Apollonia - East Church

Abstract

A fifth century in Appolonia, the port city of Cyrene.

Description

"Apollonia (Marsa Susa), Cyrene's port, was the second of the five cities of the Pentapolis—which became Hexapolis with the addition of Hadrianopolis in the reign of Antoninus Pius" (MacKendrick, 131). Shown here are the remains of what is called the 'East Church.' The church, "the largest Christian edifice in the city, was built over a Hellenistic or Roman building. Two phases, fifth and sixth-century, are recognized. To the latter phase belongs a mosaic from the south transept, showing Noah releasing the dove from the ark. There was an elegant clover-leaf baptistery, marble-revetted and perhaps cupolaed; there is provision for heating the baptismal water—Cyrenaicans were notorious for their luxury" (MacKendrick, 132).

References

MacKendrick, Paul. The North African Stones Speak. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 1980.

Image Notes

Creation date unknown. Photograph processed September 1963. Formerly cataloged as B.04.094. Notes written on the slide or index: Apollonia E. Church.

Curator Notes

Legacy Subcollection: "D: Appollonia"

Identifier D.094
Collection D: North Africa
Location Susah, Libya
Year 1963
Batch Stamp SEP 63
Printed Date September, 1963
Index Notes Apollonia E. Church