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Mono-apsidal basilica with a narthex and a single entrance from the west. A second opening was installed in the southern wall as well as in both sides of the apse. Two rooms were attached on the south on either side of a stone paved area infront of the southern opening. Some of the walls were built of mud bricks set on stone foundations.
The narthex is longer then the width of the basilical church. It is 6.20 m wide and divided lengthwise into two by a row of columns. These columns form a portico in front of the single western entrance to the church. The floor of the narthex was laid with a mosaics bearing geometric patterns. A single grave was found dug into the mosaic floor between the northern column of the portico and the eastern wall of the narthex. It was accessed from the west.
Only one doorway led from the narthex to the hall. The opening was 1.30m wide.
The walls are preserved to an average height of 2 m. Their outer face made of hewn stones. The inner face made of small and medium field stones and plastered.
The nave was separated from the aisles by two rows of six columns, with intercolumnations of 2.8 m.
The northern aisle is 17.8 m long and 3.3 m wide. A bench 40 cm wide and 30 cm high, made of sand stone blocks, ran along the northern and western walls of the aisle. In its eastern wall there was a doorway 0.80 m wide. The southern aisle has the same dimensions. A stone built bench runs along its western and southern walls, being interrupted by three openings: two lead to a annexed rooms and one, between the side rooms, leads to a stone paved ante-space outside the church. It was its main doorway. To its west there was an entrance to a western annexed room (a diakonikon / prothesis chapel). In the eastern wall of the aisle there is another opening 1.10 m wide, leading first outside and then to a lateral room (a southern pastophorium). A small domical niche (35 cm wide, 50 cm deep and 1 m above floor level), was discovered in the wall between the doorway to the pastophorium and the chancel screen of the bema. On the floor beneath the niche a fragment of rectangular marble chest (a reliqוary), 7.6x12 cm in dimensions was found, indicating that the niche was asociated with cult of relics. Its short side was decorated with a cross in a medalion. A (missing) plack was fixed to the longer side. Two beds were installed next to the southern screen of the bema.
The bema, U-shaped, 8 m wide and 5.2 m long, was raised some 60 cm (3 steps) above the nave. There are three openings in the chancel screen: one in the center, leading to the nave, and two lateral openings, at both ends, to the aisles. An ambo in a form of semi-circle (1.1 m wide and 1.1 m deep) and made of hewn stones, projects from the northwest corner of the bema. The apse is internal, 6 m wide and 3.2 m deep. The inner face of the apse was plastered and has traces of red color. A column base and traces of three other bases of the ciborium were found. The altar was located at the apse chord. An empty reliquarium was found in the depression in the floor under the altar. Three phases of mosaic floors were discovered in the bema-apse unit.
A doorway to the north of the apse, 0.8m wide, led out of the church via a stone paved area. A bench was built along the southern wall of this area. To the south of the apse, a door 1.1m wide (open inward, into the aisle), led to a lateral room, which was added to the church in later phases and its function is unclear. Its walls are built of brick and small stones, different in its masonry than the external wall of the adjacent apse. Seemingly, here as well originally there was a passage.
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Epigraphy. One of the two rooms appended on the SE of the s entrance (room E) was paved by mosaics slightly later (Sub phase A).
According to the inscriptions and mosaic styles, this phase was dated to ca. 560.
An inscription in front of the altar is dated to Nov. 570, under Justin II.