More about St Philip-and where he was buried

HOW I DISCOVERED THE TOMB OF THE APOSTLE
PHILIP
SOURCE: ZENIT
By Renzo Allegri
.
ROME, MAY 2, 2012 (Zenit.org).- On May 3, the Church remembers St. Philip and St. James the Less, two apostles who formed part of the Twelve. Last summer the news broke that the Apostle Philip’s tomb was found at Hierapolis, in Phrygia.  “The value of this  finding is undoubtedly  of a very high level,” says  Professor Francesco D’Andria, director of the archaeological mission that made the discovery. D’Andria teaches archaeology at the University of Salento-Lecce and is the director of the School  of  Specialization  in  Archaeology  of  that  university.  He  has  been  working  in Hierapolis for more than 30 years, looking for St. Philip’s tomb and, since the year 2000, he has been director of this mission.

We asked Professor D’Andria to speak to us about St. Philip and the exceptional finding
that  he  and  his  team  of  researchers  carried  out.

“Historical  news  on  Saint  Philip  is scarce,” said D’Andria. “From the Gospels we know that he was a native of Bethsaida, on Lake  Gennesaret;  hence,  he  belonged  to  a  family  of  fishermen.  John  is  the  only evangelist  who  mentions  him  several  times.  In  the  first  chapter  of  his  Gospel,  he recounts that Philip entered the group of the apostles from the beginning of Jesus’ public life, called directly by the Master. In the order of calling, he is the fifth after James, John, Andrew  and  Peter.  In  the  sixth  chapter,  when  he  recounts  the  miracle  of  the multiplication of loaves, John says that, before doing this miracle, Jesus turned to Philip and asked him how all those people could be fed, and Philip answered that 200 denarii worth of bread would not be sufficient even to give a piece to each one. And in Chapter 12, John says that after Jesus’ triumphal entrance in Jerusalem, some Greeks wished to speak with the Master and went to Philip. And during the Last Supper, when Jesus spoke of the  Father (“If  you  had known  me,  you  would  have  known  my Father also”),  Philip said: “Lord, show us the Father, and we shall be satisfied.” From the Acts of the Apostles we know that Philip was present with the others at the moment of Jesus’ Ascension and on  the  day  of  Pentecost,  when  the  descent  of  the  Holy  Spirit  took  place.  Written information ceases on that day. All the rest comes from Tradition.”

ZENIT: What does Tradition say in addition?
D’Andria:  After  Jesus’  death,  the  Apostles  dispersed  through  the  world  to  spread  the
Gospel message. And, according to Tradition and ancient documents written by the Holy
Fathers, we know that Philip carried out his mission in Scizia, in Lydia, and in the last
days of his life, in Hierapolis, in Phrygia. In a letter written to Pope Victor I, Polycrates,
who toward the end of the second century was bishop of Ephesus, recalls the important
personalities of his Church, among them the Apostles Philip and John. Of Philip, he said:
“He was one of the twelve Apostles and died in Hierapolis, as did two of his daughters
who grew old in virginity … Another daughter of his … was buried in Ephesus.”
“All scholars agree in considering that Polycrates’ information is absolutely reliable. The
Letter,  which  dates  back  to  about  190  after  Christ,  100  years  after  Philip’s  death,  is  a fundamental document for relations between the Latin and the Greek Church
It  refers  to  the  dispute  about  the  date  of  the  celebration  of  Easter.  And  in  that  letter, Polycrates, who was patriarch of the Greek Church, claims the nobility of the origins of the Church in Asia, stating that just as the trophies (mortal remains) of Peter and Paul are in Rome, the tombs of the Apostles Philip and John are in Asia. Moreover, from that letter we know that Philip spent the last years of his life in Hierapolis, with two of his three  daughters,  who  undoubtedly  helped  him  in  his  work  of  evangelization.  In  his Ecclesiastical  History,  Eusebius  of  Caesarea  says  that  Papias,  who  was  bishop  of Hierapolis at the beginning of the third century, knew Philip’s daughters and from them learned  important  details  of  the  Apostle’s  life,  among  them  also  the  account  of  a tremendous miracle: the resurrection of a dead man.”
ZENIT: Is it known how and when the Apostle died?

D’Andria: Most of the ancient documents state that Philip died in Hierapolis, in the year
80 after Christ, when he was about 85. He died a martyr for his faith, crucified upside
down like St. Peter. He was buried in Hierapolis. In the ancient necropolis of that city an
inscription was found that alludes to a church dedicated to St. Philip. On an unspecified
date,  Philip’s  body  was  taken  to  Constantinople  to  remove  it  from  the  danger  of
profanation by barbarians. And in the sixth century, under Pope Pelagius I, it was taken
to Rome and buried, next to the Apostle James, in a church built specifically for them.
The  Byzantine-style  church,  which  was  called  “of  Sts.  James  and  Philip,”  was
transformed  in  1500  into  a  magnificent  Renaissance  church,  which  is  the  present  one called “Of the Holy Apostles.”

ZENIT: When did research begin on St. Philip’s tomb in Hierapolis?
D’Andria: In 1957, thanks to professor Paolo Verzone, who taught engineering at Turin’s
Polytechnic and  was very passionate about  archaeological  research.  An agreement was
stipulated  between  the  Italian  and  Turkish  Republics,  which  enabled  our  team  of
archaeologists  to  carry  out  searches  in  Hierapolis.  Professor  Verzone  was  the  first
director of that mission. He began immediately, of course, to look for the Apostle Philip’s
tomb. He concentrated the excavations on a monument that was already visible in part
and  known  as  the  church  of  St.  Philip,  and  he  discovered  an  extraordinary  octagonal
church,  a  genuine  masterpiece  of  Byzantine  architecture  of  the  fifth  century,  with
wonderful arches in travertine stone.
All this complex of constructions made with so much care and detail made one think that
it  was  a  great  church  of  pilgrimage,  a  very  important  shrine,  and  Professor  Verzone
identified it as the Martyrion, namely the martyrial church of St. Philip. And therefore he
thought that it was built on the saint’s tomb. Hence he had several excavations carried
out in the area of the main altar, but he never found anything that made one think of a
tomb. I myself thought the tomb was in the area of the church, but in 2000, when I became director of the Italian archaeological mission of Hierapolis, by concession of the Ministry of Culture of Turkey, I changed my opinion.

ZENIT: Why?

D’Andria: All the excavations carried out over so many years had no result. I also carried
out  research  through  geo-physical  explorations,  that  is,  special  explorations  of  the
subsoil, and not obtaining anything, I was convinced we had to look elsewhere, still in
the same area but in another direction.

ZENIT: And towards what did you direct your research?

D’Andria: My collaborators and I studied a series of satellite photos of the area carefully,
and  the  observations  of  a  group  of  brave  topographers  of  the  CNR-IBAM,  directed  by Giuseppe  Scardozzi,  and  we  understood  that  the  Martyrion,  the  octagonal  church  was the  center  of  a  large  and  well-developed  devotional  complex.  We  identified  a  great processional  street  that  took  the  pilgrims  of  the  city  to  the  octagonal  church,  the Martyrion at the top of the hill, the remains of a bridge that enabled pilgrims to go across a  valley  through  which  a  torrent  flowed;  we  say  that  at  the  foot  of  the  hill  there were stairs in travertine stone, with wide ascending steps that led to the summit.
At  the  bottom  of the  stairs  we  identified another  octagonal  building  that  could  not  be seen  from  the surface  but only on satellite photos. We excavated around that building
and realized it was a thermal complex.
This was an enlightening discovery that made us understand that the whole hill was part
of  a  course  of  pilgrimage  with  several  stages.  Continuing  our  excavations,  we  found
another flight of steps that led directly to the Martyrion, and on the Square, next to the
Martyrion, there was a fountain where pilgrims did their ablutions with water, and near
there  a  small  plain,  in  front  of  the  Martyrion,  where  there  were  vestiges  of  buildings. Professor Verzone had not dared to carry out an excavation in that area because it was an  immense  heap  of  stones.  In  2010,  we  began  to  do  some  cleaning  and  elements  of extreme importance came to light.

ZENIT: Of what sort?

D’Andria:  A  marble  architrave  of  a  ciborium  with  a  monogram  on  which  the  name
Theodosius  could  be  read.  I  thought  it  was  the  name  of  the  emperor  and  so  that
architrave  made  it  possible  to  date  the  martyrial  church  between  the  fourth  and  fifth centuries. Then, little by little we found vestiges of an apse. Excavating and cleaning the floor,  a great  church  came to  light.  Whereas the floor of the Martyrion was octagonal, this  floor  was  that  of  a  basilica,  with  three  naves.  A  stupendous  church  with  marble capitals refined decorations, crosses, friezes, plant branches, stylized palms in the niches and  a  central  pavement  with  marble  tesserae  with  colored  geometrical  motifs:  all referable  to  the  fifth  century,  namely,  the  age  of  the  other  church,  the  Martyrion. However, at the center of this wonderful construction what enthused and moved us was something disconcerting that left us breathless.

ZENIT: And it was?

D’Andria:  A  typical  Roman  tomb  that  went  back  to  the  first  century  after  Christ.  In  a certain  sense,  its  presence  could  be  justified  by  the  fact  that  in  that  area,  before
Christians  built  the  proto-Byzantine  shrine,  there  was  a  Roman  necropolis.  However,
examining its position carefully, we realized that that Roman tomb was at the center of
the church. Hence, in the fifth century the church had been built precisely around that
pagan  Roman  tomb,  to  protect  it,  because,  evidently,  that  tomb  was  extremely
important. And immediately we thought that perhaps that could be the tomb where the
body of St. Philip was placed after his death.

ZENIT: And did you find confirmations of this supposition?
D’Andria: Indeed. In the summer of 2011, we carried out extensive excavation in the area
of this church with the coordination of Piera Caggia, research archaeologist of the IBAMCNR,  and  extraordinary  elements  emerged  that  confirmed  are  suppositions  fully.  The tomb was included in a structure in which there is a platform that is reached by a marble staircase.  Pilgrims,  entering  in  the  narthex,  went  up  to  the  higher  part  of  the  tomb, where there was a place for prayer and they went down on the opposite side. And we saw that the marble surface of the steps was completely consumed by the steps of thousands upon  thousands  of  people.  Hence,  the  tomb  received  an  extraordinary  tribute  of veneration.
On the  façade  of the  tomb,  near  the  entrance,  there  are  nail  holes which  undoubtedly
served to support an applied metallic locking device. Moreover, there are grooves in the
pavement  that  make  one  think  of  an  additional  wooden  door:  all  precautions  that
indicate that in that tomb there was an inestimable treasure, namely, the apostle’s body.
And on the façade, on the walls there are numerous graffiti with crosses, which in some
way have consecrated the pagan tomb.
Excavating  next  to  the  tomb  we  found  water  baths  for  individual  immersions,  which
undoubtedly  served  for  healings.  After  venerating  the  tomb,  sick  pilgrims  were
submerged in the baths exactly as happens in Lourdes.
However, the main — I would say mathematical — confirmation which attests, without a
shadow of a doubt, that that construction is really St. Philip’s tomb comes from a small
object that is in the Museum of Richmond in the United States. An object in which there
are  images  that  up  to  now  could  not  be  fully  deciphered,  whereas  now  they  have  an
obvious significance.
ZENIT: What object is it?

D’Andria: it is a bronze seal about 10 centimeters (four inches) in diameter, which served
to  authenticate  St.  Philip’s  bread  to  be  distributed  to  pilgrims.  Icons  have  been  found that  represent  St.  Philip  with  a  large  loaf  in  his  hand.  And,  to  be  distinguished  from ordinary bread, this bread was marked with the seal so that pilgrims would know that it was a special bread, to be kept with devotion.
There are images on the seal. There is the figure of a saint with a pilgrims’ cloak and an
inscription that says “Saint Philip.” On the border is a phrase in Greek, an ancient phrase
of praise to God: Agios o Theos, agios ischyros, agios athanatos, eleison imas (Holy God,
strong Holy One, immortal Holy One, have mercy on us). All the specialists of Byzantine
history  who  know  that  seal  have  always  said  that  it  came  from  Hierapolis.  However,
what is most extraordinary is the fact that the figure of the saint is presented between
two  buildings:  the  one  on  the  left  is  covered  by  a  cupola,  and  it  is  understood  that  it represents the octagonal Martyrion; the one on the right of the saint, has a roof like the
one of the church of three naves which we have now discovered. The two buildings are at
the top of a stairway. It seems that it was an image of the complex then existing around
St. Philip’s tomb. A photograph made in the sixth century. Moreover, in the image of the
seal there is an emblematic element: a lamp hanging at the entrance, typical signs that
served  to  indicate  a  saint’s  sepulcher.  Hence,  already  indicated  in  that  seal  is  that  the tomb was in the basilica church and not in the Martyrion.

ZENIT: You have made all these discoveries in recent times.
D’Andria: I would  say  very recent times. We did so between 2010 and 2011. Above  all
2011 was the year of the greatest emotions for us: we discovered the second church and
Philip’s tomb. We concluded a work begun 55 years ago. The news has gone around the
world. And it has attracted scholars and the curious to Hierapolis. Among others, at the
end  of  last  August,  hundreds  of  Chinese  arrived,  as  well  as  numerous  Koreans  and
journalists of several nationalities.
Last  Nov.  24,  I  had  the  honor  of  presenting  the  discovery,  at  the  Pontifical
Archaeological  Academy  of  Rome,  to  scholars  and  Vatican  representatives.  Also
Bartholomew the Patriarch of Constantinople wished to receive me to know the details of
the discovery, and on Nov. 14, feast of St. Philip in the Orthodox Church, he celebrated
Mass  precisely  on  the  tomb  found  in  Hierapolis.  And  I  was  present,  1,000  thousand
years, the chants of the Greek liturgy resounded among the ruins of the church.
In the forthcoming months, we will take up the works again and I am certain that other
important surprises await us.

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