Discovery of the Hermonian temples in rural
villages began in the 19th century, with surveys by
Edward Robinson and
Sir Charles Warren. Ten sacred sites were also documented by Daniel Krencker and Willy Schietzschmann in 1938.
Maurice Tallon published an
itinerary of the sanctuaries in 1967 with details of the paths to reach them. George F. Taylor provided a pictorial guide in the late 1960s with more recent information coming from Shim'on Dar in 1993 and
epigraphic surveys in 2002 and 2003. Some of the sites have been connected with the
high places used for the worship of
Baal in the
Books of Kings. The
Seleucids occupied the area after 200 BCE, shortly after which the
Ituraeans developed a principality in the area until the fall of
Chalcis when the territory passed to the
Herodian kings
Agrippa I and
Agrippa II. After the end of the first century CE, the territory became jointly controlled by the cities of
Damascus,
Sidon and
Paneas. It is thought that the area was inhabited continuously until the third century CE. Precise dating of the structures is currently not possible. Krencker and Zscheitzschmann suggested they were mostly constructed between 150 and 300 CE and
epigraphic evidence has been found to support this for several temples. Construction techniques have been seen to differ from those used in shrines of the
Phoenician and
Achaemenid and Hellenistic periods such as
Tyre,
Tell Anafa and
Kharayeb.
Khirbet Zemel and other sites in the
Hauran and
Jawlan. Although the sites may have been built on previous layers of architecture, the current temples are predominantly considered to be of Roman construction and were largely abandoned after the fourth century AD during the
Byzantine era. Taylor held the view that the religious architecture was the responsibility of "the hand of a single master builder" but was not able to answer the question of why so many shrines should be concentrated in the area.
Henry Seyrig, when reviewing Krencker and Zscheitzmann's "Romische Tempel in Syrien" highlighted that
"the clue to an important social and economic change that would deserve to be one day the focus of a study". There is still a deplorable lack of a comprehensive study into the
history,
archaeology,
architecture of these buildings and ancient sites, or the religious life of the people who used them. ==Summit site of Qasr Antar==