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A basilica and a complex of rooms were excavated. Today, no remains are extant.
The church was fronted by an atrium.
A triapsidal basilica (24 x 15 m). The floor was paved with stone flags, some remaining in situ. Fragments of colored plaster attest to frescoes on the walls.
The church showed two phases with the second floor raised 0.60 m above the first and paved in opus sectile.
A row of rooms was located south of the church.
A room south of the church was decorated with elaborate wall mosaics, with glass tesserae in green, blue, yellow and red.
Measurements were not provided by the excavator. It might be suggested that this was a refectory, based on many fragments of glass and pottery found on its floor.
Between the two floors of the church, a row of tombs contained several burials each. One tomb contained a single burial of a child. The tombs were hewn and lined with stone panels.
Category | Description |
---|---|
Pottery | Byzantine |
Glass | Fragments |
Coins | Umayyad |
Church type | Diakonikon | Link to church section | Church location |
---|---|---|---|
basilical | Ground floor |
Umayyad coins
The complex excavated in Beer Sheva (and no longer extant) strongly suggests a monastery although there is no certainty, as the description of the excavation is lacking in detail. The elaborate wall mosaic indicates a fairly wealthy establishment.