Home : Complete Site List : Search : What's New? : Permission to Use : Contact Us

Byzantine Church Interior

< Prev | 7 of 12 | Next >
Byzantine Church Interior
Click Photo for Larger Version
Please read before you download

Images and/or text from holylandphotos.org are NOT TO BE USED ON OTHER WEB SITES, NOR COMMERCIALLY, without special permission. To request permission contact us at holylandphotos@gmail.com.

Photo Comments

View looking east at the interior and apse of the small Byzantine Church on the Plateau of Masada.  In the paved area in the apse was a hewn depression that may have contained a reliquary.

On the left (north) wall, note the unusual surfacing: stones and potsherds imbedded in the plaster.  The lower portions of two tall rectangular windows are visible.  The windows were originally glazed.


The church was built by Euthymius around AD 422.  Like almost all Byzantine Churches, the apse is on the east side of the building.  A community of Byzantine monks lived at Masada (then called Marda) from the 5th through the 7th century.