Israeli prison to join Armageddon’s list of ancient ruins

Third century prayer hall was discovered there in 2005

August 08, 2018 10:32 pm | Updated 10:37 pm IST - Armageddon

A prison inmate cleans a mosaic on the floor of ancient prayer hall that was discovered on the site of Megiddo Prison in northern Israel on November 6, 2005.

A prison inmate cleans a mosaic on the floor of ancient prayer hall that was discovered on the site of Megiddo Prison in northern Israel on November 6, 2005.

The end is nigh at Armageddon — at least for an old Israeli prison near the ancient ruins of Megiddo, by tradition the site of the apocalyptic Biblical battle between good and evil.

Half an hour’s drive south of Nazareth, Armageddon is a popular site for the coach loads of tourists visiting the sites of the Holy Land. There is also a busy programme of excavations.

In 2005, work to expand the ageing Megiddo Prison uncovered the remains of a 3rd century Christian prayer hall, including a mosaic referring to “God Jesus Christ”.

The building with the mosaic was excavated, earlier artefacts found, and the site was covered up under the supervision of archaeologists.

Now, after years of legal and bureaucratic delays, the prison is to be relocated, freeing up the site for further exploration potentially as early as 2021.

The prospect already has archaeologists excitedly talking about an area they have started to call “Greater Megiddo”. “When the Christian prayer hall was first found beneath the prison, we were all excited for one minute,” said Matthew Adams, director of the W.F. Albright Institute of Archaeological Research in Jerusalem, who has spent years excavating at Megiddo.

“And then we realised, “Oh, it’s in a maximum security prison, so we’ll never actually be able to do anything with it.”

“Now that the government has decided to move this prison, we can explore this really amazing and interesting part of the development of early Christianity in a way that we didn’t think we’d be able to.”

The earliest written reference to Megiddo seems to have been during the reign of the Egyptian Pharaoh Thutmose III, who defeated Syrian and Canaanite states there in 1468 B.C. It later fell to the Israelites, and then to the Assyrians in 733 B.C. In 1918, the British military commander General Edmund Allenby routed Turkish forces there and he later took the title Viscount Allenby of Megiddo and of Felixstowe. But its fame derives principally from the apocalyptic final book of the New Testament , “Revelation”, which tells of “the battle of that great day of God Almighty...And he gathered them together into a place called in the Hebrew tongue Armageddon”.

The current dig at the mound is led by Mr. Adams and Prof. Israel Finkelstein, an Israeli archaeologist at Tel Aviv University.

“Megiddo was important because it sits on the international road which connects Egypt with Mesopotamia, with Damascus, with Anatolia. So whoever sits here controls the most important road of antiquity in the ancient world,” Prof. Finkelstein said.

Israeli tourist authorities are planning a complex on the site to combine tourism, archaeology, and nature hikes. Much work remains. “A prison of 1,000 dangerous prisoners will be moved and a new complex will be built in order to expose the mosaic and enable people from all over the world to come,” prison service spokeswoman Nicole Englander said.

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