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State of preservation/which parts were uncovered:
Although the church was excavated, no remains of the monastery were identified. The monastery is known from literary sources.
Illustrative material:
Churche/s:
Two churches of the Byzantine period were built at the site (an early 4th c. church and a later 5th c church), Both churches were basilical with an annexed chapel.
Monastery church:
Church type | Diakonikon | Link to church section | Church location |
---|---|---|---|
basilical | Ground floor |
General outline:
Although the site was excavated and its church revealed, remains of the monastery were scant. The earliest church was dated by the excavators to the fourth century. Based on the description of the pilgrim Egeria, monks were already present at the site in the late fourth century but whether or not they were local or had arrived from somewhere else is hard to judge.
Dating material:
Literary sources.
Century:
4th c.
Within century:
Second half
Century:
7th c?
Post Arab conquest history:
Still in use
Post conquest history comments:
The church apparently continued to in use in the early Islamic period although nothing is known of a monastery. The church was rebuilt in the Crusader period and an abbey established.