Scientists Have Discovered An Ancient Hidden Chapter In The Bible

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Scientist Discovers Hidden Chapter Of The Bibleballyscanlon - Getty Images
  • A scientist recently discovered a lost fragment of a manuscript representing one of the earliest translations of the Gospels.

  • The researcher used ultraviolet photography to look at past layers of text to find the "new" ancient translation.

  • The text is one of only four examples of the Old Syriac translation.


A scientist found a lost portion of Biblical text about 1,500 years after it was initially written. All he needed was ultraviolet photography equipment and plenty of research know-how.

Announcing the discovery in a paper published in the journal New Testament Studies, medievalist Grigory Kessel of the Austrian Academy of Sciences (OeAW or Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften) found the hidden chapter underneath three layers of text—dubbed a double palimpsest—thanks to ultraviolet photography.

The new find represents one of the earliest translations of the Gospels.

The long-hidden chapter—an interpretation of Matthew chapter 12—was originally translated as part of what are known as the Old Syriac translations about 1,500 years ago. But thanks to the scarcity of parchment a couple of hundred years later in the region, that parchment was reused, mostly erasing the original translation of the Biblical New Testament. A document like this, where one layer of text hides the erased remains of another, is called a palimpsest. The Kessel find is a double palimpsest because the parchment was then used a third time.

"Until recently, only two manuscripts were known to contain the Old Syriac translation of the Gospels," Kessel says in a news release. One resides in London's British Library and the other was a palimpsest discovery at St. Catherine's Monastery at Mount Sinai. In what is known as the "Sinai Palimpsests Project," a third manuscript was recently unearthed. Kessel's find marks the fourth, a translation from the 3rd century text likely copied in the 6th century. The parchment was housed in the Vatican Library.

"Grigory Kessel has made a great discovery thanks to his profound knowledge of old Syriac texts and script characteristics," Claudia Rapp, director of the Institute for Medieval Research at the OeAW, says in a news release.

While fragments of New Testament text date back to the original writings from the 3rd century, the oldest known surviving complete manuscript of the New Testament is the Greek Codex Sinaiticus, dated to the 6th century.

OeAW says Syriac translations can date from before the 6th century, but are mostly found in palimpsests, preserved in the erased layers of parchment. "This discovery proves," Rapp says, "how productive and important the interplay between modern digital technologies and basic research can be when dealing with medieval manuscripts."

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