|  | |  |  | Archaeologists Found a Skeleton Wearing an Amulet That May Change the History of Christianity 
 A 1.37-inch inscription could upend our understanding of the religion’s spread.
 
 By  Tim Newcomb
 
 Published: Oct 10, 2025 9:50 AM EDT
 
 
  
 Douglas Sacha//Getty Images
 
 Here’s what you’ll learn when you read this story:
 This story is a collaboration with  Biography.com.Archaeologists  discovered a silver amulet containing an 18-line text showing the  oldest known devotion to Christianity north of the Alps. Computer technology helped unravel the mystery of the text hidden within a silver amulet from the third century A.D.The find rewrites the history of Christianity’s spread in the northern Roman Empire. 
 
 An  1,800-year-old silver amulet discovered buried in a Frankfurt, Germany  grave, still next to the chin of the man who wore it, has 18 lines of  text written in Latin on just 1.37 inches of silver foil. That could be  enough to rewrite the known history of  Christianity in  the Roman Empire.
 
 The  amulet—and the inscription—are the oldest evidence of Christianity found north of the Alps.
 
 Every other link to reliable evidence of  Christian life  in the northern Alpine area of the Roman Empire is at least 50 years  younger, all coming from the fourth century A.D. But the amulet, found  in a grave dating between 230 and 270 A.D. and now known as “The  Frankfurt Inscription,” was made to better decipher the inscription.
 
 “This  extraordinary find affects many areas of research and will keep science  busy for a long time,” Ina Hartwig, Frankfurt’s head of culture and  science, said in a translated  statement.  “This applies to archaeology as well as to religious studies,  philology, and anthropology. Such a significant find here in Frankfurt  is truly something extraordinary.”
 
 The amulet was found in what was once the  Roman city  of Nida at an archaeological site outside of Frankfurt in 2018. During  excavation of the area, crews uncovered an entire Roman cemetery wherein  the plot designated as “grave 134,” a small silver amulet, known as a  phylactery, was located right under the chin of the occupant’s skeleton.  He likely wore it around his neck and was buried with it.
 
 Following  the find, the Archaeological Museum Frankfurt restored the silver  amulet, which included a thin silver foil with an inscription, as seen  by microscopic examinations and X-rays in 2019. The wafer-thin silver  foil was too brittle to roll out.
 
 In  May 2024, a breakthrough came when using a state-of-the-art computer  tomograph at the Leibniz Center for Archaeology in Mainz. “The challenge  in the analysis was that the silver sheet was rolled, but of course  after around 1,800 years it was also crumpled and pressed,” Ivan  Calandra, laboratory manager for imaging procedures at the center, said  in a statement. “Using the CT, we were able to scan it in a very high  resolution and create  a 3D model.”  The virtual object was then scanned piece by piece, slowly revealing  the words, allowing experts to finally get a look at the inscribed text  on the individual fragments from the scan.
 
 But  then came the puzzle work. Markus Scholz from Frankfurt’s Goethe  University was able to piece together the 18 lines. “Sometimes it took  weeks, even months, until I had the next idea,” he said in a statement.  “I called in experts from the history of theology, among others, and we  approached the text together bit by bit and ultimately deciphered it.”  Some edges were lost due to damage and some words remain open to  discussion. The original inscription is entirely in Latin, unusual for a  time that featured amulets written in Greek or Hebrew.
 
 The Frankfurt Silver Inscription, based on the most updated translation:
 
 In the name of Saint Titus.
 
 Holy, holy, holy!
 
 In the name of Jesus Christ, Son of God!
 
 The Lord of the World
 
 resists with strength
 
 all attacks setbacks
 
 The god grants well-being
 
 Admission
 
 This rescue device protects
 
 the person who is
 
 surrenders to the will
 
 of the Lord Jesus Christ, God's Son,
 
 since before Jesus Christ
 
 all knees bow: the heavenly ones,
 
 the earthly and
 
 the underground, and every tongue
 
 confess to Jesus Christ
 
 Without a reference to any other faith besides  Christianity,  rare for amulets of this age, the purely Christian inscription not only  shows the rise of Christianity to the north, but also the amulet  owner’s devotion.
 
 During  the third century A.D., association with Christianity was still  dangerous, and identifying as Christian came with great personal risk,  especially as Roman emperor Nero punished Christians with death or even a  date in the Colosseum. That was no matter for this man in Frankfurt who  took his allegiance to  Jesus Christ to his grave.
 
 The  scientific study is bolstered by references never found so early, such  as mention of Saint Titus, a student of the Apostle Paul, the invocation  “holy, holy, holy!” which wasn’t more common until the fourth century  A.D., and the phrase “bend your knees,” which is a quote from Paul’s  letter to the Philippians.
 
 “The  ‘Frankfurt Inscription’ is a scientific sensation,” said Mike Josef,  Frankfurt’s mayor, in a statement. “As a result, the history of  Christianity in Frankfurt and far beyond will have to be turned back by  around 50 to 100 years. The first Christian find north of the Alps comes  from our city. We can be proud of this, especially now, so close to  Christmas.”
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