt Sea. The Yarden Valley, as defined by the reach of the flooding of river-water and branching off tributaries, encompasses an area approximately 72,416 km sq. The Yarden River, the source and central feature of the Valley, marks the border between Sydalon and Yisrael. Due to religious, national, historical, geostrategic, and agricultural significance and concerns, the Yarden River Valley has been the major factor between the West Scipian Wars and the West Scipian Contention between Yisrael and Sydalon. The 1973 Yarden Accords formally divided the Yarden Valley between the two powers along the course of the Yarden River under international customary law.
Introduction
Geography
Physical geography
Political geography
The Yarden River Valley is approximately 72,416 kn sq. Of that, about 37.8% is in Sydalon and 62.2% is in Yisrael.
North Bank
The Sydalene portion of the Valley, sometimes known as the North Bank, is 27,360 km sq and consists of the whole of the Duchy of Hayan and County of Melfi as well as parts of the Royal Domain such as the County of Mirabel. Colloquially, the North Bank is often referred to as the Cultivida.
Several major cities lie in the Yarden Valley, including Zippori, Hamrun, and Hayan.
South Bank
The Yisraeli side of the Yarden Valley, also referred to as the South Bank, is 45,056 km sq. About 88% of the Valley is enclosed in the Yarden Valley Special District, with the remainder being in neighboring jurisdictions such as the Yerushalayim, Central, and Northern districts.
The major city of Chevron resides in the south-central Yarden Valley, while smaller cities and towns with religious significance such as Yericho and Beis LeChem are also located in this region.
Demography
Sydalon
Yisrael
History
Agriculture
The Yarden River Valley is approximately 10 degrees warmer than adjacent mountainous areas (the Judean and TBD Mountains), as well as about 3-6 degrees warmer than nearby coastal land due to global air currents. Its all-season agricultural climate, extremely fertile soils, and ready water supply made it a major region for agriculturical production dating back at least 5,000 years ago. By about 3,000 BCE, produce and crops from the Valley were being exported to other areas of Scipia and potentially across the Periclean Sea to southern Belisaria.
The area's high-yielding and productive farmlands were chronicled repeatedly in the Hebrew Bible. Modern and contemporary methods of farming have significantly amplified the agricultural output of the Valley since the 1850s.
The Yarden River Valley southern bank is known as the "breadbasket" of Yisrael.
Religious significance
The river valley and its surrounding lands hold special religious and spiritual importance to both Judaism and Christianity. The Yarden River is held sacred in Christian belief as where the Messiah was baptized. For Jews, the Yarden Valley was site of numerous miracles, such as the Battle of Yericho, as told by the Hebrew Bible, and a vessel for Hashem to deliver life-sustaining water and sustenance to the Jewish people in their lands.
Pilgrimage and tourism
Numerous cities, battles, events, and the graves of figures described or cited in the Bible, both for Jews and Christians, are scattered across the Yarden River Valley.
Some examples include:
- The cities of Yericho, Beis LeChem, Nazres, and Chevron, all of whom feature prominently in the Bible;
- The foothills of the Judean Mountains, where the story of the Chanukkah Revolt by the Chasmoni primarily occurred;
- Numerous Christian monasteries and convents on either side of the River Yarden;
- Farms in the valley reportedly containing over 3,000 year-old olive and grape vines, some of whom that have been in near continuous use since antiquity.