1945 Nag Hammadi find buried in fertilizer turned a desert jar into Gnosticism’s game changer for scholars

Fertilizer diggers uncovered a jar holding 13 codices
In 1945, Egyptian villagers hunting for fertilizer near Nag Hammadi unearthed a clay jar containing leather-bound Coptic codices hidden in the desert for centuries. The find revealed 13 codices, including texts linked to works later discussed such as the Gospel of Thomas. Before this discovery, historians studying Gnostic Christianity relied mostly on hostile accounts, making true reconstruction difficult. Nag Hammadi reshaped research in religion, linguistics, translation, and how early communities transmitted texts and ideas.
- Discovery happened in 1945 on the outskirts of Nag Hammadi in Upper Egypt
- Local workers were digging for fertilizer, not conducting archaeology
- A clay jar contained 13 leather-bound codices written in Coptic
- Texts were Coptic translations of Greek originals
- Researchers previously relied on opponents’ hostile descriptions of Gnostic Christians
- The codices informed studies beyond theology, including linguistics and text transmission
This summarization was done by Beige for a story published on
The Economic Times
