Cave of the Seven Sleepers

Entrance to Al-Raqeem Cave

The Cave of the Seven Sleepers (Arabic: كهف الرقيم, Kahf ar-Raqīm) is an archaeological and religious site in ar-Rajib, a village to the east of Amman, Jordan.[1] It is claimed that this cave housed the Seven Sleepers, also known from Christian sources as the "Sleepers of Ephesus" and from the Qur’an as the "Companions of the Cave" (Arabic: اصحاب الكهف, romanizedaṣḥāb al kahf)—a group of young men who, according to Byzantine Christian and Islamic sources, fled the religious persecution of Roman emperor Decius.[2][3] Legend has it that these men hid in a cave around AD 250, emerging miraculously centuries later - according to the Koran, 309 lunar years later.[4] Rediscovered in 1951, it is one of several caves associated with the Seven Sleepers (see "Other contenders").

  1. ^ "Seven Sleepers Cave - Turkish News". Hürriyet Daily News. Retrieved 2020-06-14.
  2. ^ Sarah Islam (2023). "The Cave of the Seven Sleepers in al-Rajib: A Co-Produced Christian-Muslim Site of Veneration". CORE - Coproduced Religions. Universität Bern, CH & Institute For Advanced Study, Princeton, New Jersey, USA. Retrieved 8 March 2024.
  3. ^ "Seven Sleepers of Ephesus". Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica, inc. Retrieved 13 June 2020.
  4. ^ "Grotto of the Seven Sleepers in Ephesus | Turkish Archaeological News".