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Most of the walls had been plundered down to their lowest course, in some places even that is missing. The mosaic pavements were well preserved, including four Greek inscriptions.
The site is entirely surrounded by a wall.
A large atrium (30.5 x 20 m) is located west of the church.
The church, located in the eastern part of the complex, forms the major part of it. The church is a monaspsidal basilica (18.6 x 12.1- internal measurements). An exo-narthex is located to its west (3.6 m wide). Steps (7.2 m wide) led from the atrium to the narthex. Three entrances led from the narthex into the church. Two rows of columns separated the aisles from the nave. The columns, standing on stylobates were topped with pseudo-Corinthian and pseudo-Ionian order capitals in low relief. Pastophoria are located at the eastern end of both aisles. The apse is internal. A chapel (7.5 x 4.2 m) is located on the northern side of the church. It was entered from a doorway in the northern aisle. A baptistery (4.1 x 3.5 m) is located on the south side of the church, reached from a doorway in the southern aisle. The church and its auxiliary rooms were all paved with polychrome mosaics. Fragments of altar screen and posts were found. An atrium (20x30m), stone paved, with rooms on its northern and southern sides, extended on the west.
A large hall on the northern side of the atrium, paved by white mosaics, might have served as a refectorium according to Gutfeld and Kalman.
A burial cave is located ca. 5 m north of the chapel, outside the wall surrounding the complex. The cave consists of a subterranean burial chamber (3.25 x 2.3 m and 1.75 m high). A hewn staircase leads into the cave. Three burial niches in the walls were covered with stone slabs. Four crosses were carved into the rock above them. Twenty six lamps dated to the Early Islamic period were found intact along with fragments of glass vessels and one intact bottle.
A large water cistern was located under the atrium, at its center. It got its water via a plastered settling basin, octagonal in shape, attached to it on the east. Three drainage channels led water to the settling basin and clay water pipes conducted the water to the cistern. A monolitic stone basin, on the west of the water cistern, seemingly served for the washing of face, hands and legs by drawn water.
Two small quarries were found ca. 20 m south of the atrium. A well preserved winepress was found 20 m east of the church. The treading floor (7 x 5.5 m) had a screw anchoring stone in its center and a drain led to a settling vat (0.95 x 0.9 m and 0.75 m deep). A round, plastered collection vat (2.25m diameter) had a mosaic floor. An oil press was partially uncovered adjoining the south side of the church, east of the baptistery. The oil press was an integral part of the church, attested by its walls that had been carved into the hill. Two uprights were found in the eastern part of the press. A collection basin 1.23 m in diameter and 0.85 m deep was sunk into the rock. A rock that had been part of the crushing mechanism was found in secondary use on the west side of the atrium.
Category | Description |
---|---|
Oil lamps | 26 intact oil lamps dated to Early Islamic period- found in the burial cave. |
Glass | Fragments of glass vessels and an intact glass bottle- found in the burial cave.
A large fragment of window pane- found in the church. |
Total area (sqm) | Size class |
---|---|
1,350 | Medium |
Church type | Diakonikon | Link to church section | Church location |
---|---|---|---|
basilical | Diakonikon | Ground floor |
The church was erected ca. 500 CE, based on the pottery and other finds.
Signs of iconoclasm and repairs attest that the church was in use in the first half of the eighth century.