Beit Imrin

This page is subject to the extended confirmed restriction related to the Arab-Israeli conflict.Beit Imrin (Arabic: بيت امرين, transliterated as "House of Princes") is a Palestinian village in the Nablus Governorate in northern West Bank, located 18 kilometers northwest of Nablus.

[1][3] Beit Imrin is an agricultural village with the main products being pulses, grains, vegetables, olives, grapes, almonds and figs.

The town of Sebastia is located to the southwest, the villages of Ijnisinya and Nisf Jubeil to the south, Burqa to the northwest and Yasid to the east.

In 1596, it appeared in Ottoman tax registers as a village in the nahiya (subdistrict) of Jabal Sami in the Nablus Sanjak.

Below the village and to the west there is a fertile valley irrigated by a spring called Ain Dilbeh.

[11] In 1882, the PEF's Survey of Western Palestine (SWP) described it as "a village of moderate size in the valley at the foot of the Sheikh Beiyzid chain.

It is built of stone, and has a spring in the valley to the south, and olives round it on the east and west.