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The site was excavated intermittently from the 1950's. A Byzantine period basilica and monastery were excavated in 1957 on the northeastern slope of the tel. Most of the excavation concentrated on the church but auxiliary structures forming the monastery were uncovered.
A courtyard adjacent to the church was surrounded by rows of rooms.
The church (22.3 x 15 m) was built of stones in secondary use and decorated with a mosaic pavement featuring geometric designs. The church had a polygonal external apse which did not survive. A narthex existed on the western side of the church. Sections of a mosaic pavement survived in the southern and western areas.
Rows of rooms surrounded the courtyard, some of which probably served as dwellings for the resident monks. The rooms were separated from the southern wall of the church by a roofed passegeway.
A "corridor", paved with large flagstones, ran the length of the southern side of the church and a series of small rooms was accessed from it. This may have been the refectory. The proximity of the kitchen, located to its south, adds credence to this suggestion.
A bathhouse that had been in use since the Roman period (originally served the tenth legion stationed in the vicinity) was excavated south of the church.
A storage facility was found in the complex of rooms south of the church attested by the large number of broken storage vessels.
A double cooking stove and a large oven (1.2 m diameter) were unearthed in the largest room located south of the corridor. This room was identified as a kitchen.
In addition to those mentioned above (see Kitchen), an oven was found at the western end of the corridor.
A rock hewn cistern was discovered southwest of the church. Only its western part was excavated. The cistern is square, its western part measuring 2.5 m in width and about 5 m deep. The roof of the cistern rested on arches and the walls were coated with thick layers of plaster.
Category | Description |
---|---|
Pottery | Most of the vessels date to the Byzantine period. A jar, dating to the seventh century CE had an Arab name inscribed on it. |
Coins | Five coins: 3 Byzantine, 2 Umayyad. |
Oil lamps | Lamps with Greek inscriptions |
Total area (sqm) | Size class |
---|---|
630 | Small |
Church type | Diakonikon | Link to church section | Church location |
---|---|---|---|
basilical | Ground floor |
Established in the fifth century, based on the pottery assemblage.
Based on an Arbic inscription on a pottery vessle.