Initially small in number, the settlements rapidly grew across the occupied Palestinian territory.



Today, around 620,000 Israeli settlers live in over 200 settlements, roughly 11 percent of the total Jewish population in historic Palestine.



The transfer of population into occupied territory is a clear violation of International Humanitarian Law and the Fourth Geneva Convention.



All Israeli settlements in the occupied Palestinian territory are considered illegal under international law.

The impact of the settlement enterprise is vast. Roadblocks, checkpoints and other infrastructure designed to protect settlers, such as segregated roads, severely limit Palestinian movement.

Meanwhile, the appropriation of land and water sources for settlement use leads to a loss of livelihoods for farmers, and limits the urban development of Palestinian towns and cities.

Israeli settlements undermine the Palestinian right to self-determination by limiting the possibility of a contiguous state, instead creating a series of disconnected enclaves throughout the West Bank

Violence by settlers, many of who are armed, against Palestinian civilians is also a routine part of daily life, with actions ranging from torching farmlands and throwing stones at cars, to the use of live fire and arson attacks.

Critically, Israeli settlements undermine the Palestinian right to self-determination by limiting the possibility of a contiguous state, instead creating a series of disconnected enclaves throughout the West Bank.



Below is a timeline of the settler movement in the Holy Land. Scroll to the bottom of the article for an interactive version

The settler movement is born

Months after the June 1967 war, the first Israeli settlement, Kfar Etzion, was established in the occupied West Bank.



Settlements were initially built in key strategic areas under military pretexts, but were sparsely populated.



Religious Zionism emerged in the messianic fervour of Israel's comprehensive victory in the 1967 war and the country's vast territorial expansion.



Early religious settlers believed the Land of Israel was promised to them by God, legitimising a divine mission to build on occupied land.

In 1968, firebrand right-wing Israeli Rabbi Moshe Levinger infiltrates Hebron with followers of the Land of Israel Movement to celebrate Passover, and refuses to leave.

Religious Zionism emerged in the messianic fervour of Israel's comprehensive victory in the 1967 conflict and the expansion of its territory



Moved by Israeli forces to a nearby army base, the government eventually permits the establishment of Kiryat Arba settlement on the outskirts of Hebron - representing the first wave of ideological settlers in the West Bank.



That same year, the UN Security Council votes 13-0 with 2 abstentions to adopt Resolution 252 "reaffirming that acquisition of territory by military conquest is inadmissible".

During the same period, the Gush Emunim (Bloc of the Faithful) begins gaining prominence following the 1973 Arab-Israeli war, organising protests, marches and sit-ins to further the settlement cause.



The movement wins a key victory in 1975 as the government allows Eilon Moreh settlement to be built near Nablus.

In 1977, Labor Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin agrees to the establishment of Maale Adumim settlement, which would eventually become a major industrial hub with over 30,000 people.



The settlement, which became a city in 1991, was part of a keystone Israeli policy to separate Jerusalem from the West Bank, and prevent the contested city from being divided.



In 1978, the State Department under US President Jimmy Carter deems that Israeli settlements are "inconsistent with international law".

Right-wing Israeli Rabbi Moshe Levinger (L) and settler leader Hanan Porat celebrate with followers after the government agreed to their demands to set up the first Jewish settlement in the northern West Bank on 8 December, 1975. [Getty]















Likud enters government



The right-wing Likud party led by Menachem Begin enters power and actively develops settlements in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip, providing financial incentives and tax concessions for the first time to encourage Israeli Jews to move to the occupied Palestinian territories.

In 1980, thirteen years after capturing East Jerusalem, the Israeli Knesset passes Basic Law: Jerusalem, Capital of Israel, which states in Article 1 that "Jerusalem, complete and united," is the capital of Israel, formalising its annexation.

In 1982, Israel completes the return of the Sinai Peninsula to Egypt under the 1979 peace treaty, removing some 7,000 Israeli settlers from the territory.

By the end of Likud's rule in 1983 the settler population in the occupied Palestinian territories is around 23,700.

Israeli settlement activity nearly doubles in the years after the Oslo Accords, with the settler population reaching 198,300 in 2000

The Oslo Accords

By the time the Oslo Accords are signed in 1993, the settler population is 116,300. Settlements have expanded into key areas such as the Jordan Valley, which forms a third of the West Bank and is a vital agricultural and security corridor.

Despite being raised by Palestinian negotiators at the 1991 Madrid Peace Conference, the issue of settlements - together with Jerusalem and refugees – are set aside in the Oslo Accords for future talks.

Israeli settlement activity nearly doubles in the years to come, with the settler population numbering 198,300 in 2000.



Separation wall

In 2002, Israel begins construction of its controversial separation wall. Measuring 670-kilometres in length, 85 percent of its route is inside the occupied West Bank and surrounds Israel's major settlement blocs touted for annexation.

Gaza withdrawal

In 2005, Israel's hard-line prime minister Ariel Sharon, a patron of the settler movement, unilaterally withdraws 8,500 settlers from the Gaza Strip.



Since 1967, Israel had established over 21 Jewish settlements in the coastal territory.



Over half of the Israeli public opposed the evacuation.

The International Court of Justice ruled that the barrier was illegal. [Getty]

Obama and the settlements

In a parting shot to Netanyahu's right-wing government, outgoing US President Barack Obama refuses to veto a resolution demanding a halt to all Israeli settlements, which the UN Security Council adopts.



Despite taking a hard line, settlements grow rapidly under Obama's presidency, with Netanyahu pushing a wave of construction that matched, and even exceeded, the amount of building that took place under his predecessors during the Bush years.

EU rules to label settlement products

The EU's top court rules that food products from Israeli settlements in the occupied Palestinian territories must be labelled, backing EU guidelines issued in 2015.

The ruling reinforces the distinction between Israel proper and illegally occupied Palestinian territory.

Trump's pro-Israel shift



Donald Trump enters office in 2017, and immediately drops America's long-standing policy of a two-state solution.



He appoints David Friedman, a fervent proponent of, and donor to, settlements as US ambassador to Israel.



Israel approves the first new settlement in the occupied West Bank for two decades in 2017 near the Palestinian city of Nablus.



Later in 2017, Trump recognises Jerusalem as Israel's capital, effectively rejecting Palestinian claims to the city.



There are now more than 200,000 Israeli settlers in East Jerusalem.



With little resistance from a friendly Trump administration, Israel launches the largest settlement construction push in years, approving thousands of homes.



In March 2019, Trump officially recognises Israeli sovereignty over the occupied Golan Heights, seized from Syria in 1967.



US says Israeli settlements 'not illegal'

On 18 November, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo repudiates a 1978 State Department legal opinion that held that civilian settlements in the occupied territories are "inconsistent with international law," the latest in a series of Trump administration moves that weaken Palestinian claims to statehood.