Umm ar-Rasas mosaics


The Umm ar-Rasas mosaics are a number of Byzantine mosaics discovered by Michele Piccirillo in the ruins of the Church of St. Stephen in Umm ar-Rasas, Jordan, in 1986.[1][2]
Of particular note is a mosaic floor dated to 785, the largest one in Jordan, with a series of panels depicting the most important cities of the region.
Town mosaic
Outer frame, left (northern) side
A series of eight cities in Palestine are shown in the frame:
- Jerusalem (Hagia-polis [Holy City])
 - Nablus (Neapolis)
 - Sebastia (Sebastis)
 - Caesarea
 - Lydda (Diospolis)
 - Bayt Jibrin (Eleutheropolis)
 - Ascalon (Askalon)
 - Gaza
 
- 
			
Jerusalem - 
			
Nablus - 
			
Sebastia - 
			
Caesarea - 
			
Lydda - 
			
Eleutheropolis (Bayt Jibrin) - 
			
Ashkelon - 
			
Gaza 
Outer frame, right (southern) side
Seven cities in Transjordan are shown in the frame:
- Kastron Mefaa (Umm er-Rasas)
 - Philadelphia (Amman)
 - Madaba
 - Esbounta (Heshbon)
 - Belemounta (Ma'in)
 - Areopolis (Rabba)
 - Charachmoba (Al-Karak)
 
Two additional cities are shown at the head of each aisle:
- Limbon
 - Diblaton
 
Inner frame
The inner frame includes illustrations of ten cities in the Nile Delta:
- Alexandria
 - Kasin (Ras Kouroun)
 - Thenesos
 - Tamiathis
 - Panau
 - Pelusium
 - Anticiaou(?)
 - Eraklion (either Heracleopolis Parva / Sethroë or Heracleion)
 - Cynopolis
 - Pseudostomon.
 
- 
			
Alexandria - 
			Kasin (Ras Kouroun)
 - 
			
Thenesos - 
			
Tamiathis - 
			Panau
 - 
			

 - 
			
Anticiaou(?) - 
			
Eraklion - 
			

 - 
			
Pseudostomon 
See also
- Early Byzantine mosaics in the Middle East; although dating to the Abbasid period, the mosaics there are part of the Byzantine tradition
 
References
- ^ Piccirillo 1988, pp. 208–231.
 - ^ Piccirillo & Attiyat 1986, pp. 341–352.
 
Bibliography
- Piccirillo, Michele; Attiyat, Taysir (1986). "The Complex of Saint Stephen at Umm er-Rasas-Kastron Mefaa. First Campaign, August 1986". Annual of the Department of Antiquities of Jordan. 30. Department of Antiquities, Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan.: 341–352. Retrieved 2023-05-16.
 - Piccirillo, Michele (1988). "The Mosaics at Um er-Rasas in Jordan". The Biblical Archaeologist. 51 (4). The American Schools of Oriental Research: 208–231. doi:10.2307/3210072. ISSN 0006-0895. JSTOR 3210072. S2CID 192366752. Retrieved 2023-05-15.
 - Balty, Janine (1998). "Les mosaïques d'Umm al-Rasas et la date de 718 - MICHELE PICCIRILLO, EUGENIO ALLIATA, et al., UMM AL-RASAS, MAYFA'AH I: GLI SCAVI DEL COMPLESSO DI SANTO STEFANO (Studium Biblicum Franciscanum, Collectio Maior 28; Jerusalem, 1994). Pp. 376, figg. 319, 35 pl. coul., 62 figg. coul., 3 plans dépliants". Journal of Roman Archaeology. 11. Cambridge University Press (CUP): 700–702. doi:10.1017/s104775940001789x. ISSN 1047-7594. S2CID 250349440.
 - Eckersley, Tracey (2016). Putting Christians on the map : topographic mosaics from late antique Jordan as representations of authority and status (Thesis). University of Louisville. doi:10.18297/etd/2484.
 
External links
- Ghazi Bisheh "Church of St Stephen" in Discover Islamic Art, Museum With No Frontiers, 2023. 2023.
 

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