Vici.org

Les environs:

North wall of the Soutch Church at KokanayaTomb of Eusebius at KokanayaPyramidal Tomb at KokanayaDeir Seta, BaptisteryDeir Seta, BaptisteryBanqusa, South ChurchSyriac inscription from baptistery of DehesDehes, East Church. Portal in South wallByzantine chapel near BanakfurQalb Loze in SyriaArshin, ChurchBashmishliBamukka, GraveBamukka, church and baptisteryKhirbet HasanSarmada castleKfer. Plan of the chapel.Baqirha 2020Baqirha, Baptistery of the West Church

Localisation:

  • Syrie, Būz Ghār
  • geo:36.132164,36.633804
  • Précision incertaine

Period or year:

  • 554 / unknown

Classification:

  • Sanctuaire
  • Visible

Identificateurs:

  • vici:place=69641

Annotations

Il n'y a pas une annotation en français. Présenté est une annotation en Anglais.

The church at Juwaniye - Djuwaniyeh was dedicated to St. Stephen. The inscription found in the atrium on the south side of the church ibears the dedication to St. Stephen (https://vici.org/vici/69640/). Another inscription found near the town of Djuwaniyeh only partially preserved (https://vici.org/vici/69642/?lang=en) gives the date 554 AD. Both stele are almost certainly of the same time so the church is from this period (Butler 1929, p. 142).

Sources:

  1. Howard Crosby Butler: Early Churches in Syria. Fourth to Seventh Centuries. Princeton University Press, Princeton 1929, p. 142-143
  2. The Cult of Saints in Late Antiquity; http://csla.history.ox.ac.uk/record.php?recid=E01815

The church at Juwaniye - Djuwaniyeh was dedicated to St. Stephen. The inscription found in the atrium on the south side of the church ibears the dedication to St. Stephen (https://vici.org/vici/69640/). Another inscription found near the town of Djuwaniyeh only partially preserved (https://vici.org/vici/69642/?lang=en) gives the date 554 AD. Both stele are almost certainly of the same time so the church is from this period (Butler 1929, p. 142).

Sources:

  1. Howard Crosby Butler: Early Churches in Syria. Fourth to Seventh Centuries. Princeton University Press, Princeton 1929, p. 142-143
  2. The Cult of Saints in Late Antiquity; http://csla.history.ox.ac.uk/record.php?recid=E01815

À proximité

Djuwaniyeh, Stele II

Boundary stele. Sixth century.

Djuwaniyeh

Byzantine boundary stele.

Ma'a z- Kafr Aruk (2 km)

Me'ez - ancient village. Roman and Byzantine ruins.