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A partial excavation revealed a church, a courtyard with five cisterns to its north and several rooms on its south and west. A large baptismal font was found in front of the church.
A courtyard is located north of the church.
The basilical church ( 24.6 x 16.8 m) has a rectangular, external apse. Entrance to the prayer hall is in the southern wall. Remains of a mosaic pavement were found in the hall. An octagonal baptismal font (1.2 m high, 1.1 m in diameter) was found northwest of the church, its sides decorated with crosses and rosettes.
Several rooms were observed west and south of the church. Some of these may have been dwellings of the resident monks.
Burial caves were excavated nearby. Some Byzantine oil lamps with decorative crosses and dedicatory inscriptions were found in the caves.
(See burials)
The courtyard north of the church contained five water cisterns.
Category | Description |
---|---|
Oil lamps | Decorated with crosses and bearing dedicatory inscriptions |
Church type | Diakonikon | Link to church section | Church location |
---|---|---|---|
basilical | Ground floor |
Byzantine, based on the finds. Suggested 5th-6th century.
The monastery seems to have been located on the fringes of the village of Thecoa itself. Since no enclosing wall was reported, it is not known whether the second church mentioned belonged to the monastery or served as one of the village churches. If one assumes that the southern wall of the church formed a part of the southern enclosing wall, the entrance through that wall may indicate that the church served not only the resident monks but the villagers as well.