The Byzantine Eastern Church of Khirbet et-Tireh
Date
2016-01-29
Authors
Al-Houdalieh, Salah Hussein A.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Scientific Research Publishing
Abstract
Khirbet et-Tireh was inhabited during the Hellenistic, Roman, Byzantine and Early Islamic periods,
and was later used as agricultural land throughout the Ottoman-Turkish period and down to
modern times. The ancient settlement has been determined to cover a total area of approximately
30,000 square meters. However, 75 percent of its historic fortified space has been destroyed over
the past few decades by the construction of roads, a school, a gas station and several residential
structures on its northern part. The surviving architectural remains at the Khirbet include a system
of fortifications, a Byzantine monastery, two Byzantine-era churches, a rock-cut reservoir, a
cistern, water channels, a rock-cut olive press, several burial caves, a street (or a wide pathway
corridor), and several dry-stone terrace walls. The unearthed part of the eastern church complex
measures 28.8 m long along its east-west axis and a maximum of 25.5 m wide in its north-south
dimension. It follows a basilical plan and consists of five main parts: four south side rooms, an
atrium, a narthex, a main hall, and three northeast side rooms. The entire area of the church was
once paved with mosaic carpets consisting of geometric and figurative designs, with the richly colored
tesserae encompassing various shades of white, black, grey, yellow, orange, pink, wine red,
green and blue. Furthermore, remains of two plaster layers were uncovered on the interior faces
of the majority of the walls of the church complex. After the final consolidation and conservation
of the mosaic pavements of the church, as a protective measure we are covering the mosaics with a
permeable, plastic-mesh geotextile, topped by a layer of sieved soil 0.25 m thick.
Description
Keywords
Khirbet et-Tireh , Church , Crypt , Mosaics , Byzantine Period
Citation
Al-Houdalieh, S. H. A. (2016). The Byzantine Eastern Church of Khirbet et-Tireh. Archaeological Discovery, 4, 48-67.http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/ad.2016.41005