Tel Ashkelon National Park has
recently undergone extensive development work, initiated and funded by the
Nature and Parks Authority, Ashkelon Municipality and the Leon Levy
Foundation, during which the Israel Antiquities Authority recently revealed
a magnificent 2,000-year-old basilica that is the largest of its kind in
Israel.
The exciting finds, which also
include an ancient odeon (theater), are now being revealed for the first
time and will soon be open to visitors to Tel Ashkelon National Park,
enhancing the visitor experience at the site. The site will be opened on
completion of the development, conservation and restoration work, which
includes erecting sculptures and marble columns found in excavations at the
site.
The Nature and Parks Authority
and the Ashkelon Municipality are also developing and constructing a new network
of accessible paths designed to showcase and provide better access to the
park’s unique nature, heritage and landscape, thereby enhancing the visitor
experience.
During the Roman period, the
public life of the city revolved around its basilica (a Roman public
building), where its citizens transacted business, met for social and legal
matters, and held performances and religious ceremonies.
According to Dr. Rachel
Bar-Natan, Saar Ganor and Fredrico Kobrin, excavation directors on behalf
of the Israel Antiquities Authority, “The huge building is covered with a
roof and divided into three parts – a central hall and two side halls. The
hall was surrounded with rows of marble columns and capitals, which rose to
an estimated height of 13 meters and supported the building’s roof. The
floor and walls were built of marble.”
The marble, discovered during
many years of archaeological excavations lasting until two years ago, was
imported from Asia Minor in merchant ships that reached the shores of
Ashkelon, which was a famous, bustling trade city. Roughly 200 marble items
weighing hundreds of tons have been found in all, testifying to the
building’s great splendor. Among the items, dozens of column capitals with
plant motifs were discovered, some bearing an eagle – the symbol of the
Roman Empire. Pillars and heart-shaped capitals stood in the corners of the
building. Excavations by the British in the 1920s unearthed huge statues,
including a statue of Nike, the goddess of victory, supported by the god
Atlas holding a sphere, and a statue of Isis – an Egyptian deity depicted
as Tyche, the city’s goddess of fortune.
The basilica was devastated in
the earthquake that struck the country in 363 CE. The effects of the
seismic waves are clearly visible on the building’s floor, providing
tangible evidence of the events of that year in Ashkelon. After its
destruction, the building was abandoned. During the Abbasid and Fatimid
periods, the site of the basilica was transformed into an industrial area
and several installations were built in it. In one of these, marble pillars
and capitals from the basilica were incorporated in secondary use in the
buildings’ walls. There is evidence from the Ottoman period that marble
items were cut up for use as paving stones and some of the beautiful
architectural features were taken for building construction.
The conservation department of
the Israel Antiquities Authority is conducting complex preservation and
restoration work on the odeon and the impressive basilica, led by the
Nature and Parks Authority and generously funded by the Leon Levy
Foundation. The work involves placing the spectacular marble sculptures of
ancient Ashkelon in the southern part of the basilica. In the first stage,
the odeon will be conserved and restored. Thanks to the Leon Levy
Foundation’s donation, it will incorporate modern seating, a stage and a
series of explanatory signs. At the same time, a pilot program at the site
has begun installing the impressive marble items in place, in a complex
operation in which one of the pillars, weighing dozens of tons, was hoisted
into the basilica. The floor of the excavated basilica will be restored and
filled in, and additional columns will be placed around the perimeter based
on lessons learned from the initial program. The public will then be able
to access a magnificent basilica, the largest in Israel. In the meantime,
visitors will be able to sit on the seating in the odeon – to be completed
in the coming months – and observe the work on the nearby basilica.
Meanwhile, the new system of
accessible paths being developed by the Nature and Parks Authority and
Ashkelon Municipality in the national park aims to make the park’s unique
nature, heritage and landscape more readily available, thereby enhancing
the visitor experience. The route, about 2 km long, will go through the
national park’s main sites, including the world’s oldest arched Canaanite
gate, the famous wells of the ancient city, the basilica and the odeon, and
the Crusader walls. This chronological trail tracing Ashkelon’s history
through the ages will be clearly lined with content signage. A second trail
will lead to the ancient wall and Ashkelon’s dunes, providing a glimpse of
the rich flora and fauna to the south of the national park. Between the two
trails, in the center of the park, a new visitor center will illustrate in
an experiential interactive way the vibrant life of the port city and its
importance throughout the various periods.
According to Shaul Goldstein,
CEO of the Israel Nature and Parks Authority, “The Tel Ashkelon National
Park combines a fascinating antiquities site with unique natural resources
characteristic of the dunes in the coastal plain. It was the first national
park to be declared in Israel in the 1960s and since then, it has been
constantly evolving and renewing for the benefit of visitors from all over
the country. The unveiling of the basilica and odeon together with the
development, preservation and restoration work, which includes the
installation of pillars and ancient marble sculptures found in excavations
at the site, as well as the addition of new and accessible trails around
points of major interest will undoubtedly enhance visits to the park and
further emphasize its heritage and uniqueness. We are grateful to our
partners for providing tremendous support and guidance in the national
park’s development, including the generous assistance of Mrs. Shelby White
and the Leon Levy Foundation under the close supervision of archaeologist
Prof. Daniel Master.”
Ashkelon Mayor Tomer Glam says,
“The Ashkelon National Park is one of the most important ancient sites,
both in Israel and in the world, and time and time again it emerges as one
of the most visited sites in the country. The city takes great pride in it,
investing resources and funding in cooperation with the Nature and Parks
Authority, encouraging visitors by subsidizing entry for Ashkelon’s
residents and promoting educational and community initiatives. We have
recently also finished upgrading the entrance road to the park, which has
been transformed to give the park the dignity it deserves. I am convinced
that the restoration and conservation work in the park, the new
archaeological discoveries and the development work – including new
accessible paths – will contribute significantly to the park’s natural
beauty and strengthen its status as the most beautiful and well-kept
national park in Israel.”
Shelby White, founder of the
Leon Levy Foundation, explains that the conservation and restoration work
was made possible, among other things, thanks to its generous donation,
“When Leon and I visited Ashkelon in 1985, we did not imagine that our ties
with that ancient seaport would last for over three decades. I am glad that
the odeon, one of the many archaeological discoveries made by the Leon Levy
expedition, will now be restored and the famous Roman sculptures of
Ashkelon will be returned to their original location. Thanks to this,
visitors to the Ashkelon National Park from Israel and around the world
will be able to imagine this great city in all its ancient glory.”
“The basilica was founded by
Herod the Great, and one historical source suggests that his family came
from the city of Ashkelon,” add Ganor, Dr. Bar-Natan and Kobrin of the
Israel Antiquities Authority. “During the Roman Severan Dynasty, in the
second and third centuries CE, the building was renovated, marble
architectural features were brought to the site and a small theater was
added. Herodian coins discovered in the bedding of the structure’s ancient
floors show that it was built at the time of one of the greatest builders
ever to have lived in the country. The writings of the historian Josephus
mention Herod’s construction in the city of Ashkelon and list fountains, a
bathhouse and colonnaded halls. Today, based on the new archaeological
evidence, we can understand the origins of the historical record.”
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