A 1,600-year-old Jewish bath, also known as a mikveh, was recently uncovered in Italy – and the find is the oldest of its kind in Europe.
On March 10, Italian officials announced the discovery, which was found at the archaeological site of Ostia Antica last summer.
In a statement translated from Italian to English, the Ostia Antica Archaeological Park described the mikveh as being a “small semi-underground room with a well underneath.”
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Pictures released by officials show ancient stairs leading down to what was once used as a ritual bath. The steps show “notable traces of wear,” according to the statement, and are “flanked by two masonry shoulders covered inside with hydraulic plaster.”
“In the north-eastern corner, immediately above the northern abutment, there is a through hole in the masonry, probably intended to house a pipeline for the supply of water,” the statement says.

The recently-discovered mikvah, found in Italy, dates back around 1,600 years. (Ostia Antica Archaeological Park)
The well’s diameter measures roughly 3.5 feet and is “crowned by a brick ring probably added at a later time, certainly intended for the collection of groundwater.”
As archaeologists dug deeper, they also uncovered a lamp from either the 5th or 6th centuries A.D. – roughly the same age as the mikveh.
The lamp was decorated with the image of a menorah and a lulav, or a palm branch associated with the Jewish holiday of Sukkot – and the combination of all the above discoveries pointed to the site’s use as a mikveh.
“The walls covered with hydraulic plaster, the presence of a groundwater collection well…and the discovery of the lamp with Jewish symbols at the bottom of the well…leads us to hypothesize an interpretation of it as a Jewish ritual bath,” the statement said.
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A lamp with Jewish symbols, such as a menorah and a lulav, was also found at the site. (Ostia Antica Archaeological Park)
“Intended for people to dive (but also objects) for purification purposes, [mikvehs] generally appear as rectangular basins, in most cases covered, dug into the ground and covered with hydraulic plaster, with a row of steps that occupy their entire width, connected directly or indirectly to a spring, a well or a rainwater collection tank,” the press release described.
Mikvehs are used by Jews to achieve ritual purity, such as during a religious conversion, while cleaning utensils or while preparing for a wedding. The latest discovery is the only ancient Roman-era mikveh found in Europe.
The only other ancient mikveh in Europe is located in Palazzo Bianca in Syracuse, Sicily, which was “probably built near the local synagogue between the 6th and 7th centuries AD,” the release stated. That places it after the fall of Rome in 476 A.D., which the Ostia Antica mikveh appears to predate.
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Though few ancient mikvehs survive in Europe, they undoubtedly existed. Historians say that the decline of mivkehs can be pointed to the Roman persecution of Jews in the first century.

Ostia Antica, which translates to “Ancient Ostia”, is an archaeological site for the ancient city of Ostia. (Ostia Antica Archaeological Park)
“Widely spread in Judea, Galilee and Idumea in the Herodian age, particularly within residential buildings, they progressively decreased in the 1st century until they almost completely disappeared at the beginning of the 2nd, in connection with the full Romanization of the region following the destruction of the Temple in the year 70 AD and the subsequent repression of Bar Kokhba in 135 AD,” the release said.
Alessandro Giuli, the Italian Minister of Culture, said that the recent discovery “strengthens the historical awareness of this place as a true crossroads of coexistence and exchange of cultures, cradle of tolerance between different peoples who found their union in Roman civilization.”
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“It represents a unique one in the Roman Mediterranean area outside the Land of Israel and attests to how deep-rooted the Jewish presence was in the heart of Roman times,” Giuli noted.
In a statement, Victor Fadlun, the president of the Jewish Community of Rome, said that the discovery brought on “emotion and pride.”

Rome’s Jewish community welcomed the discovery of the mikveh. (Ostia Antica Archaeological Park)
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“It is the sign of a living presence, which has been perpetuated over the centuries and leads to us today,” Fadlun said. “The demonstration of an identity that many generations of Jews have managed to preserve, defend and enhance.
“I thank those who have made decisive scientific and financial contributions for this important result.”