Mazor Mausoleum
The Mazor Mausoleum (Hebrew: מאוזוליאום מזור) is one of the best preserved Roman buildings in Israel, located in El'ad. The Mausoleum, which is the only Roman era building in Israel to still stand from its foundations to its roof, was built for an important Roman man and his wife in the 3rd century AD. Their identities remain a mystery but one can still see the remnants of two sarcophagi in the mausoleum.
Location within Israel | |
Coordinates | 32.0465°N 34.9461°E |
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Location | Mazor, Israel |
Type | Mausoleum |
Completion date | 3rd century AD |
Muslim Period
In the Late Antiquity, Muslims added a prayer niche in the southern wall, indicating the direction of Mecca, and the building became an Islamic holy place called Maqam (shrine) en Neby Yahyah (Shrine of the Prophet John).[1] Due to its sacredness, the building was preserved through the ages.[2] It functioned as a mosque until the depopulation of the Palestinian village Al-Muzayri'a in 1948.
In July 1949, Israel decided to raze the mausoleum, after the Israeli army had used the building for target practice. However an antiquities inspector managed to stop the destruction.[3]
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mazor Mausoleum. |
- Conder and Kitchener, 1882, SWP II, pp. 365-367
- "The Mazor Mausoleum". Ministry of Tourism - The State of Israel. Retrieved 2009-01-13.
- History Erased, by Meron Rapoport, Haaretz, 05.07.07