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Capernaum
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==Synagogue== [[File:Capernaum synagogue by David Shankbone.jpg|thumb|Remains of the 4th-century synagogue]] According to Luke's Gospel, the Capernaum synagogue at the time of Jesus' ministry had been built or funded by a Roman centurion based there.<ref>{{bibleverse||Luke|7:5|NKJV}}</ref> The ruins of a later building, among the [[oldest synagogues in the world]], were identified by Wilson. The large, ornately carved, white building stones of the synagogue stood out prominently among the smaller, plain blocks of local black basalt used for the town's other buildings, almost all residential. The synagogue was built almost entirely of white blocks of [[limestone]] brought from distant [[quarry|quarries]]. The synagogue appears to have been built around the 4th or 5th century. Beneath the foundation of this synagogue lies another foundation made of basalt, and Loffreda suggests that this is the foundation of a synagogue from the 1st century, perhaps the one [[Jesus in the synagogue of Capernaum|mentioned in the Gospels]].{{sfn|Loffreda| 1974}} Later excavation work was attempted underneath the synagogue floor, but while Loffreda claimed to have found a paved surface, others are of the opinion that this was an open, paved market area. The building consists of four parts: the praying hall, the western [[patio]], a southern [[balustrade]] and a small room at the northwest of the building. The praying hall measured {{Convert|24.4 by 18.65|m|ft|abbr=on}}, with the southern face looking toward [[Jerusalem]]. The internal walls were covered with painted plaster and fine stucco work found during the excavations. Watzinger, like Orfali, believed that there had been an upper floor reserved for women, with access by means of an external staircase located in the small room, but this opinion was not substantiated by the later excavations of the site. The ancient synagogue has two inscriptions, one in [[Greek language|Greek]] and the other in [[Aramaic language|Aramaic]], that commemorate the benefactors that helped in the construction of the building.<ref name="IMFA1"/> There are also carvings of five- and six-pointed stars and of palm trees. In 1926, Orfali began restoration of the synagogue. The work was interrupted by his death in a car accident in 1926 (which is commemorated by a Latin inscription carved onto one of the synagogue's columns), and was continued by Virgilio Corbo beginning in 1976.{{citation needed|date=April 2016}}
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