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The architectural funeral complex consisted of an open courtyard (3.5×3.5 m) with a tomb located in its south-western corner, and a roofed chamber (3.5×4.3 m) with a mosaic floor. The orientation is northwest-southeas (generally speaking, it is oriented to the north), and the chamber was attached to the earlier courtyard on its south. The walls were partially preserved to a maximal elevation of 0.3 m, as well as the entrances from the north and east. The courtyard's floor was of beaten earth. Three Greek inscriptions were preserved in the mosaic floor, one of them dating the construction of complex. Another inscription was found on a marble panel which closed the eastern part of the tomb.
Courtytard, 3.5×3.5 m in dimensions.
The entrance into the open courtyard with the tomb was located in the northern wall of the courtyard, in its western side. The chamber was connected to the courtyard through the entrance 1.5 m wide in their common wall - eastern wall of the chamber (ca. 1 m wide), but at a certain period it was concealed by a short wall (W28; 1.4 m long, 0.5 m thick), built over the mosaic floor, perhapse to regulate circulation of pilgrims in the chamber.
The walls (ca. 0.8 m thick) of the chamber and courtyard were built of mud in a "terre pisè" - a rare building technique in our region - that were set over foundations of small and medium-size fieldstones. The inner and outer faces were coated with white plaster, the remains of which were found on the floor.
Category | Description |
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Pottery | second half of the sixth–early seventh centuries CE |
Glass | second half of the sixth–early seventh centuries CE |