
Additional discoveries made a the site included a bronze candelabrum and marble reliquary, both the largest of their kind to ever be found in Israel.
A marble block with three half-sphere depressions was found beside a baptismal font, thought to possibly point to a lost stage of early Christian baptismal rites, was found in the ancient city of Hippos, not far from the Kinneret, according to a recent study.
The artifact, unlike anything previously documented in archaeological record, was discovered during excavations focused on a newly unearthed ceremonial hall annexed to the south of Hippos’s cathedral. Inside, archaeologists found a partially preserved room housing a baptismal font and several other liturgical objects.
“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,” said Dr. Michael Eisenberg of the Zinman Institute of Archaeology and Haifa University, one of the leaders of the excavation.
Currently, researchers' leading theory regarding the artifact’s use is that it was meant to hold three different oils used during the threefold baptismal immersion ceremony, rather than the two anointings in the pre- and post-baptism.
Evidence further suggests that the ceremonial hall was constructed after 591 CE and later destroyed during an earthquake in 749 CE, which buried the artifacts beneath heavy rubble leading to their preservation.
Additional discoveries made a the site included a bronze candelabrum and marble reliquary, both the largest of their kind to ever be found in Israel.
Ancient Hippos: Only Christian Byzantine city on the Kinneret
Hippos was the only Christian city around the Kinneret during the Byzantine age, controlling a broad swath of territory including the southern Golan and the Kinneret’s eastern shore, an area Christian tradition associates with the ministry of Jesus.
As such, the cathedral of Hippos, one of approximately seven churches to have operated within the city at the time, became the most prominent ecclesiastical place of worship in the region.
It is also the only known church to have had two designated halls, or photisterion (“hall of illumination”), with baptismal fonts. The photisterion previously excavated at the site is the largest known among Byzantine churches in Israel.
According to researchers, the larger hall was used primarily for adult baptisms, while the second, recently discovered hall was used for the baptisms of infants and children.
“Baptism was one of the central rites of Christian communal life and gradually took shape during the Byzantine period,” Eisenberg concluded. “In different regions, distinct liturgical traditions developed, many of which are not documented in written sources.”
“This find offers a rare glimpse into how the baptismal rite was shaped and practiced in the Byzantine Christian community of Hippos.”
The complete findings were published by Dr. Michael Eisenberg and Dr. Arleta Kowalewska in an early March edition of the Palestine Exploration Quarterly.
latest_posts
- 1
Manual for Wonderful Getaway destination - 2
They died 'doing what they loved': The stories of workers in their 80s who died on the job - 3
Hidden Island Cameras Capture Rare Tasmanian Species for the First Time Ever - 4
Best Exciting ride: Which One Rushes You the Most? - 5
EU-funded BioSupPack project turns brewery waste into bioplastics
A mom stopped giving her kids snacks — and sparked a debate about eating habits
What is the 'Survivor 50' Challenge? Hidden immunity idols will be up for grabs in every U.S. state.
Instructions to Pick the Right Gold Speculation Procedure: Exploring the Market
Find Your Internal Culinary expert: Cooking Strategies and Recipes
It's official: NASA's Artemis 2 moon mission will break humanity's all-time distance record
SpaceX launches Starlink satellites on its 150th Falcon 9 mission of the year
More parents refusing vitamin K shots for newborns, study finds
Lilly becomes first healthcare firm to join trillion-dollar club, Wall Street reacts
Iran, Hezbollah fire rockets at Israel during Passover celebrations












