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The mono-apsidal church, 18.5 m long and 14 m wide, was almost entirely excavated. It consisted of an atrium, a prayer hall with two aisles, an external apse and two attached lateral wings 4.25m wide, with several rooms and chapels (the southern wing was almost entirely destroyed by modern building activity; the northern one served as a baptistery). Each wing terminated with an apse on the east. The church complex extende over 1000 sqm compound.
The rectangular atrium with a peristyle was 18.5 m long and 13.25 m wide. It was paved with stone slabs. The floor slabs covered the collapsed vault of a large cistern, 7.4 m long, 3.15 m wide and 3 m deep. The cistern collected the water from the roof by three plaster-lined channels.
The walls are 0.6 m thick, and were built of ashlars 0.35 - 1 m long. The ashlars were laid out as headers and stretchers. The internal sides of the walls were covered with plaster.
The nave is 7.5 m wide and paved with mosaics.
The aisles are 2.5 m wide. At the eastern end of the southern aisle, under the floor, a tomb was discovered, which served for the cult of the relics (see under "Burial Loci" in "Detailed Description").
The apse is external, semicircular, with outer radius of 4 m. In the first phase its internal diameter was 5.5m; in the second - 3.2m.
Category | Description |
---|---|
Coins | A tremessis coin of Constantine II (337-361 CE) was found on the phase 1 pavement of one of the rooms of the northern wing. |
Pottery | Egyptian storage jars, "Late Roman" and African Red Slip" bowls and plates, storage jars from Asia Minor and roof tiles. |
Glass | Window panes and glass chandelier. |
Metal objects | Iron nails, door bolts and fragments of a lead chandelier. |
Other | An episcopal ivory sceptre lacking its handle in a shape of a hand. The hand had three fingers, comprising episcopal blessing. Ring on one of the fingers (Leibovitch 1957: 35) |
The church, including the lateral chapels, is attributed by numismatic evidence and an inscription to the mid 4th c., although, according to Jerome, in 366 Dor was still deserted. Coins of Constans II (337-361) were uncovered under the lower floor of a room attached to the church on the north (Dauphin 1999, 401).
The second phase is attributed to the end of the 5th c.