The Borneo Post

Israeli archaeolog­ists uncover rare 1,500year-old mosaic

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JERUSALEM: A 1,500-yearold mosaic floor with a Greek inscriptio­n has been uncovered during works to install communicat­ions cables in Jerusalem’s Old City — a rare discovery of an ancient relic and an historic document in one.

The inscriptio­n cites 6th-century Roman emperor Justinian as well as Constantin­e, who served as abbot of a church founded by Justinian in Jerusalem. Archaeolog­ists believe it will help them to understand Justinian’s building projects in the city.

The full inscriptio­n reads: “The most pious Roman emperor Flavius Justinian and the most 6God-loving priest and abbot, Constantin­e, erected the building in which (this mosaic) sat during the 14th indiction.”

Indiction is an ancient method of counting years that was used for taxation purposes. Archaeolog­ists said the inscriptio­n suggests the mosaic dated to the year 550/551 AD.

Justinian was one of the most important rulers of the Byzantine era. In 543 AD he establishe­d the Nea Church in Jerusalem - one of the biggest Christian churches in the eastern Roman Empire and the largest in Jerusalem at the time.

“The fact that the inscriptio­n survived is an archaeolog­ical miracle,” David Gellman, director of the excavation on behalf of the Israel Antiquitie­s Authority, said in a statement.

“Every archaeolog­ist dreams of finding an inscriptio­n in their excavation­s, especially one so well preserved and almost entirely intact.”

Researcher­s believe that the building of which the mosaic was once part, located beside the Old City’s Damascus Gate, was used as a hostel for pilgrims. — Reuters

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