Church of Christ's fishermen Apostles is found: Israel dig uncovers site of biblical village where Jesus's disciples Peter and Andrew were born
- Researchers found ancient church at site called El-Araj, in Beit Habek near northern shore of Sea of Galilee
- At the site, they discovered mosaic floors, glided mosaic tiles, and fragments of marble chancel screen
- The team said this season's dig El-Araj confirmed it as the site of Bethsaida, a fishing village from biblical text
- Bethsaida is the site where Peter and his brother Andrew were born according to the Gospel of John
Archaeologists in Israel's Galilee have discovered the remains of an ancient structure now said to be the Church of the Apostles – a long-debated biblical site built atop the homes of the apostles Peter and Andrew.
While mentions of the church can be found in Christian text dating as far back as the year 725 AD, there has been no confirmation of its existence, leading some to doubt that it was ever real.
Now, a team from Kinneret College in Israel and Nyack College's Center for the Study of Ancient Judaism and Christian Origins has found what could be the first physical evidence at the site of el-Araj, in Beit Habek near the northern shore of the Sea of Galilee.
Excavations this summer have turned up ornate mosaic floors, gilded remnants of a wall mosaic, and the fragments of a marble chancel screen that was once adorned with a wreath.
Archaeologists in Israel's Galilee have discovered the remains of an ancient structure now said to be the Church of the Apostles – a long-debated biblical site built atop the homes of the apostles Peter and Andrew. The Byzantine church was found near remnants of a Roman-era settlement, matching the location of Bethsaida
Mordechai Aviam of Kinneret Academic College, on the shore of the Sea of Galilee in northern Israel, said this season's dig at nearby El-Araj confirmed it as the site of Bethsaida, a fishing village where Peter and his brother Andrew were born according to the Gospel of John.
The Byzantine church was found near remnants of a Roman-era settlement, matching the location of Bethsaida as described by the first century AD Roman historian Flavius Josephus, Aviam said.
The newly-discovered church, he added, fitted the account of Willibald, the Bavarian bishop of Eichstaett who visited the area around 725 AD and reported that a church at Bethsaida had been built on the site of Peter and Andrew's home.
According to Willibald, Aviam says, Bethsaida lay between the biblical sites of Capernaum and Kursi.
Excavations this summer have turned up ornate mosaic floors (pictured), gilded remnants of a wall mosaic, and the fragments of a marble chancel screen that was once adorned with a wreath
The Byzantine church was found near remnants of a Roman-era settlement, matching the location of Bethsaida as described by the first century AD Roman historian Flavius Josephus, Aviam said. Nearby, the team also found pottery and other artifacts, in a testament to the size and complexity of the ancient site
Though the researchers have only so far excavated the southern rooms of the church, they say the evidence indicates it was part of a monastery complex.
In the engraving above, Jesus Christ transforms water into wine during the Marriage at Cana (John 2:7 )
'We excavated only one third of the church, a bit less, but we have a church and that's for sure,' Aviam told AFP.
'The plan is of a church, the dates are Byzantine, the mosaic floors are typical... chancel screens, everything that is typical of a church.'
'Between Capernaum and Kursi there is only one place where a church is described by the visitor in the eighth century and we discovered it, so this is the one,' he said.
Christians recognise Saint Peter, originally a fisherman, as one of the first followers of Jesus and the leader of the early Church following the ascension.
The Catholic Church also venerates him as its first pope.
El-Araj, known as Beit Habeck in Hebrew, is not the only candidate for the site of Bethsaida.
About two kilometres (more than a mile) away at e-Tell, digging has been going on since 1987 and according to the National Geographic website has unearthed major ninth-century BC fortifications and 'Roman-period houses with fishing equipment, including iron anchors and fishing hooks, and the remains of what may be a Roman temple'.
Aviam is convinced that he and his international team, with professor R. Steven Notley of New York City's Nyack College as academic director, are digging in the right spot.
The team says the newly-discovered church fitted the account of Willibald, the Bavarian bishop of Eichstaett who visited the area around 725 AD and reported that a church at Bethsaida had been built on the site of Peter and Andrew's home
'We have a Roman village, in the village we have pottery, coins, also stone vessels which are typical of first century Jewish life, so now we strengthen our suggestion and identification that El-Araj is a much better candidate for Bethsaida than e-Tell,' he said.
'It has been excavated for the past 32 years. We started digging two years ago because we thought it's the better one and now we have the proofs.'
Notley, interviewed in Israeli daily Haaretz, is a little more cautious, saying the clincher will be if complete excavation of the El-Araj church reveals an inscription.
'It would be normal to find an inscription in a church of the Byzantine period, describing in whose memory it was built, for instance,' he told the paper.
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