A Byzantine-era discovery at Hippos includes a ceremonial object tied to early Christian worship near the Sea of Galilee, where Jesus preached. (Art Media/Print Collector/Getty Images; Michael Eisenberg)
Ishtartv.com - foxnews.com
By Andrea Margolis ,April
5, 2026
Archaeologists have uncovered
a one-of-a-kind artifact near the Sea of Galilee that may reveal new
details about how early Christians practiced baptism.
The 1,400-year-old artifact was
recently found in the ancient city of Hippos, a prominent bishop's seat during
the Byzantine era, according to a March 30 press release shared with Fox
News Digital.
The city was once the only
Christian city around the Sea of Galilee, controlling territory associated with
Jesus' ministry.
The marble block was found in a
hall of baptism called a photisterion. It may shed light on "a stage of
the early Christian baptismal rite that has until now gone unrecorded,"
officials said.
Hippos' cathedral had two
baptismal halls: one for adults, and another for infants and children, which is
where the new object was found.
The smaller hall was constructed
after 591 A.D. and was destroyed by an earthquake in 749 A.D. —
meaning the object is roughly 1,400 years old.
Officials described the artifact
as "a rectangular block bearing three hemispheric cavities, found beside a
baptismal font in a newly revealed ceremonial hall."
Researchers believe the block may
have held three different oils used during a threefold baptismal immersion
ceremony.
Pictures of the object show the
weathered marble block with three bowl-shaped basins, suggesting it was
designed to hold liquids side by side.
Early Christian baptisms more
commonly involved two anointings before and after the rite — which makes the
three-part design particularly unusual.
"The collapse buried the
marble and bronze artifacts beneath the rubble, preserving them until their
recent discovery," the release noted.
Officials added, "After
extensive examination and comparison, the scholars concluded that no known
parallels to the artifact exist."
Michael Eisenberg, a University
of Haifa archaeologist who recently published the results in the
journal PEQ, along with colleague Arleta Kowalewska, said the object was
found among a variety of "remarkable liturgical objects," including a
bronze candelabrum used to hold candles.
"Only after careful research
did we realize how unique they are for understanding Christian ritual
practices in the cradle of Christianity by the Sea of Galilee," he
said.
The object was "nothing
special at first glance," to the excavations, Eisenberg told Fox News
Digital.
"But here is exactly where
the archaeological and liturgical studies came into play."
Realizing that it is a
one-of-a-kind artifact that may fill unknown regional and perhaps wider lacunae
in one of the most ancient and sacred Christian ceremonies was a complete
surprise."
Eisenberg said the findings may
"open a portal" to the development of baptism rituals in the early
Christian world.
"In different regions,
distinct liturgical traditions developed, many of which are not documented in
written sources," the archaeologist said.
This find offers a rare
glimpse into how the baptismal rite was shaped and practiced in the
Byzantine Christian community of Hippos."
The find joins a long list of
significant archaeological discoveries found at Hippos in recent years.
Last year, excavators in Hippos
found a 1,600-year-old Christian care facility for the elderly, which
is possibly the world's oldest nursing home.
Last July, metal detectorists
found a trove of ancient jewelry and gold coins near ruins in Hippos.
A marble block with three carved basins found at Hippos may point to a previously unknown step in early Christian baptism rituals. (Michael Eisenberg)
The ancient city of Hippos, near regions tied to Jesus' ministry, served as a major center of early Christian life. (Fine Art Images/Heritage Images via Getty Images; Michael Eisenberg)
|