Yahoo – AFP,
April 26, 2017
Caesarea (Israel) (AFP) - Israeli archaeologists working on a major Roman-era port city on Wednesday unveiled new discoveries including an altar dedicated to Augustus Caesar and a centuries-old mother-of-pearl tablet inscribed with a menorah.
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| People sit next to an ancient aqueduct in the Roman-era city of Caesarea which is set for renovation as part of a multi-million-dollar project (AFP Photo/Jack GUEZ) |
Caesarea (Israel) (AFP) - Israeli archaeologists working on a major Roman-era port city on Wednesday unveiled new discoveries including an altar dedicated to Augustus Caesar and a centuries-old mother-of-pearl tablet inscribed with a menorah.
The finds
at Caesarea, a complex on the Mediterranean coast 50 kilometres (30 miles)
north of Tel Aviv, were the result of "one of the largest and most
important conservation projects ever undertaken in Israel," the Israel
Antiquities Authority said.
Caesarea
was established some 2,030 years ago by Roman-appointed King Herod the Great,
who ruled what was then Judea.
Today, the
ruins are a popular tourist destination where concerts are still held in the
remains of an ancient Roman theatre.
Archaeologist
Peter Gendelman, leading a tour of the site, said the preservation work was
perhaps the most "complicated and interesting" project he had worked
on in his 30-year career.
Some of the
finds are "completely changing our understanding of the dynamics of this
area", he said.
Authorities
are planning to finish the excavations within months and open a visitors'
centre built into ancient vaults to illustrate the city's history.
Guy
Swersky, vice chairman of the Rothschild Caesarea Foundation, said Caesarea was
a major city from Roman times right through to the Crusader era.
"This
was by far the most important port city in this area of the Middle East,"
he said.
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A picture
taken on April 26, 2017 shows part of an ancient synagogue in the
Roman-era
town of Caesarea on the Israeli coast (AFP Photo/JACK GUEZ)
|
The Edmond
de Rothschild Foundation and local authorities have allocated more than 100
million shekels ($27 million, 25 million euros) for the project.
The site,
which contains ruins from later periods including the Byzantine, Muslim and
Crusader eras, has been the focus of major excavation work over the decades but
recent work has revealed new secrets.
The project
also aims to preserve the remains of an ancient synagogue and a nearby
aquaduct.
Officials
said a small mother-of-pearl tablet engraved with a menorah was testimony to an
ancient Jewish presence at the site.
Archaeologists
said it likely dates to the fourth or fifth century AD.



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