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Columns of the Bishop`s palace, Aphrodisias Royalty Free Stock Photo
Columns of the Bishop`s palace, Aphrodisias Royalty Free Stock Photo
Columns of the Bishop`s palace, Aphrodisias Royalty Free Stock Photo
Columns of the Bishop`s palace, Aphrodisias Royalty Free Stock Photo
Church of the Archangel in Nekresi monastery, Georgia Royalty Free Stock Photo
   
   
Columns of the Bishop`s palace, Aphrodisias
The Nekresi monastery, Church of the Archangel, Georgia Royalty Free Stock Photo
Church of the Archangel in Nekresi monastery, Georgia Royalty Free Stock Photo
   
   
   
Romanesque rotunda of St. Nicholas in Cieszyn, Poland Royalty Free Stock Photo
Romanesque rotunda of St. Nicholas in Cieszyn, Poland Royalty Free Stock Photo
To the west of the Council House is a well-preserved peristyle building completely refurbished in late antiquity and known as the Bishop`s Palace, and it may indeed have been an official residence of some kind in the late period. It was one of the largest houses in the city: it occupied a whole city-block c. 35 x 40 m. As was usual for an elite Roman house, the plan was centred on a columned courtyard. Opening off the courtyard are large reception rooms, a triple-apsed dining room to the east, and an apsidal hall to the north. Coin finds indicate these core parts of the late Roman house were built around AD 400. It was richly decorated with mosaics, cut-marble floors, sculptures, and figured wall paintings. In late antiquity, the house may have been used as the residence of the provincial governor, and in the middle ages, when the house underwent extensive re-modelling, it probably became the residence of the bishop. It was occupied through to c. AD 1200, when Aphrodisias was finally abandoned.


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