Excavations in Israel's Galilee have uncovered remains of an ancient church said to mark the home of the apostles Peter and Andrew, the dig's archaeological director said Friday.
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| Credit: El Araj Excavations |
The Byzantine church was found near remnants of a Roman-era settlement, matching the location of Bethsaida as described by the first century AD Roman historian Flavius Josephus, Aviam said.
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| Credit: El Araj Excavations |
According to Willibald, Aviam says, Bethsaida lay between the biblical sites of Capernaum and Kursi.
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| Credit: El Araj Excavations |
"The plan is of a church, the dates are Byzantine, the mosaic floors are typical... chancel screens, everything that is typical of a church. Between Capernaum and Kursi there is only one place where a church is described by the visitor in the eighth century and we discovered it, so this is the one," he said.
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| Credit: El Araj Excavations |
El-Araj, known as Beit Habeck in Hebrew, is not the only candidate for the site of Bethsaida.
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| Credit: El Araj Excavations |
Aviam is convinced that he and his international team, with professor R. Steven Notley of New York City's Nyack College as academic director, are digging in the right spot.
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| Credit: El Araj Excavations |
"It has been excavated for the past 32 years. We started digging two years ago because we thought it's the better one and now we have the proofs."
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| Credit: El Araj Excavations |
"It would be normal to find an inscription in a church of the Byzantine period, describing in whose memory it was built, for instance," he told the paper.
Source: AFP [July 19, 2019]
from The Archaeology News Network https://ift.tt/30LDoXE
Breaking News: Byzantine Church of the Apostles unearthed in northern Israel - News Paper







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