1
10
1
-
https://architectureandasceticism.exeter.ac.uk/files/original/852073abac2a27a7ca07caa4a0b99063.jpg
f1bddc2afe8ab93722b7872f27a96718
https://architectureandasceticism.exeter.ac.uk/files/original/8d7ef697132ec6d0a6790e8ecf433748.jpg
84df9bcc11f1643ebb0f3db4f9147e35
https://architectureandasceticism.exeter.ac.uk/files/original/401e6c3ae99f8173661928eeb0855ded.jpg
28efbc8d2bacdbf1c59af105f9492d7e
https://architectureandasceticism.exeter.ac.uk/files/original/b69924634f14aad7ddab7cea9cce86d1.jpg
76177a8c67d6a8a1990f78a8e29cd6e9
https://architectureandasceticism.exeter.ac.uk/files/original/00eee0fd751a9983d4f7d1f3dff50c98.jpg
1dd8f7ccc6cc8bef28acb3fc9a44d3f7
https://architectureandasceticism.exeter.ac.uk/files/original/9b61c30494978297595b6b82d0e5455c.jpg
affea889db82abd23b4925fee9a3396b
https://architectureandasceticism.exeter.ac.uk/files/original/e2e97508ceee1d6c892fb84763b8c9ba.jpg
9d1f3e95cdb9edbd01320d3cb7e7a6f1
https://architectureandasceticism.exeter.ac.uk/files/original/6abcfd81e7864c6a2f3a5c4aa9a4ee57.jpg
0b5c5890695120ae883dead8072e0160
https://architectureandasceticism.exeter.ac.uk/files/original/8de637d416095d95f7762df3ddf6c0ce.jpg
79e4b875fe1662f5fb586eab345f795d
https://architectureandasceticism.exeter.ac.uk/files/original/2ba46c04161515ba225ca621a39f27ca.jpg
9f229af08118ea7f820be741ffd62d73
https://architectureandasceticism.exeter.ac.uk/files/original/1eabfbb5b3266d61326ca0322c171532.jpg
cf87814678ed5cb524b8fb4d7632143c
https://architectureandasceticism.exeter.ac.uk/files/original/38c7690f547e361fa7554734d84ee284.jpg
503923168d72f5dcb94c389290fc867a
https://architectureandasceticism.exeter.ac.uk/files/original/943142f16a26439d434f576eb2a5df0e.jpg
eb69e0019049c07e4db351bb7dbf50b0
https://architectureandasceticism.exeter.ac.uk/files/original/3e4a47ef966d8e4cd29cbacf1a7cce0f.jpg
ed73db1b81c37e13e2d7bf407a50abb3
https://architectureandasceticism.exeter.ac.uk/files/original/e8e8adf6a23cff6b11e3fcb20a7aab0d.jpg
badadfcfab550c1efa088923c7d1b9ac
https://architectureandasceticism.exeter.ac.uk/files/original/2831e9088724ce811c98f17e8ea9dcd0.jpg
5c73de663cfc5ffa64aa5298ddcaff96
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
The Dayr Mar Elian Archaeological Project (DMEAP)
Description
An account of the resource
The survey and excavation of the monastery of St Julian of the East (Dayr Mar Elian esh Sharqi), Qaryatayn, Syria, 2001-2004. This is now the most complete surviving record of the site as the monastery was destroyed by the so-called Islamic State group in August 2015.
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Emma Loosley
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Metadata and all media released under a Creative Commons BY-NC-SA International licence unless otherwise indicated
Relation
A related resource
The photographs of the 2001-2003 survey and excavation seasons have been lodged with the Archaeological Data Service and are reproduced here with their permission. For those who would like more specialised information such as context and intervention numbers or direction of shot please refer to: http://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk/archives/view/dmeap_ahrb_2004/gallery.cfm.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Gathering information on local history
Description
An account of the resource
Over the duration of the project efforts were made to talk to local people to collect their memories of the monastery. The older inhabitants of Qaryatayn could remember the small mud brick shrine that stood over the sarcophagus until the modern church was built on the site in 1938. The eastern range of the cloister had also had a range of mud brick rooms until the 1980s, when termite damage caused them to collapse leaving only the south east tower and one other chamber still standing. Until this collapse the monastery was inhabited by Bayt Habib, a Christian Bedu clan. Members of this family, especially the family patriarch Abu Nasif, were amongst the most knowledgeable of the local informants.
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Emma Loosley
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2002-07-03
2002-07-11
2003-08-29
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Daniel Hull
Stephen Rowland
Mukhles Atallah
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Metadata and all media released under a Creative Commons BY-NC-SA International licence unless otherwise indicated
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Ethnographic information/Social History
Relation
A related resource
The photographs of the 2001-2003 survey and excavation seasons have been lodged with the Archaeological Data Service and are reproduced here with their permission. For those who would like more specialised information such as context and intervention numbers or direction of shot please refer to: http://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk/archives/view/dmeap_ahrb_2004/gallery.cfm.
Bedouin
Bedu
Dayr Mar Elian
Dayr Mar Elian Archaeological Project
Ethnographic information
Monastery
Qaryatayn
Social History
Syria
Syrian Civil War