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Most of the stones were plundered over time but in some places, walls remain to a height of 2 m. A basilical church was excavated, including an atrium surrounded by a peristyle and some auxiliary structures.
To the west of the church there is an atrium (13.8 x 13.4 m). A cistern was found in the center of the atrium and a complex of rooms surrounds it. No remains of paving were found in the atrium, the excavators surmise that it was paved with stone slabs. The atrium was surrounded by porticoes paved in a coarse white mosaic on its northern, western and southern sides.
The church, a basilica (15.5 x 12.5 m), was excavated in 1976. Its construction was dated to the sixth century. To its west there is a narthex (14 x 3 m) from which three openings access the prayer hall which is divided into a nave and two aisles. An apse at the eastern end is 2.6 m deep and 5 m diameter, these are estimates made by the excavators as no remains of the actual apse were found. Two chapels flank the eastern side of the church. The excavators suggested that these were independent chapels that were not necessarily connected with the daily services in the church. The two staircases flanking the crypt lead directly to these chapels. The church walls were plastered inside with white plaster.
The complex of rooms west of the church covered a larger area than that of the church itself. On the southern and western sides there were large halls, their outer walls having been dismantled but a robber trench revealed the western rooms to be 4.3 m wide. A strip of mosaic pavement in the southern rooms revealed that they were 5.3 m wide. Their function has not been ascertained.
A tomb, predating the church is contained in the crypt (see below). The remains of 11 individuals were found in it. According to the excavators, the cave became a chapel at the end of the fourth century.
Beneath the eastern end of the nave there is a rectangular crypt (4.5 x 3.3 m). The space had originally been a natural cave. The crypt was accessed via two staircases, one on its northern and a second on its southern side. The crypt has a window with a cross inscribed in its lintel. A Muslim inscription in Kufic script is engraved on the crypt’s southern wall. The crypt is paved in a well-preserved mosaic pavement featuring floral motifs and crosses.
A cistern was found beneath the courtyard.
Category | Description |
---|---|
Pottery | Pottery dating to the Byzantine and Early Islamic periods. Ribbed jars, found in the crypt. |
Metal objects | An elongated iron ring found in the crypt. |
Oil lamps | An oil lamp found in the crypt. |
Church type | Diakonikon | Link to church section | Church location |
---|---|---|---|
basilical | Ḥorvat Berachot - Church | Ground floor | |
single nave | Ground floor | ||
single nave | Ground floor |
Based on archaeological considerations and comparative analysis of the architecture and the mosaics.
Based on the architectural modifications and the finds.
The double staircase leading into the crypt on two sides is similar to the one found at the north church of Rehovot in the Negev (Tsafrir, Patrich and Heginbottom 1988). This may indicate that, like in Rehovot in the Negev, the builders of the complex provided for a large flow of visiting pilgrims with possibly "one way" stairs for going in and going out of the crypt.