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The northeastern part of the complex was excavated. Two courtyards, cisterns, rooms and tombs were unearthed. The walls remained to a height of 1-2 courses and one mosaic pavement was mostly preserved.
A courtyard (courtyard 1) is located on the western side of the excavated are, bounded on its northern and eastern sides by rooms. A second courtyard (courtyard 2) was constructed in the third phase of the monastery.
Northeast of courtyard 1, a room was suggested by the excavator to have been a watchtower.
Although a church was not located, large amounts of colored tesserae were found in the rubble indicating a second story which may have housed a church.
An underground chamber sealed by four stone slabs served as a burial. It contained the remains of 18 humans: male, female and children. Burial offerings were also found in the tomb.
A storeroom was found in the eastern part of a divided room belonging to the second phase of the monastery. The room contained numerous fragments of storage jars in parallel rows.
A large quantity of vegetal remains that point to animal fodder indicate that large farm animals were kept on the site.
A cistern was located in courtyard 1. A second cistern was located on the seam between courtyard 1 and courtyard 2.
Agricultural installations were not found. However, agricultural implements attest to the site's function as a farm (see small finds)
Category | Description |
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Inscription - see under epigraphy | |
Oil lamps | 26 Late ByzantineLamps. One Early Islamic lamp. |
Metal objects | Iron rod for measuring; door hinges; parts of door latches; two latches of boxes and chests; a sickle; a knife; a pitchfork. Bronze lamp chain. |
Other | Vegetal matter: wheat; barley; olive kernels; grape pips; seeds of wild plants, wild grasses and legumes. |
Bones | Remains of 18 humans: male, female and children. |
Glass | Window panes; glass vessels from burial |
Other | Roof tiles. |
Total area (sqm) | Size class |
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500 | Small |
Church type | Diakonikon | Link to church section | Church location |
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No traces |
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.
An inscription in the mosaic dated to 610 C.E.
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.
Architectural
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.