Browse Items (29 total)
- Chronology Archaeological contains "{Byzantine Period}"
St. Catherine's Monastery: Codex Sinaiticus
This photograph shows a page from the Codex Sinaiticus, which was created in the 4th century CE. The extant pages (400 of an estimated 730) contain the oldest complete manuscript of the New Testament. It was found at St. Katherine's Monastery in the…
Tags: Byzantine, Codex Sinaiticus, New Testament
The Vatican: Codex Vaticanus
This photograph shows a page from the Codex Vaticanus, which was created in the 4th century CE and is arguably the most important ancient manuscript of the Greek Bible. Codex Vaticanus originally contained both the Old and the New Testaments, but…
Tags: Byzantine, Codex Vaticanus, New Testament
Jerusalem: Church of the Holy Sepulchre and Dome of the Rock
This photograph, looking east, shows the proximity of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre (the two domes in the foreground) to the Dome of the Rock (in the background). The Mount of Olives and the Arab village of Et Tur (the smaller of the two towers on…
Jerusalem: The Western Wall/Wailing Wall
This photograph shows the proximity of the Western Wall (sometimes called the Wailing Wall) to the Dome of the Rock. The Western Wall, at the center of the photograph, is the western wall of the Temple Mount that was built by Herod the Great and on…
Tags: Dome of the Rock, Herod, Jerusalem, Temple Mount, Western Wall
Hammat Tiberias: the synagogue mosaic floor - central panel
This photograph shows the central panel of the mosaic floor in the fourth century synagogue at Hammat Tiberias. The stones running through the middle of it are a later wall that was built in such a way as to destroy the mosaic. At the center of the…
Tags: Byzantine, Galilee, Hammat Tiberias, Mosaic, Synagogue
Hammat Tiberias: the synagogue mosaic floor - top panel
This photograph shows the upper panel of the mosaic floor in the center of the fourth century synagogue at Hammat Tiberias. It is the last panel that a worshipper would see/walk across as he walked toward the standing Torah shrine on the southern…
Tags: Byzantine, Galilee, Hammat Tiberias, Mosaic, Synagogue
Beit Alpha: the synagogue mosaic
This photograph shows a close-up of one of the panels of the mosaic floor in the 6th century CE synagogue at Beit Alpha. The panel tells the story of the Akedah, or the binding of Isaac (Genesis 22:1-19). At the left two servants stand with a beast…
Tags: Beit Alpha, Byzantine, Galilee, Mosaic, Synagogue
Hammat Tiberias: the synagogue mosaic floor - central panel close-up
This photograph shows a close-up of the figure at the center of the zodiac that is in the central panel of the mosaic floor in the fourth century synagogue at Hammat Tiberias. This very fine mosaic shows a depiction of the sun god Helios riding his…
Tags: Byzantine, Galilee, Hammat Tiberias, Mosaic, Synagogue
Beth Shean/Scythopolis: aerial view
During the Hellenistic period (332-63 BCE) the city of Beth Shean enjoyed a revival and came to be known as Scythopolis, or 'City of the Scythians', perhaps as a result of a unit of the Scythian cavalry in the army of Ptolemy II Philadelphus. During…
Tags: Beth Shean, Cardo, Galilee, Hasmonaeans, Hellenistic, Roman, Scythopolis, Theater
Hammat Tiberias: the synagogue
This is a photograph of the synagogue of the ancient city of Tiberias. Several synagogues were built on this site over the centuries; much of the architecture that you see here dates to the 5th-8th centuries CE. The mosaic floor that you will see in…
Tags: Byzantine, Galilee, Hammat Tiberias, Mosaic, Synagogue
Jerusalem: Ecce Homo Arch
This picture shows the Ecce Homo arch, which was the large central arch of Hadrian's east forum. It stands over the Via Dolorosa in the Old City of Jerusalem outside the Sisters of Zion Convent. Note how more modern buildings have been built around…
Tags: Aelia Capitolina, Hadrian, Jerusalem, Roman
Madaba: Madaba Map
This map was found to be part of the mosaic floor of a 6th century CE church in Madaba, Jordan (east of the Dead Sea), and includes this map of Byzantine Jerusalem. A broad, column-lined street runs from the north gate south through the center of the…
Tags: Aelia Capitolina, Byzantine, Damascus Gate, Jerusalem, Madaba, Madaba Map, Map, Roman
Jerusalem in the Byzantine period: Map
This map of Jerusalem has a circle around the location of the modern Damascus Gate, one of the northern gates into the Old City of Jerusalem. The modern gate, which was built during the Ottoman period, sits atop a Roman gate that was built in the…
Tags: Aelia Capitolina, Damascus Gate, Hadrian, Jerusalem, Map, Ottoman, Roman
Jerusalem: Damascus Gate
A look from the north at the Damascus Gate, which is one of the northern gates into the Old City of Jerusalem. The gate that you see at the center of the photograph, as well as the walls to its right and left, are Ottoman in date, built by Suleiman…
Tags: Aelia Capitolina, Damascus Gate, Hadrian, Jerusalem, Ottoman, Roman
Jerusalem: Church of the Holy Sepulchre - aedicule of the Anastasis
This photograph shows a small aedicule, a chapel built over the rock cut empty tomb believed to belong to Jesus. It stands at the center of the rotunda, the round architectural structure that was built there by the Crusaders and right underneath the…
Jerusalem: Church of the Holy Sepulchre - plan
This plan shows the original layout of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in the time of Constantine and his mother Helen. The complex is made of 3 separate units: at the bottom of the plan, a basilica ending with an apse and Golgotha incorporated into…
Jerusalem: Church of the Holy Sepulchre
This close-up of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, which is looking northwest, shows the two domes of the church: the Anastasis (the larger dome, on the left) and the dome over the basilica (the smaller dome, on the right). The entrance to the…
Kidron Valley: Mar Saba
This monastery in the Judaean Desert, initially called the Great Laura and later Mar Saba (after its founder, Sabas of Cappadocia), was built in 483 CE. It is the result of Byzantine-era hermetic monasticism: in 457 CE, at the age of 18, Mar Saba…
Tags: Byzantine, Kidron Gorge, Mar Saba, Monastery
Wadi Qelt: Choziba Monastery (St. George's)
This photograph shows the cliff-side monastery called Choziba or St. George's Monastery, which is in the Wadi Qelt, approximately 3 miles west of Jericho, in the Judaean Desert. The monastery was established in the early fifth century, during the…
Tags: Byzantine, Monastery, St. George's, Wadi Qelt
Jerusalem: Church of the Holy Sepulchre - Tomb of Jesus
This photograph shows the interior of the Aedicule of the Anastasis, where Christians as early as the 4th century CE believed that Jesus' body was laid before his resurrection.
Jerusalem: Church of the Holy Sepulchre - Chapel of St. Helena
This photograph is taken from the Armenian chapel dedicated to Queen Helena (the mother of Constantine who was entrusted by her son to oversee the building of the church in the 4th century CE). The steps in the background are the 29 steps that lead…
Jerusalem: Gold Ring Depicting the Holy Sepulchre
This photograph shows a gold ring that depicts the Aedicule of the Anastasis at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. It was found in a 6th-century building south of the Temple Mount and shows the Anastasis as a free-standing structure (which was how it…
The Roman Empire: Map
This map shows the provinces of Roman control around the Mediterranean. The red circle is around Rome, the capital of the Roman Empire, and the arrow points to the city of Constantinople, which is where Constantine moved the capital of the Empire in…
Tags: Byzantine, Constantine, Constantinople, Map, Rome
Jerusalem: aerial view
In the background of this aerial photograph of the Old City of Jerusalem we see the hills of the Judaean desert, as well as Transjordan in the distance. In the near distance, just beyond the city, is the Mount of Olives and Mt. Scopus. In the center…
Jerualem: Christian Quarter and Dome of the Rock
This close-up aerial photo of the Old City of Jerusalem depicts the complex of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre (at the bottom left, with the two grey domes). In the middle background is the Temple Mount and the golden dome of the Dome of the Rock.…
Jerusalem: Phasael's Tower
This photograph shows Phasael's Tower, one of three towers built by King Herod the Great (37-4 BCE) as part of his defensive wall system on the western side of the city of Jerusalem. Herod named the tower after his brother, who was killed by the…
Tags: Citadel, Crusades, Hellenistic, Herod, Jerusalem, Phasael Tower, Roman
Jerusalem in the Byzantine period: Map
This plan shows what Jerusalem looked like in the Byzantine period. The Temple stood in ruins, as did the short-lived Temple of Jupiter that some scholars believe was erected in its place. Multiple churches were built during and after the reign of…
Jerusalem: City of David
This view of the eastern slope of the City of David shows the steps leading down to the Gihon Spring (at the bottom of the photo, in the triangular shadow beneath the double window), 8th-7th century BCE walls and a Jebusite wall (immediately below…
Jerusalem: area and population through the ages
This slide, fairly self-explanatory, shows the size and population of Jerusalem between 1,000 BCE and 565 CE. One can see the gradual rise in the city's population and geographical scope, as well as the topographical trajectory of its development:…
Tags: City of David, Iron Age, Jerusalem, Map