A 1,400-year-old plaque depicting a cross is reshaping understanding of how far east Christianity spread.
Archaeologists working on Abu Dhabi's Sir Bani Yas Island uncovered the artefact, which features a stepped pyramid evoking Golgotha - where Christians believe Jesus was crucified - with leaves sprouting from its base reports the Daily Mail.
It was found among the ruins of a church and monastery, pointing to a Christian community that flourished on the island during the seventh and eighth centuries. The report comes as the Turin Shroud mystery was said to have been 'solved' by the expert who says he even knows Christ's blood type.
Early ChristiansChristianity in this period is typically associated with the Levant, Mesopotamia and parts of Europe, making evidence of a thriving community on a southeastern Arabian Gulf island both unexpected and historically significant.
At the same time, the region was undergoing profound religious change as Islam was rising and spreading rapidly across Arabia, while older pagan traditions lingered and Christianity was thought to be fading.
However, the presence of a flourishing Christian settlement here challenges that assumption.
Christianity flourishedMaria Gajewska, lead archaeologist at the site, said: "Every element of the cross incorporates regional motifs."
"It tells us that Christianity in this region was not only present but flourished, adapting visually to its local context. We had settlements of Christians that were not just existing but were clearly thriving."
Mohamed Khalifa Al Mubarak, chairman of the Department of Culture and Tourism, called the discovery "a powerful testament to the UAE's profound and enduring values of coexistence and cultural openness," adding that the find highlights a history of peaceful religious diversity in the region.
Object of venerationThis season's excavations also uncovered pottery, glass artefacts and a small seagreen bottle that may have held oil or rosewater.
The cross itself is about 10.6 inches long, 6.7 inches wide and roughly 0.8 inches thick.
Archaeologists believe it could have been an object of veneration, mounted on a wall with worshippers kneeling before it.
Hager Al Menhali, an Emirati archaeologist at the department, told The National: "The plaster was resting face down and something about it caught my attention."
She added that a "distinct fingerprint on the back," speculating it was left by the person who crafted the stucco plaque.
Church of the EastFuture studies will include radiocarbon dating and further exploration of the courtyard houses, which could eventually be incorporated into a broader visitor trail.
"These discoveries deepen our connection to the past and inspire future generations to embrace the spirit of unity and mutual respect that has long defined our community," Al Mubarak said.
Evidence from the excavation suggested that senior monks may have lived in the courtyard buildings, walking to the church for services or using the spaces for spiritual retreats.
The wellbuilt structures, made of limestone and coral with cisterns for water, indicate a comfortable existence rather than a purely hermitic life.
The Christian community belonged to the Church of the East, a branch that stretched from the Middle East to China.
The Sir Bani Yas discovery offers a rare glimpse into how Christianity not only survived but expanded eastward, linking Arabian Gulf communities into the wider story of the faith's spread toward India and Asia.
Evidence of a church and monastery on Sir Bani Yas, dating to the seventh and eighth centuries, was first uncovered in the early 1990s.
Another monastery, likely linked to the same church, was discovered on an island in Umm Al Quwain in 2022. Similar sites have also been identified in Kuwait, Iran and Saudi Arabia.
Archaeologists are still investigating why the Sir Bani Yas settlement declined.
The church is believed to have been fragmenting before the rise of Islam, troubled by internal schisms as rival branches sought independence.
However, evidence suggests that early Christian and Islamic communities in the region communicated and traded peacefully. So far, no external event has been identified as the cause of the site's abandonment.
What is striking, archaeologists said, is that the buildings appear unusually clean, with little sign of collapse or rubble. This suggested the residents may have left intentionally, planning to return, rather than being forced out by disaster or conflict.
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