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Ancient Tiberias reveals more
of its beauty and treasures in this season´s excavation
Jerusalem, July 25, 2005 -- Further revelations of the beauty of the
ancient city of Tiberias and of its uniqueness as a Jewish center were
revealed in this season’s excavations there.
The excavations, funded by the Tiberias municipality, are turning the site
into a significant archaeological park, according to dig director Prof.
Yizhar Hirschfeld of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and the Israel
Antiquities Authority, and Prof. Katharina Galor of Brown University,
Providence, RI.
Ancient Tiberias’ location, just south of the modern city of Tiberias
along route 90, was highly attractive in Roman times: on one side open to
the Sea of Galilee (Lake Kinneret) and on the other bounded by Mount
Berenice. Two main north-south streets dominated the city plan. One was
the cardo, the main commercial thoroughfare of the town. The other was the
promenade, which was open on one side to the lake and over which route 90
was built.
Excavations this year focused on the city’s basilica complex, which was
first discovered several years ago and is identified with the seat of the
Sanhedrin, the ancient supreme Jewish religious authority. The eastern
wall of the structure was preserved to a height of two meters and was
bounded by the promenade.
The structure itself was built in the 4th century C.E. as a gigantic
complex of at least 2,000 square meters. It has some 25 rooms with three
main components: a colonnaded courtyard, which served as a gathering place
for the townspeople, a passageway, and a reception hall with a
semi-circular apse. Under the courtyard, excavators found a water cistern,
supported by arches, that has survived the centuries unscathed .
Beneath the apse hall, remains of an impressive, first-century, marble
floor were found. There is no natural marble in Israel, and therefore,
this floor must have been part of a grand structure belonging to an
individual of extraordinary wealth. The excavators believe it was one of
the palaces belonging to Herod Antipas, son of Herod the Great, who
founded Tiberias in 20 C.E. A marble floor of this type from the Second
Temple period has been found previously in Israel only at the Herodian
palaces of Masada, Jericho and Herodion.
The finds in the remains of the complex’s ancient shops this season were
extremely rich: complete oil lamps, bronze coins, including more of the
“Jesus coins” (a coin from the 11th century bearing the image of Jesus,
discovered in earlier excavations there), glass and stone vessels, jewelry
and frescoes. On the western façade of the basilica complex, a row of
shops was discovered along with a 50-meter section of street paved with
basalt stones, which the archaeological team named “Galilee Street.”
Note: Photos available via e-mail upon request.
For further information: Jerry Barach, Dept. of Media Relations, the
Hebrew University,
Tel: 02-588-2904. Orit Sulitzeanu, Hebrew University spokesperson, Tel:
052-608016.
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