The building is thought to date from c. 460 CE[5] and consists of a prayer hall measuring approximately 11 by 14 m (36 by 46 ft). It was divided into three aisles by two rows of four columns each.[6]
^"Khirbet Dikke and the Synagogues in and around Bethsaida Valley". Archaostyle. Archaostyle Scientific Series 7. Qazrin. 2009. (191 pages; 58 illustrations; 1 map).