{
    "type": "FeatureCollection",
    "name": "artefact",
    "crs": {
        "type": "name",
        "properties": {
            "name": "EPSG:4326"
        }
    },
    "features": [
        {
            "type": "Feature",
            "geometry": {
                "type": "Point",
                "coordinates": [
                    30.555384,
                    25.476681
                ]
            },
            "properties": {
                "id": 1768,
                "artefact_uri": "https:\/\/4care-skos.mf.no\/artefact\/1768",
                "site_id": 3,
                "site_uri": "https:\/\/4care-skos.mf.no\/place\/3",
                "site_name": "Ma\u02bfbad H\u012bbis",
                "clm_id": "",
                "material": "Stone",
                "description": "Limestone capital with putti holding wreaths and with acanthus leaves.\r\nDimensions: H. 49 cm; W. 58 cm; D. 58 cm; Wt. 98.4 kg.\r\nThe capital sat atop the south-east column of the church (Winlock 1941: VI; see also plan of Ma\u02bfbad H\u012bbis). It has \"a tenon hole in the bottom, 4.5 to 5 cm. square and 4 cm. deep, for its attachment to the shaft\" of the column (Winlock 1941: 46). On the top of the capital, Winlock read the graffito iwxannhs gerapan (= \u1f14&gamma;&rho;&alpha;&psi;&alpha;&nu;), \"John engraved (it)\". Winlock adds the following details: \"After the destruction of the church, the capital was hollowed out for a mortar and broken in two, probably during its use as such.\" \"Like the fragments of columns, those of the capital had been thickly covered with whitewash.\" (1941: 46).\r\nWinclock gives the following description of the whereabouts of this capital: \"The architraves of the portico, for example, had been so shattered that it seemed impossible to replace them, and by the end of the first season practically nothing of its east fa&ccedil;ade had come to light except the base and the capital of the southeast column with its well-preserved color. Thus it was that when, acting under Lythgoe's instructions, I asked Maspero for the capital in 1910, he decided to give it to the Metropolitan Museum as practically its sole return for an outlay which had made the restoration of the temple possible. Three years later, when Baraize was finishing the portico, he made a roughhewn block to take the place of the capital on the top of the restored column.\" (Winlock 1941: VI).",
                "date_from": 350,
                "date_to": 399,
                "dating_criteria": "See Ma\u02bfbad H\u012bbis.",
                "selection_criteria": "Archaeological context associated with Christian markers",
                "absolute_relative_date": null,
                "stratigraphic_context": "",
                "shelf_mark": "",
                "bibliography": "",
                "external_links": [
                    {
                        "text": "The Metropolitan Museum of Art",
                        "url": "https:\/\/www.metmuseum.org\/art\/collection\/search\/456101"
                    }
                ],
                "classes": "Architectural element",
                "writing_medium": "",
                "text_content": "",
                "language": "",
                "archive": "",
                "authors": [
                    {
                        "author": "Victor Ghica",
                        "year": "2024"
                    }
                ]
            }
        }
    ]
}