Church of Saint George | |
---|---|
Rooftop view, Lydda c. 1920
|
|
Basic information | |
Location | Lod, Israel |
Affiliation | Greek Orthodox |
Completed | 1872 |
The Church of Saint George (Arabic: كنيسة القديس جيورجوس or كنيسة مار جريس, Hebrew: כנסיית גאורגיוס הקדוש קוטל הדרקון) is the major shrine for the fourth-century Christian martyr Saint George and is located in Lod, Israel. The current church, built in 1870, shares space with the El-Khidr Mosque(الخضر Al-Khidr, often associated with Saint George).
Toward the end of the nineteenth century, the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Jerusalem received permission from the Ottoman authorities to build a church on the site of a previous basilica. The church is built over a ruined 15th-century structure, and occupies the north end of the nave and left-hand aisle of the earlier church, from which there survive two apses - which, contrary to the normal rule, face north rather than east.
The Ottoman authorities stipulated, that part of the plot be made available for a mosque. Consequently, the current Church of St. George incorporates only the northeast corner of the Byzantine basilica. The prayer hall of the adjacent mosque contains a column that once stood in the nave of the basilica. The church contains the sarcophagus of St George.
St George's tomb
Bas-relief on the sarcophagus
Coordinates: 31°57′10.8″N 34°53′58.15″E / 31.953000°N 34.8994861°E