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The site is poorly preserved. Due to severe damage by heavy machinery, a salvage excavation took place. The excavation showed that most of the stones had been robbed.
A wall on the west side of the site forms the boundary for the constructed area. The excavator suggested that this wall was part of the perimeter wall of the complex. The complex seems to be square with an area of some 700 m2.
The chapel was approximately 7.5 x 9.25 m. It was paved with a mosaic floor and showed no evidence of either pillars or roof tiles. It has been suggested that the roof was vaulted.
Four rooms were located adjacent to the south wall of the chapel. Some of these may have served as dwellings. The rooms were paved in a white mosaic, and plastered.
In the northwest corner of the site, two rock cut tombs were found. Three cist tombs were located in the prayer hall. These apparently preceded the construction of the complex and were covered by a mosaic pavement. Remains of a clay coffin were found in the southeastern corner of the prayer hall, close to the apse. No association could be determined between the coffin and the tombs in the vicinity. The coffin had been used as a fire pit at some later stage, attested by the quantity of ashes found in it. Beneath the coffin, a hewn cist tomb (1.8 x 0.6 x 0.8 m) was located. The tomb had been covered with two large stone slabs, only the eastern of which was preserved, in situ. Two additional and identical cist tombs were located in the northwestern corner of the hall and completely excavated, revealing only material of the modern era. The tombs are all in alignment with the church on an east-west axis.
A winepress, was found that had been abolished when the chapel was constructed.
Category | Description |
---|---|
Pottery | Pottery of the Byzantine period |
Glass | A small glass disk 2.5 cm. in diameter was found in the fill over the mosaic. |
Total area (sqm) | Size class |
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700 | Small |
Church type | Diakonikon | Link to church section | Church location |
---|---|---|---|
single nave |
No precise dating was provided. However, no finds earlier than Byzantine were found.
The identification of the site as a monastery was based on several finds: the absence of any evidence of construction beyond the western wall, the eastern wall bounds the site, and no structures were found to the south of the excavated southern rooms on the lower terrace (Aviam 2004).