Jerusalem (Mount of Olives) - Eleona

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Architectural Evolution
General outline: 
Eleona is a basilical, memorial church, built over a crypt or a cave where, according to Christian tradition, Jesus taught his disciples.
Dating material: 

According to Eusebius the church was built on order of Emperor Constantine, on the initiative of his wife Helena. Also, mentioned by the Bordeaux pilgrim (333 CE).  

The baptistery annexed on the south is attributed by Vincent (1957) to the end of the 4th c. or early 5th c. This is marked here as subphase A.

Phase date
Century: 
4th c.
Within century: 
First half
Subphases
Subphase A Date
5th c.
Early
General outline: 
According to Eutychius of Alexandria (Annales, 119 [text]; 99 [trans.]), the church was destroyed by the Persians in 614. However, shortly thereafter it is mentioned by Sophronius (Anacreontica XIX, 9-12), Adomnan (I, 25), Epiphanius the Monk, the Georgian Calendar and the Commemoratorium de casis Dei 1, 18 (ed. McCormick, p. 206-207). In addition, it is not mentioned among the churches restored by Modestus. Bieberstein and Bloedhorn 1994, III: 286, suggested that it was rather destroyed in a 9th c. unrest (either that of the years 809-814, or that of 871), so that in the days of Eutychius it was in ruins, as he says.
Dating material: 

Literary sources.

Phase date
Century: 
9th c.
Post conquest history comments: 
According to Eutychius of Alexandria (Annales, 119 [text]; 99 [trans.]), the church was destroyed by the Persians in 614. But the fact that it is mentioned in several later literary sources, casts doubt about it, but in his days (d. 940), it was already in ruins.
Conclusions: 
Seemingly destroyed in the late 9th or early 10th c.