20 Sep 2022

Gaza farmer finds Byzantine mosaic while planting tree

8:05 am on 20 September 2022
A man uses a brush to uncover Byzantine mosaics dating from the fifth to seventh centuries. They were found less than a km from the often tense border with Israel, and are in amazing condition, said French archaeologist Rene Elter.

A man uses a brush to uncover Byzantine mosaics dating from the fifth to seventh centuries. They were found less than a km from the often tense border with Israel, and are in very good condition, French archaeologist René Elter said. Photo: AFP/Mohammed Abed

A Palestinian farmer has discovered an ornate Byzantine floor mosaic while trying to plant an olive tree on his land in the Gaza Strip.

Salman al-Nabahin said he and his son had been digging into the ground when they unearthed the relic.

They later uncovered several more sections depicting colourful animals and birds.

Experts have called it one of the greatest archaeological treasures ever found in Gaza.

Nabahin told Reuters news agency he had realised the mosaic belonged to the Byzantine era after searching on the internet.

The Byzantine Empire was the eastern half of the Roman Empire, which can be traced back to 330 AD, and survived for more than a thousand years.

"I see it as a treasure, dearer than a treasure. It is a Palestinian legacy," Nabahim said.

The son of Palestinian farmer Salman al-Nabahin uses a sponge to uncover Byzantine mosaics dating from the fifth to seventh centuries after being discovered by his father while working on his land in the central Gaza Strip on 18 September, 2022.

Palestinians uncover the large Byzantine mosaics found in Bureij in central Gaza Strip, which have been carefully uncovered over several months. Photo: AFP/ Mohammed Abed

Archaeologist René Elter, from the French Biblical and Archaeological School of Jerusalem, told the Associated Press the mosaic was "exceptional".

"These are the most beautiful mosaic floors discovered in Gaza, both in terms of the quality of the graphic representation and the complexity of the geometry," he said.

"Never have mosaic floors of this finesse, this precision in the graphics and richness of the colours been discovered in the Gaza Strip."

The Palestinian Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities said international experts were being brought in to complete the site's excavation.

The Gaza Strip was once a bustling trade route for civilisations. It is rich with antiquities.

Palestinians uncover the large Byzantine mosaics found in Bureij in central Gaza Strip, which have been carefully uncovered over several months.

The son of Palestinian farmer Salman al-Nabahin uses a sponge to uncover Byzantine mosaics dating from the fifth to seventh centuries after being discovered by his father while working on his land in the central Gaza Strip. Photo: AFP/ Mohammed Abed

- BBC

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