Posted on 09/30/2015 12:14:44 AM PDT by SunkenCiv
A 1,500 year old mosaic, depicting a map with streets and buildings, was exposed about two years ago in archaeological excavations the Israel Antiquities Authority conducted together with school children and employees from the Qiryat Gat Industrial Park... This extraordinary mosaic served as the floor of a church dating to the Byzantine period. It was removed from the site for the purpose of conservation and was recently returned to its permanent location in the industrial park. The mosaic will be revealed to the public for the first time at the Factories from Within festival to be held October 1, during the Sukkot holiday.
According to archaeologists Saar Ganor and Dr. Rina Avner of the Israel Antiquities Authority, The appearance of buildings on mosaic floors is a rare phenomenon in Israel. The buildings are arranged along a main colonnaded street of a city, in a sort of ancient map. A Greek inscription preserved alongside one of the buildings exposed in the mosaic indicates that the place which is depicted is the settlement חורטסו, in Egypt. According to Christian tradition, the prophet Habakkuk was buried in חורטסו. The appearance of this Egyptian city on the floor of the public building in Qiryat Gat might allude to the origin of the churchs congregation.
The mosaic pavement was part of the floor of a church that did not survive. Two sections of the mosaic were preserved; animals such as a rooster, deer and birds and a special goblet with red fruits are portrayed on one part of the pavement. According to Ganor, The artist utilized tesserae of seventeen different colors in preparing the mosaic.
(Excerpt) Read more at antiquities.org.il ...
Such painstaking work.
Until Islam is gone, I’d prefer antiquities to remain buried.
Another insult to Mohammed uncovered?
Better hide the kids, especially the six year old girls.
Yep.
I hope ISIS and The Muslim Brotherhood don’t find out about this. They WILL destroy it given the opportunity.
What is the name of the place in the Greek or Roman alphabet?
Translation of the page identified it as “hortso settlement in Egypt.” I couldn’t find any info on it with a search. Maybe someone else knows more.
Thanks. The letters looked like cheth-vau-resh-teth-samech-vau which could result in something like “Hortso” or “Chortso” but I didn’t know if other vowels needed to be inserted...and with the tiny script wasn’t sure I had identified all the letters correctly. Perhaps the name in Greek was fully preserved but they transliterated it into Hebrew letters.
Thanks. The letters looked like cheth-vau-resh-teth-samech-vau which could result in something like “Hortso” or “Chortso” but I didn’t know if other vowels needed to be inserted...and with the tiny script wasn’t sure I had identified all the letters correctly. Perhaps the name in Greek was fully preserved but they transliterated it into Hebrew letters.
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