Kafr Zabad

He noted only foundations and some parts of the cella walls and pediment of the upper temple had survived.

[3] The lower temple had only one section of upright door frame, again with blocks of pediment, architrave and cornice lying scattered about the landscape of the Anti-Lebanon.

There is a relief carved into a rock approximately 100 metres (330 ft) east of the temple with the figure of a Roman goddess (probably Venus).

The figure is barely recognisable and had been mostly destroyed with only the lower half remaining distinguishable:[3] indeed to the northeast of the lower temple there it is a rock-cut relief of Venus, called "Bint El Malik" or the king's daughter by the local people.

[5] In 1838, Eli Smith noted Kefr Zebad as a Druse and Christian village in the Baalbek area.