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‘Atiqot 73 (2013)
ISBN 2948-040X
Burial Caves from the Early Roman–Early Byzantine Periods at Ben Shemen
(with contributions by Uri Baruch and by Israel Carmi and Dror Segal)
(Hebrew, pp. 19*–44*; English summary, pp. 137–138)
Oren Shmueli, Eli Yannai, Yifat Peleg and Yossi Nagar
Keywords: Lod Shephelah, burial, secondary burial, funerary goods, oil lamps, anthropology, Second Temple, Jewish population, Christians, charcoal, olive, carob, wood
Four burial caves were discovered at Ben Shemen: Caves 1–3 are loculi (
kokhim
) caves of the type characteristic of Jerusalem and the Judean Hills during the Early Roman period; Cave 4 is an arcosolium cave, attributed to the Late Roman and early Byzantine periods. The
kokhim
caves yielded stone ossuaries—decorated with standard motifs characteristic of the period—and meager finds dating from the mid-first and second centuries CE. They were used as family burial place for the nearby Jewish settlement. Cave 4 consists of three arcosolia, each containing a burial shelf. The ceiling, the walls and the partitions of the burial shelves were covered with white plaster, on which were the remains of red paint. A Greek inscription in red was also found, indicating that the cave was used by Christians in the late third or the early fourth century CE.