Exploring Mount Tabor: A Visitor's Guide
A place of pilgrimage since the Byzantine Era, Mount Tabor's religious significance is matched by its sheer beauty, which has made it a haven for nature lovers and hikers. A major highlight of any trip to the Jezreel Plains region, this is the place to put your hiking shoes on and hit the trails. If you're not a walker, the church complex here - upon the site of Jesus' Transfiguration - is a must-do tourist attraction for any road trip you're planning in the area.
Church Complex
On the summit, the road to the right leads to the area occupied by theFranciscan Monastery and enters a walled courtyard between the ruins of an older church on the left and the monastery garden on the right up to the Church of the Transfiguration (or Tabor Church).
Built of light-coloured limestone, the Church of the Transfiguration harks back to the style of church building, which developed in Syria between the 4th and 6th centuries. This architecture was no longer concerned only with the decoration and furnishing of the interior, but for the first time sought to give the exterior a monumental stamp. This Syrian tradition is reflected, for example, in the facade, with its two projecting towers between which a round-headed arch surmounted by a pediment frames the entrance to the church, and in the volute-like framing of the windows.
In the interior - again on the Syrian model - the nave is separated from the aisles by wide-spanned arches. The roof beams are borne on short columns in the clerestory. The church contains three grottoes, which were described by Jonas Korte in 1751 as "three chapels, with a small altar; they are called tabernacles, and they are said to represent the three huts which Peter desired to build, one for his Master, the other two for Moses and Elias".
The Grotto of Christ is in the eastern part of the church. Steps lead down to a lower level with a sanctuary enclosed by walls belonging to a Crusader church and roofed with a modern barrel vault. In the vaulting of the apse in the upper part of the church is a mosaic on a gold ground representing theTransfiguration. There are two other chapels in the towers on the west front: in the south tower the Chapel of St Elias, in the north tower the Chapel of Moses, with a mosaic pavement incorporating crosses in the design. This means that the mosaic must date from before 422, when the Emperor Theodosius II prohibited the representation of crosses in mosaic pavements so that this sacred symbol should not be trodden underfoot.
View Point
To the north and south of the Church of the Transfiguration are walls belonging to older buildings. From the top of the walls there are excellent views of the elliptical summit plateau with its remains of ancient buildings set in luxuriant gardens. There are also beautiful panoramic views of the surrounding areas - overlooking the hills of Nazareth to the west, the West Bank to the south, the Jordan rift valley to the east, and Galilee to the north.
Hiking
If you're feeling active, Mount Tabor has two great hiking trails where you can get your fill of fresh air. The Shvil HaYa'aranim Trail goes around and up the mountain and the Socev Har Tavor Trail circumnavigates the mountain.
Practical Mount Tabor Tips
- The church complex is open 8am-11am and 2pm-5pm daily.
- Entry is free.
- Modest dress is required for entry (no sleeveless tops, short skirts, or skimpy shorts).
Getting There
- The summit of Mount Tabor can be reached on a sign-posted road, which branches off the Afula-Tiberias road at the south end of Kefar Tavor and runs northwest.
- Another road, which goes off the Afula-Tiberias road farther to the south, also runs up to the summit by way of the Arab village of Dabburiya.
- The last few kilometres of the steep, winding road to the summit are not suitable for buses and caravans.
History
In the 2nd millennium BC there was a Canaanite shrine, a "high place", on Mount Tabor, as there was on other hills like Mount Carmel and Mount Hermon. The god worshipped here was Baal, whose cult spread in the 2nd millennium, as a result of trading links, to the island of Rhodes, where he was worshipped on Mount Atabyrion (1,215m/3,986ft) under the name of Zeus Atabyrios. (Atabyrion was also the Greek name for Mount Tabor).
In the time of the Judges (12th century BC) the prophetess Deborah and her general Barak mustered their forces on Mount Tabor before launching the victorious onslaught, which annihilated Sisera, the king of Hazor's general, "and all his chariots and all his host" (Judges 4,12-16).
The significance of Mount Tabor in the history of Christianity began in the 4th century, when it became identified with the "high mountain apart" into which Christ went with his disciples Peter, James, and John "and was transfigured before them: and his face did shine as the sun, and his raiment was white as the light. And, behold, there appeared unto them Moses and Elias talking with him" (Matthew 17; Mark 9,2-13; Luke 9,28-36).
Jesus thus appeared to the disciples in his divine form, as the Christ and God's "beloved son". Together with the Resurrection, the Transfiguration became one of the central themes of the theology and iconography of the Eastern church. The appearance of the transfigured Christ in a glory of light also had a decisive influence on the mystical thought of Eastern monasticism: a form of mystical practice, still found on the "holy mountain" of Athos, which seeks through ascetic exercises to be blessed with the "uncreated light" of Mount Tabor and thus to achieve a mystical union with God.
The first churches on Mount Tabor were built before 422, and in 553 it became the see of a bishop. From this period dates the large mosaic of the Transfiguration in St. Catherine's Monastery on Sinai. There was further building on Mount Tabor, both as a place of pilgrimage and as a fortress, during the Crusader period. The fortress withstood an attack by Saladin in 1191, but was destroyed by Baibars in 1263. In 1631, the Druze emir Fakhr ed-Din granted the summit of the hill to the Franciscans, whose monastery still exists. In 1911, the Greek Orthodox, to whom the northern part of the summit plateau belonged, built a church dedicated to St Elias (Elijah). The large Franciscan church (designed by Antonio Barluzzi) was built in 1921-23.
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