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According to Epstein and Gutman the longitudinal walls of the chapel are not parallel to each other. Six long antae of different length, arrange in three pairs, are projecting inword. They supported arches carrying the flat roof of the church. Another single pair of antae was set in the deep apse. There was an entrance in the western wall and another one opened to the south. According to the plan published by Schumacher the main hall was divided into two rooms (the western one might have been a courtyard), no antae are presented, a smaller chapel with an annex to its east was attached on the south and there are two N-S narrow halls in the western end of the complex. Was it a differnt church?
Many architectural details decorated with crosses (45 altogether), were uncovered in the village in secondary use.
According to Schumacher, the small room on the west might be considered an atrium.
There are two entrances into the chapel: The central one is built in the center of the western wall; the lateral one is built in the center of the southern wall.
According to Schumacher 1888: 228: "The wall course, about 3 feet thick, follows without mortar, and in such a way that the stones of the singlecourses, which are 12 to 16 inches high, lie across each other diagonally".
According to Epstein and Gutman, the single nave of the chapel was roofed by a series of six pairs of antae of different length, supporting arches, according to the typical Horanite architecture. These antae are not present in the plan published by Schumacher.
No bema was found. The external apse has an elongated shape. According to Epstein and Gutman, a pair of antae carrying an arch, separated it into two parts.
Due to the fact that the plans published by Schumacher in 1888 and the one published by Epstein and Gutman in 1972 are very different, it is not clear if we have to do it with two different chapel, as was assumed by Ovadiah and de-Silva 1981, or with just a single one, as is reflected from the description of the site by hartal (https://survey.antiquities.org.il/#/MapSurvey/27/site/3486, site no. 5).