Shelomi - Monastery

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Source of knowledge
Archaeological remains
Excavated site
Excavators: 
NameDate
C. Dauphin
1976-1977
Discussion: 
The question of the site's identification as a monastery has been debated. According to Dauphin, who excavated the site, it is not a monastery, as a church has not been found. Dauphin's view is that the site served as a farm that belonged to a monastery, perhaps worked by lay people. This assertion has been contested by Aviam (2002), who identified the site as a monastery. Hirschfeld, too, regarded the site as a monastery, suggesting that the church may have been located on the second story (Hirschfeld 1997: 69, note 143). Two points should be considered: the first - only the northeastern part of the complex was excavated. It cannot be ruled out that the part that remained un-excavated contained the church. The second has to do with the style of the mosaic pavement: It is elaborate and well executed. Such a mosaic would have required a fairly large expenditure. If this was not a monastery proper and only a farm worked perhaps by hired hands, why invest such funds in decorating? If, on the other hand, the residents who worked the farm were monks belonging to a mother house located elsewhere, the farm should very well be counted as a monastery.
State of certainty: 
Archaeologicaly definitive
Architectural evolution
Phase name (as published): 
Phase A
General outline: 
A courtyard surrounded by rooms. The courtyard was paved with a coarse white mosaic. The lower floor of the room east of the courtyard and its southern wall belong to this phase. Only two courses of stones remain of northern wall of this room. Its floor was plaster. The two rooms to the south of this room formed a single unit.
Dating material: 

Based on the pottery and a coin of Anastasius (498-518 C.E.) this phase was dated to the late fifth- early sixth century CE.

Phase date
Century: 
5th-6th c.
Iconoclastic evidence
Iconoclastic evidence: 
No
Phase name (as published): 
Phase B
General outline: 
This is a continuation of phase A with some changes. The room east of the courtyard was paved in a polychrome mosaic with a geometric pattern. The workmanship is of a high quality in black, grey, pink, wine-red, orange, yellow, ochre and brown, the background is white. The northern wall was plastered. The southern unit of phase A was divided into two rooms by a north-south wall. Only two courses of this wall remain. A storeroom was found in the eastern part of this divided room. A mosaic pavement was laid in the western of the two rooms. At the end of this phase the structure suffered destruction and a fierce conflagration possibly as a result of the Persian occupation.
Dating material: 

An inscription in the mosaic dated to 610 C.E.

Phase date
Century: 
6th c.
Within century: 
Early
Iconoclastic evidence
Iconoclastic evidence: 
No
Phase name (as published): 
Phase C
General outline: 
The northern part of the complex was abandoned and occupation was concentrated in the southern part. A southern wing was constructed consisting of a courtyard, paved with a crude white mosaic and containing a cistern 5 m deep. A trapezoid room of crudely made walls was built east of the courtyard, using boulders and earth with a plaster floor. The new structures were oriented towards the southeast.
Dating material: 

Signs of the conflagration that destroyed the structures of the first phase are not visible, therefor this part postdates the destruction. A Syro-Palestinian inscription at the joining point of the two courtyards dates the reoccupation of the site to the eighth century. A large number (26) of late Byzantine and 1 Arab oil lamps confirms this.

Phase date
Century: 
8th c.
Within century: 
Mid
Iconoclastic evidence
Iconoclastic evidence: 
No
Phase name (as published): 
Phase D
General outline: 
Minor changes were made such as the thickening of walls.
Dating material: 

Architectural

Phase date
Century: 
8th-9th c.
Iconoclastic evidence
Iconoclastic evidence: 
No
Dating material: 

Based on the finds and the Syro-Palestinian inscription, the site was occupied in the eighth century. The date when it ceased to serve in a monastic capacity is unknown.

Phase date
Century: 
Unknown
Post Arab conquest history: 
Repaired
Post conquest history comments: 
Arab and Crusader pottery indicate a later occupation of the site.