Ras et-Tawil - Monastery

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Source of knowledge
Archaeological remains
Surveyed site
Surveyors: 
NameDate
Conder and Kitchener
1871-1877
Gibson
1981
Kloner
2001
Excavated site
Excavators: 
NameDate
Gibson and Kloner
1981
Discussion: 
The monastery uncovered at Ras et-Tawil is a fine example of a coenobium type monastery. It encompasses all the criteria that define a monastery of this type. The size of the built complex indicates a small number of resident monks (the excavators estimated between 10-15 monks) and the presence of the agricultural terraces and winepress attest to the main source of income of the community. The walled garden and the animal pens indicate that the monks produced vegetables and possibly some fruit and perhaps animal products that both supplemented their own diet and may have been sold as surplus.
State of certainty: 
Archaeologicaly definitive
Architectural evolution
Phase name (as published): 
Phase one
General outline: 
The site includes a chapel, five subsidiary rooms which probably served as service rooms and living quarters, two hallways, two large courtyards, an oven, a winepress, an enclosed garden, a cistern and agricultural terraces.
Dating material: 

Late fifth or early sixth century CE, based on the finds.

Phase date
Century: 
5th-6th c.
Phase name (as published): 
Phase two
General outline: 
Some structural changes were made and some of the floors were raised.
Dating material: 

Based on the architecture.

Phase date
Century: 
6th-7th c.
General outline: 
Last quarter of the eighth century.
Dating material: 

A large cache of 206 bronze coins, many of which were of Egyptian origin, the latest of which were from the third quarter of the 8th century CE.

Phase date
Century: 
8th c.
Within century: 
Second half
Post Arab conquest history: 
Still in use
Post conquest history comments: 
According to the excavators, the monastery was "re-used" in the Abbasid period. It is not clear if it was used in a monastic capacity or otherwise. The site was abandoned in the late eighth century CE and was later robbed of most of its stones.