Israel
The Galilee Journeys of Jesus & the Apostles
The Galilee Journeys of Jesus & the Apostles include sites on the north-western shore of the Sea of Galilee and in the area of Nazareth which, according to biblical tradition, were visited by Jesus and his Apostles. Some of these sites, like Nazareth and Tiberias, became modern cities, others are archaeological sites such as Sepheris and Capernaum.
Site Info
Official Information
- Full Name
- The Galilee Journeys of Jesus & the Apostles (ID: 1471)
- Country
- Israel
- Status
-
On tentative list 2000
Site history
History of The Galilee Journeys of Jesus & the Apostles
- 2010: Requested by State Party to not be examined
- As Sites of Christianity in the Galilee
- 2000: Added to Tentative List
- Added to tentative list
- Criteria
Links
- UNESCO
- whc.unesco.org
All Links
UNESCO.org
- whc.unesco.org — whc.unesco.org
News Article
- Jan. 28, 2016 jpost.com — 1,700-year-old inscriptions linked to ‘rabbis’ unearthed in Galilee
Community Information
Travel Information
Recent Connections
News
- jpost.com 01/28/2016
- 1,700-year-old inscriptions linked…
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Visitors of The Galilee Journeys of Jesus & the Apostles
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Community Reviews
Show full reviewsGabLabCebu
The Galilee Journeys of Jesus & the Apostles
The Galilee Journeys of Jesus & the Apostles (On tentative list)

Oh Galilee! As a Christian, it is a wonder how all the steps of Jesus' early life are less than 2 hours' drive in this region. Back in 2018, I visited Nazareth, Cana, Mount Tabor, Zippori, Tiberias, Magdala, and the Mount of Beatitudes on a small-group private tour. Indeed, they are all holy sites, and it feels greatly spiritual to walk in Jesus' footsteps and be in the sites of great miracles and mysteries. However, I can't say that this is a site worth inscribing on the list. All the significance lies in religious intangible aspects, as in Nazareth, Cana, Mount Tabor, and the Mount of Beatitudes, where only modern churches stand, although Nazareth does have a few Roman-age remains including the alleged house of Mary on the lower level of the church. Tiberias is now a modern city with not much to see related to Jesus. That leaves Zippori and Magdala.
Zippori is a normal ruined Roman city, and the preservation and restoration of structures is generally poorer than in Bet Shean. However, Zippori's mosaics are extremely intricate and well-preserved. A walk through the synagogue in the lower section of the city reveals colorful floor mosaics of a various people and creatures in a rich agricultural landscape. Walking up the hill, one would come to the poorly-preserved Roman theatre, the iconic Crusader-Ottoman fortress with a sarcophagus used as a block, and the highlight of them all, the Roman villa with the best preserved Roman mosaics of Israel, including …
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The Galilee Journeys of Jesus & the Apostles
The Galilee Journeys of Jesus & the Apostles (On tentative list)

I would like to review two of the proposed sites in this serial nomination: Nazareth and Seppheris.
Nazareth is a typical Arab town (and the largest in Israel). Its centre is the old town with the typical covered basar. Almost all churches in the centre are new (19th Century onwards) with two exceptions - the Synagogue Church and Mensa Christi which are both crudsader constructions. There are also Roman remains under the Annunciation Chapel and some medieval remains under the Franciscan church. Nonetheless, not much of historical Nazareth survived.
Nearby Seppheris poses a great contrast. It is a well preserved Roman city. It features the remains of a synagogue as well as some Roman mansions displaying beautiful mosaics. Unfortunately, although the town was mentioned in the description it seems it was removed from the proposal and goes for a seperate nomination. With its exclusion no significant historical sites have remained in the proposal which, unsurprisingly, led to its rejection by Unesco in 2010.
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