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Architectural expression of liturgy and doctrine in the Eastern churches of the


fourth to sixth centuries: towards a theologically contextual typology

Article · January 2004

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Susan Balderstone
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Architectural expression of liturgy and doctrine
in the Eastern churches
of the fourth to sixth centuries:
towards a theologically contextual typology.
Susan Balderstone

Abstract: Many scholars of Byzantine architecture have theorised about the reasons for
church form and structure, with most relating them to sources in pagan architecture or
local traditional construction methods (Krautheimer, Crowfoot, Ward-Perkins, Mango and
Hill) ); to aspects of provincialism, regional independence or location peripheral to em-
pire (Megaw, Delvoye, Wharton), or to environmental constraints such as frequent earth-
quakes (Curcic). But just as the wording of the various creeds and ecumenical state-
ments responded to aspects of contemporary non-orthodox beliefs or “heresies”, so did
the theological debate inform the liturgical practices and consequently church planning.
It could be expected that these responses would also be reflected in the architectural
approach to form and symbolism. Thus a contextual typological framework is proposed,
based on the association of different architectural approaches to church planning and
form in the 4th to the 6th centuries with the contemporary doctrinal disputes over the true
nature of Christ.

Introduction face of scarce funding and resources, these sites need


interpretation by archaeologists and historians. Which are
Analysis of the archaeological evidence of a number of
the most significant sites and why? How does a particular
churches in the eastern Mediterranean region in relation to
site demonstrate its place in the history of Christianity in
the theological debates of the fourth and fifth centuries
its region, or indeed internationally? How important is it to
suggests a link between certain church builder bishops
the local, regional and/or world community now, as a place
and their architects and the particular architectural forms
of pilgrimage or as a tourist site? The extensive survey of
of the churches they founded. It is possible that the
early Christian and Byzantine architecture undertaken by
particular architectural forms used were chosen because
Krautheimer in the 1960s and subsequently updated to
they were considered to provide a symbolic expression of
1979 (Krautheimer 1979) is a good starting point, with a
the theological position of the relevant bishop in relation
large number of plans and descriptions. However it does
to the ongoing Trinitarian and Christological debates of
not deal with the theological context including the
the period. It would follow that specific architectural forms
Trinitarian and Christological debates in relation to evolving
then came to be accepted as the formulaic expression of
liturgical practices. More evidence of these is now available
the doctrinal positions adopted by the various Christian
through translations of early sources, and recent
communities.
excavations have revealed new information.
The objective of the analysis is to contribute to the
This analysis is based primarily on the circumstantial
establishment of a typological framework based on the
evidence provided by excavated remains and their
theological context for the large number of archaeological
associations. There is little documentary evidence of the
remains of early Christian churches found in the countries
thought behind church design in the 4th to the 6th centuries.
bordering the Eastern Mediterranean. These range from
The “one short document” on how to build a church found
small, seemingly isolated chapels to large complexes
in a Syriac version of the Testamentum Domini nostri Jesu
including monastic establishments, parish churches,
Christi and discussed by Crowfoot in relation to the Jerash
commemorative churches at centres of pilgrimage, cathedral
churches (Crowfoot 1938:175-184) prescribes the location
churches at major settlements and palace churches at the
of the various elements of the church (diakonikon,
major administrative capitals of the Byzantine world.
baptistery, throne, altar etc,) but gives no direction on the
For the cultural heritage site manager trying to decide architectural expression of Christian theology. The various
protection, conservation and presentation priorities in the ekphraseis discussed by Ruth Webb (Webb 1999:59-74)

Buried History 2004 - Volume 40 pp 29-38 Susan Balderstone 29


Figure 1: Restored Plan of the Basilica of St. Epiphanius (from Megaw 1974: figure A).

are not helpful as they put the authors’ interpretations a stock of remedies against the poison of heresy) completed
rather than the founder church builders’ intentions, and do in 377, he collected eighty heresies. His categorisation of
not necessarily reflect those. these and numbered ordering reflects a preoccupation with
numbers further demonstrated in his De Mensuribus et
However in respect of the church founders’ architectural
Ponderibus (‘Of Weights and Measures’) c.390, where
intentions a few clues can be gleaned from the writings of
amongst other matters he meditates on particular numbers
some key bishops, in particular Epiphanius, Bishop of
including the number three (Epiphanius, trans. Esbroeck).
Salamis/Constantia in Cyprus from 367 to his death in 402,
Young suggests that his straightforward Greek and appeal
and Gregory of Nyssa who began his episcopate in Asia
to the classic Trinitarian proofs, such as the threefold
Minor c. 371 and died c.395.
Sanctus, was the basis of his popularity (Young 1983:134).
Epiphanius It is therefore not surprising that the sanctuary of the large
basilica he founded at Salamis-Constantia (where he was
Epiphanius was a key participant in the great theological
buried in 403) comprises three apses (see figure 1). It is an
debate of the fourth century (Englezakis 1995:39). He was
obvious and easily read architectural expression of
recognised along with Athanasius of Alexandria and
Epiphanius’ position on the Trinity - three entities
Paulinus of Antioch as a father of orthodoxy who refused
expressed by three apses in a line across the east end of
to compromise his essential understanding of Christianity
the sanctuary. This is also the form of the church at Soli
by bending to any influences from Graeco-Roman antiquity.
(also within the see of Epiphanius) of similar date, and later
His writings are valued for the information they provide on
in the fifth century at Carpasia (Megaw 1974: figures A, B
the religious history of the fourth century, both through
&C). But clearly the triple-apsed form was not universally
his own observations and from the documents transcribed
acceptable as an expression of orthodoxy. It could be argued
by him that are no longer extant (Saltet 1999). He travelled
that in fact the triple-apsed form denied the ‘God in three
widely through the region - to Egypt, Asia Minor, Syria,
persons’ position in that it emphasised the three rather
Mesopotamia, and Palestine. He visited Alexandria,
than the one in three. The Alexandrian theological position
Antioch, Jerusalem, Constantinople and Rome, some
as argued by Athanasius at Nicaea (Atiya 1991:300) - one
several times (Englezakis 1995:33). His writings were widely
hypostasis, but with coequality between Father, Son and
read in the Christian world (Young 1983:141), and include
Holy Spirit - perhaps explains the development of the
the Ancoratus (‘The Well-anchored’) of 374, which sets
triconch version of basilica sanctuary in Egypt, such as
out his own position of strong opposition to the Arian and
that of the monastery church founded by Shenute dating
Origenist heresies. In terms of Trinitarian theology he
from the first half of the fifth century - the White
“speaks of three hypostases in the Trinity, whereas the
Monastery1. The triconch sanctuary, where the three apses
Latins and Paulicians of Antioch speak of one hypostasis
are arranged at right angles to each other around three
in three persons” and “clearly teaches that the Holy Ghost
sides of a domed central square can more easily be read as
proceeds from the Father and the Son” (Saltet 1999). In his
one in three (see figure 2). Similarly in Jerusalem in the
second, much larger work, the Panarion (‘Medicine Chest’-
same period, the sanctuary of the church of St. John the

30 Buried History 2004 - Volume 40 pp 29-38 Susan Balderstone


architectural form best expressed and symbolised that belief.
It has been argued that the Apostles’ Creed dating from the
first or second century focused on the true humanity,
including the material body of Jesus, since the
contemporary Gnostic, Marcionite and Manichean heretics
denied that Jesus was truly Man. On the other hand, the
Nicene Creed of 325 strongly affirmed the deity of Christ
through an emphasis on the consubstantiality of the Trinity
because it was directed against the Arians, who denied
that Christ was fully God (Kiefer: Christia online resources
accessed 19/04/2002).
Two creeds were appended to the end of Epiphanius’
Ancoratus. One was the baptismal creed of the Church of
Constantia, and the other is supposed to have been his
own personal expression of belief. The former was adopted
at the Council of Constantinople in 381. It is considered to
be a reworking of the Baptismal creed of the Church of
Jerusalem, which itself was a reworking of the Nicene Creed.
It essentially represents a version of the Nicene Creed
expanded by the addition of the Filioque clause stating
that the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father and the Son,
an assertion of their coequality as a response to Arianism
(Fortescue 1907:381).
The debate over the relationship of the Holy Spirit to the
Father and the Son informed the change in liturgical
practices and its reflection in architectural form. This is
demonstrated by the fact that by the end of the fourth
century the eastern orthodox liturgy required a tripartite
sanctuary for the Eucharistic liturgy. As Baldwin Smith
pointed out, the layout derived from the description in the
Testamentum does not preclude the location of the chamber
for receiving the offerings being adjacent to the central
apse (Baldwin Smith 1950:151, note 57)3. The deacons
conveyed the Eucharistic offerings from there to the altar
table in front of the central apse. As Dix has described, the
historical differences in the understanding of the
consecration of the Eucharist, and the need for the
traditional Syrian liturgies to accommodate consecration
by the Holy Spirit in addition to their traditional concept of
Figure 2 : Plan of the church at Dayr Anba Shinudah consecration by the Son, determined the eastern orthodox
by Peter Grossmann (from Aziz 1991:768). liturgy (Dix 1964:268-302). He suggested that the Trinitarian
doctrine articulated at Nicaea was superimposed on the
Baptist sponsored by Athenais/Eudocia (wife of Emperor traditional liturgical action, so that the consecration had to
Theodosius II), which survives still as a crypt has the be understood as a metaphorical representation of the
triconch form, as did that of the church of St. Stephen, resurrection, the Eucharistic offering having already become
which she founded (and where she was buried) near the the body and blood of Christ at the offertory. Hence the
northern gate of the city (Join-Lambert, trans. Haldane development of an elaborate procession of the offering to
1958:134-6)2. the altar: the deacons were in fact bearing the body and
blood of Christ, and their progress needed to be
Support for the idea that the triple-apsed sanctuary was an
accompanied by appropriate awe and adoration. Dix quotes
attempt to express symbolically the theological
Theodore’s (of Mopsuestia) early fifth century exposition
understanding of the consubstantiality of Christ can be
of the liturgical action in Catecheses v and vi, describing
drawn from the fact that the different architectural forms
the spreading of linens on the altar by the deacons, and
associated with the various positions in the theological
their agitation of the air with fans (Dix 1964:282-284).
debate are chronologically paralleled by the different
versions of the Creed. Just as there was debate over the For the church builder/architect commissioned to
wording used to express orthodox belief, it can be expected accommodate this liturgy and at the same time to interpret
that similar debate would have occurred about what the theological position of those who followed the teaching

Buried History 2004 - Volume 40 pp 29-38 Susan Balderstone 31


of Epiphanius, the basilica with triapsidal sanctuary as had doubts about this and prayed for divine instruction.
constructed in the late fourth century at Salamis, Soli, He was greatly relieved when Eudocia, wife of the Emperor
Baalbek and Gethsemane was the solution. The form Arcadius who had been persuaded to fund the
followed the traditional layout of Paulinus’ Tyre basilica construction, sent Porphyry a plan to follow. He then
archetype, but modified the sanctuary to accommodate the obtained the services of “a certain Rufinus, an architect of
new development in the liturgy and express the Trinity. In Antioch, a believer and well skilled, by whom the whole
the period before the development of the great and little building was accomplished” (Mark the Deacon, trans. Hill
entry processions, a small passage between the central 1913:78). The plan was cruciform and the church was
and side apses as demonstrated by the remains of the triple- dedicated in 407. It was known initially as the Eudoxiana. It
apsed sanctuaries excavated in Cyprus at Salamis, Soli and is likely that the plan was similar to that of S.Babylas at
Carpasia, would have facilitated the liturgical action. Antioch begun c. 379 (Baldwin Smith 1950:110)5. This story
illustrates a number of points: not only did the bishop find
Long basilica churches with triple-apsed or triconch
the idea of copying the form of the pagan temple
sanctuary forms were quite different from the great domed
unacceptable, the form of an important church did not
church on an octagonal plan at Antioch, in which the
depend on available local building skills - these could be
traditional martyrium ‘dome of heaven’ used over Christ’s
brought in from elsewhere when necessary.
tomb in the Anastasis at Jerusalem was adopted as an
appropriate form for Constantine’s palace church. This was
Gregory of Nyssa
begun in 337 under Constantine and completed by his son
Constantius in 362. Downey (1961:414) notes that since The use of the cruciform plan for churches in regular use
the exile of the orthodox bishop Eustathius c. 330, the needs some explanation as it was not intrinsically functional
Christians of Antioch had been under the control of a series for the Eucharistic liturgy. Krautheimer saw the choice of
of bishops with Arian tendencies. The building of the the cruciform plan for churches in regular liturgical use,
Golden Dome was delegated to the Arian Count Gorgonius like the choice of the dome for the Great Church at Antioch,
(Baldwin smith 1950:26). The use of an all-encompassing as a translation of a traditional martyrium form (Krautheimer
dome in this church and at S. Lorenzo in Milan, founded by 1979:86) in the context of preoccupation with holy relics as
the Arian Emperor Auxentius c.378 (Krautheimer 1979:86), the basis for founding a church. However the cross form
can be explained as a means of expressing architecturally could be read in many ways. Gregory of Nyssa (c.335-395),
the Arian focus on the absolute nature of God. The triple- unlike Epiphanius was an admirer of Origen (Leclerq 1999).
apsed sanctuary can then be seen to respond to this by He saw the cross as an appropriate symbol for the Godhead
emphasising the Trinity and thus the consubstantiality of in that its four spatial directions represented the whole
the Father, Son and Holy Spirit in the same way that the universe, and expressed the idea that the One who died on
Nicene Creed responded to Arianism by emphasising their the Cross harmonised the whole universe through the form
consubstantiality. The use of this form at places
strategically important to the Church under Theodosius I
would have emphasised the imperially-sanctioned
theological position. At Baallbek the triple-apsed basilica
inserted in the destroyed Jupiter temple temenos
represented the triumph of the Church over paganism; at
Gethsemane the triple-apsed basilica commemorated an
important place of Christian pilgrimage.
This is not to say that Arians would have worshipped only
in circular/octagonal, domed churches as it is clear from
the letter from S.Ambrose to his sister in 386 that the Arians
in Milan wanted to take over his new, (cruciform)
(Krautheimer 1979:86)4 basilica inside the walls (Ambrose,
trans. Beyenka:60). And it is clear that not all bishops
conceptualised their theology in a way that enabled them
to give direction as to church form. Mark the Deacon relates
that Porphyry, Bishop of Gaza was at a loss as to what form
his new church to be built on the site of the former pagan
temple to Marnas, should take. The discussion that took
place c. 403 is illuminating: “Some then counselled that it
should be built after the fashion of the temple of the idol;
for the shape of it was round, being set about with two
porticoes (colonnades), one within the other; but in the
midst of it was a dome spread out and stretching high” Figure 3: Plan of the church at Nyssa, from S.Gregory’s
(Mark the Deacon, trans. Hill 1913:75). However Porphyry description (from Lethaby 1912:85, figure 45.).

32 Buried History 2004 - Volume 40 pp 29-38 Susan Balderstone


strong pagan centre (Hermopolis Magna)7 could be easily
read and understood as a symbol of the crucified Christ,
while the semi-circular ends of the transept plus the
elongated sanctuary apse retain the Trinitarian symbolism
(see figure 4). The use of the transept form at this important
location can be seen as an expression of imperial-sanctioned
orthodoxy in the face of the revival of the dispute about
the nature of God.

The Emperor Zeno


The variety of architectural forms used for churches in the
latter half of the fifth century follows the condemnation of
Nestorius by the Council of Ephesus in 431, the reassertion
of orthodox doctrine at Chalcedon in 451 and subsequent
attempts by the Emperor Zeno (474 -91) to conciliate the
Monophysites. The various church forms can be explained
as architectural expressions of the different theological
positions, but some require more analysis due to the fact
that they contain various forms representing different stages
of construction. For example at St Simeon Stylites in
northern Syria c. 480-90 (Krautheimer 1979:156-157) the
triple-apsed form was used for the eastern arm of the
cruciform-plan church (see figure 5), but the dates of the
various parts of this complex are not clear. The cross-in-
square plan of the Church of the Prophets, Apostles and
Martyrs at Jerash of 464-465 had three conched niches in
the wall of the apse according to Schumacher, although
these are not indicated in the plan reproduced by Crowfoot
(Crowfoot 1941:87 and figure 8). The use of the cruciform
plan in this later period appears to coincide with the addition
by Apollinarian sympathisers of the reference to the
crucifixion in the liturgical acclamation known as the
Trisagion, which according to Henry Chadwick was passed
into use under a Monophysite patriarch in Antioch c. 460
(Chadwick 1967:208). This was not accepted by those
following the imperial orthodox line asserted at Chalcedon,
who interpreted the Trisagion as referring to the Trinity
rather than to Christ. Perhaps this explains the combination
of the cruciform plan with three apses or niches.
Figure 4: Plan of the church at Al Ashmunayn by Peter By the middle of the fifth century the bulk of the people in
Grossman (from Aziz 1991:286). Egypt and Syria rejected Chalcedon and favoured the
Monophysite position (Fortescue 1999), although this may
of His death (Ladner 1955:88-89)6. Ladner referred to the have had more to do with nationalism and reaction against
background of fascination with the mystery of numbers rule from Constantinople than with an involvement in the
that informed Gregory’s interpretation (Ladner 1955:94). He theological argument. The Emperor Zeno (474-91), although
proposed that for Gregory the role of Christ as unifier had obliged to follow the Chalcedonian or Melkite line
to be demonstrated through the visible shape of the Cross. sympathised personally with the Monophysites. He
Gregory’s description in his late 4th C letter to Amphilochius founded the octagonal Theotokos Church at Garizim (see
of his proposed martyrium at Nyssa is translated by Lethaby figure 6), which can be seen as a revival of the form of
to indicate a colonnaded octagon developed from the cross- Constantine’s Great Church at Antioch, and as such an
in-square plan, with four exedrae diagonally opposite each architectural expression of the absolute nature of God as
other (Lethaby 1912:85). Thus the cross had generated the distinct from the cruciform, triconch and triple-apsed forms
plan, but could not now be easily read in the form so created that expressed the consubstantial Trinity. It can be seen to
see (figure 3). It was a mystery to be contemplated. On the reflect the Arian and Origenist aspects of Monophysism.
other hand the cross contained in the transept basilica
So in relation to the desire of Late Roman/Early Byzantine
form such as the fifth century cathedral at Al Ashmunayn,
archaeologists to be able to distinguish between the
one of the largest and richest churches in Egypt at a once

Buried History 2004 - Volume 40 pp 29-38 Susan Balderstone 33


Figure 5: The triple-apsed
sanctuary of the eastern arm of
St Simeon Stylites (Photo: the
author, 1980).

archaeological remains of the churches of the various Figure 6: Plan of the Theotokos Church at Garizim
religious groups (Tsafrir 1999), it seems that architectural (Wilkinson 1981: ).
form is the key at least to the identity of the founding
faction, if not to the faction of subsequent users. The
proposed contextual typological framework is a work in
progress by this author, but at this stage can be defined by
certain particular examples as outlined below.

Outline of typological framework


The triple-apsed basilica developed in Cyprus at the end
of the fourth century and was strongly associated with the
orthodoxy of Epiphanius. The cruciform plan came to be
associated with the theology of Gregory of Nyssa and
perhaps too closely with Origenism for some. The basilica
with triconch sanctuary appears to derive from Athanasius’
version of orthodoxy, and was favoured by certain bishops
and other influential church founders such as Athenais/
Eudocia in the first half of the fifth century. The domed
octagon /circular/tetraconch plan was associated with the
influence of Arianism in the fourth century and with the
Monophysites in the fifth century. In the early sixth century
the Church of St. Polyeuktos enlarged and rebuilt by
Princess Ancina Juliana during the reign of Justin I
following the healing of the schism with Rome (519) seems
to have taken the form of a transept basilica (Mango and
Sevcenko 1961:243-246). The sculptural decoration of the
surviving column capitals has been recognised as similar
to Egyptian examples, in particular at the White Monastery
and at Al Ashmunayn (McKenzie 1996:140-142). This
example can be seen to represent a revival of the transept
form as emphasising the reunification of the Church.
However during the reign of Justinian, the influence of
Monophysism resurfaced. The domed church of accommodate the Eucharistic liturgy. The use of an
SS.Sergius and Bacchus built for a community of elongated version of this form for the great dome of S.
Monophysite refugees by Justinian and Theodora at Sophia in Constantinople may have been due to the
Constantinople (Bardill, 1999:9-10 and see note 65) develops influence of the Monophysites with the Empress
the Gregory of Nyssa plan with the addition of an apse to Theodora.

34 Buried History 2004 - Volume 40 pp 29-38 Susan Balderstone


Figure 7: Pella: view
from the upper
church down the
Wadi Jirm al-Moz to
the Jordan Valley
(Photo: the author,
1978).

Application to Pella
In contrast with and perhaps in response to this
Monophysite influence, the orthodox bishops/church Located opposite the junction of the route of the ancient
builders at Jerash and throughout Jordan in the sixth armies from the coast through the vale of Esdraelon with
century revived the triple-apsed basilica as the form the Jordan Valley, Pella presents a scene of pastoral
appropriate for the architectural expression of eastern tranquillity (see figure 7). The perennial streamlets from the
catholic doctrine (Balderstone 2000). In Cyprus the triple- ancient spring which feeds the Wadi Jirm al-Moz flow
apsed form continued to be used in the fifth and sixth through a green delta, sporadically populated by herds of
centuries. Examples include the Basilica de la Campanopetra goats or sheep and their accompanying shepherds and
at Salamis (Delvoye 1978:327, figure 18), and churches at donkeys. The presence of this eternal spring is the reason
Carpasia (Megaw 1974: figure C), Ayia Trias and Peyia for the long period of occupation of the site, going back
(Megaw 1974: figures D and E). On the other hand, it is several thousand years. The ruins that punctuate this scene
recorded that at Edessa in the sixth century the Melkite have excited pilgrims and other travellers to the Holy Land
cathedral was described as vaulted, with a “lofty cupola” since at least the time of the Crusades, particularly those
supported on broad arches, all constructed entirely of stone who accepted the identification of the site as the place to
(Segal 1970:189). The hymn from which this description which the persecuted Christians fled from Jerusalem during
was taken is believed to have been composed at the time of the first Jewish Revolt (66-70 AD). The story of the first
the dedication of the church after its Justinian Christians at Pella derives from the Ecclesiastical History
reconstruction 543-554, and is one of the few pieces of of Eusebius, written in the first half of the fourth century,
literary evidence of architectural expression in church and was later recorded by Epiphanius (Epiphanius, trans.
building (McVey 1993:183), albeit as interpreted by the Esbroeck 1984: xv).
hymn’s author. McVey’s analysis of the hymn suggests
Although nothing can be proved one way or another about
that the church may have taken the form of a cubic triconch
the presence of Christians in the first century, and the
with central dome (McVey 1993:194-Str. 12). If that is the
identification of the site referred to by Eusebius and
case it would indicate a reversion to the early fifth century
Epiphanius with this Pella is disputed (Watson 2000:118),
Egyptian formula for orthodox expression used at the
the extant archaeological remains are certain evidence of a
sanctuary of the White Monastery. The use of this triconch
later period of Christian occupation of the site. The remains
sanctuary form was continued in Egypt in the sixth century
of three churches have been excavated; all are aisled
at Dandarah, Dayr Abu Matta , Dayr Anbar Dakhum, and
basilicas with atriums in a form that can be related to
Dayr Anbar Bishoi (Suhaj) (Grossmann 1991:691, 706, 731,
Eusebius’ description of Paulinus’ church at Tyre. However
740).
the sanctuaries differ from that description in that they
The implication of this contextual typological framework comprise three apses, although the first phase of the Civic
can be demonstrated by application to the church sites at Church had no apse at all. The first phase was dated by
Pella, east of the Jordan River, known in Graeco-Roman Smith on the basis of coins found in a sounding beneath
times as one of the cities of the Decapolis. the church to around 400 or slightly earlier (McNicoll

Buried History 2004 - Volume 40 pp 29-38 Susan Balderstone 35


1992:159). The casket was dated to the
fourth or fifth century. If the relic is
indeed bread, it might perhaps be a relic
of the custom described by Father
Gregory Dix of dispatching the
fermentum, a fragment from the Breads
consecrated by the bishop of the
patriarchal see at the Eucharist of the
whole church, to be placed in the chalice
at every parish Eucharist (Dix 1964:21).
He quotes Ignatius, Epistle to
Smyrnaeans, viii, I, on the need for a valid
Eucharist to be “under the bishop”.
However Dix later noted that the
fermentum was abandoned in the East
by the fourth century (Dix 1964:285).
A factor that raises questions about the
date of the Civic Church is an inscription
found in the debris of the Civic Complex,
on a stone used as a paver in a later
phase. This was identified as possibly
referring to Theodosius I, Emperor from
379 to 395 (McNicoll et al 1982:109-110).
It may have formed part of the dedication
of the first phase of the church, which
would put it up to twenty years before
400. Alternatively it could possibly refer
to the second phase of construction,
when the sanctuary was remodelled into
its triple-apsed form, if in fact this
occurred earlier than proposed by Smith
(see figure 8).
In the light of the contemporary
theological debate, the evolving
liturgical practices at the time, and the
evidence provided by extant
archaeological remains in other places
that are connected to crucial players in
the theological debate in the latter half
of the fourth century as outlined above,
Figure 8: Pella: reconstructed plan of the Civic Church in phase 2 (from it seems that the remodelling of this
Smith 1989: 87, figure 25). church into a triple-apsed form could well
be dated to the time of Theodosius I. If
so, the importance of Pella as an early
1992:159). The sounding yielded no evidence of an earlier Christian site is considerably enhanced, as it demonstrates
building beneath this phase. Smith suggested that the early imperial recognition, which in turn indicates that in
second (triple-apsed) phase of the church should be dated the fourth century the place was considered to have some
to the first half of the sixth century, although he gave no importance. This may have been because at that time it
archaeological evidence for that date. The other two triple- was believed that this Pella was the place of refuge for the
apsed churches were dated to the late fifth or early sixth persecuted Christians of the first century whose flight was
century (McNicoll 1992:159) and the sixth (Smith 1973). recorded by Eusebius and Epiphanius.
There are some aspects of the remains that raise questions
Conclusion
about these dates. At the East Church a reliquary was found
sealed into floor of sanctuary. The reliquary casket Clearly further survey and analysis of a larger number of
contained a silver fistula and remains of what microscopic published church sites of the period is needed to develop
analysis indicated might be calcified bread (McNicoll and refine the contextual framework. However it can be

36 Buried History 2004 - Volume 40 pp 29-38 Susan Balderstone


seen that a theologically contextual typological framework Delvoye, Charles 1980 La Place des Grandes Basiliques
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Wooster: 87, Fig. 25

38 Buried History 2004 - Volume 40 pp 29-38 Susan Balderstone

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