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Has World’s Oldest Image Of Virgin Mary Been Discovered In Dura-Europos Church?

AncientPages.com - The Dura-Europos church is located in Syria and the place is very interesting to anyone interested in Biblical archaeology.

It’s the world’s oldest Christian church dating back to the third-century C.E.

For the first three centuries of the church, Christians typically met in homes because of intermittent persecution.

On June 13, 313 AD, Edict of Milan was signed by Roman Emperor Constantine and the persecution of Christians ended.

The city of Dura, or as we know it, Dura-Europos, Syria. Image credit: Beliefnet

The Dura-Eurpos church was discovered when excavations took place  before World War II, but it is only recently that we have been able to learn more about the church’s precious surviving frescoes.

The church’s painted baptistery remains a unique discovery. It contains   the most ancient Christian paintings. The "Good Shepherd", the "Healing of the paralytic" and "Christ and Peter walking on the water" are considered the earliest depictions of Jesus Christ.

See also:

Unsolved Mystery Of The Aleppo Codex And Its Missing Pages: One Of The World’s Most Precious Ancient Books

Codex Washingtonianus Contains A Passage Not Seen In Any Other Biblical Manuscript

Mystery Of The Philistines – Biblical Goliath People – New Clues Shed Light On An Ancient Enigma

One of the most intriguing discoveries is a wall painting depicting a woman leaning over a well. The identity of the woman is unknown.

Some scholars think this is the Biblical scene of the Samaritan woman who speaks with Jesus beside Jacob’s well.

Michael Peppard, an associate professor of theology at Fordham University and author, of the book The World’s Oldest Church: Bible, Art, and Ritual at Dura-Europos, Syria suggests the portrait depicts not the Samaritan woman but the Virgin Mary at the moment of the Annunciation, when the angel Gabriel announces to her that she will bear the Son of God, Jesus.

A detail of the baptistery painting from Deir ez-Zor, Syria, that may portray the Virgin Mary. Credit Tony De Camillo/Yale University Art Gallery

If Peppard’s interpretation is correct, this would make the portrait of the  woman at a well is the oldest securely datable image of the Virgin Mary.

The fate of the church is unknown after occupation by ISIS, but its famous frescos were removed after discovery and are now preserved at Yale University Art Gallery.

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