By Christian Fraser
BBC News, Rome

St Paul's Outside the Walls is one of the
largest churches in Rome
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Archaeologists working for the Vatican
have unearthed a sarcophagus containing what they believe are the
remains of St Paul the Apostle.
The tomb dates back to at least AD390 and was found in a crypt under
a basilica in Rome.
It has long been thought that the crypt contained the tomb of St
Paul but the altar had hidden it.
St Paul was an influential early Christian who traveled widely in
the Mediterranean area in the 1st Century.
Excavations at the site began in 2002 and were completed last month.
Ancient pilgrims
The cathedral of St Paul's Outside the Walls is the largest church
in Rome after St Peter's.
For the past three years, archaeologists have been excavating
underneath the altar to remove two huge slabs of marble and now, for
the first time in almost 1700 years, the sarcophagus of St Paul is on
public view.
The original inscription on the top reads: Paolo Apostolo Martyr -
Latin for "Paul Apostle Martyr".
The holes through which the ancient pilgrims would have pushed
pieces of cloth to touch the relic are clearly visible.
"What we can see at the moment through a grating, a new grating
that's been put there, is the side of the sarcophagus of Paul which
seems to be white marble-like material," said Father Edmund Power, the
abbot of the Benedictine Monastery.
St Paul traveled widely through Asia Minor, Greece and Rome in the
1st Century.
His letters to the early churches, found in the Bible's New
Testament, are arguably some of the most influential on Christian
thinking.
St Paul is said to have been beheaded in AD65 by the Roman Emperor
Nero.
His sarcophagus will be on public view for the foreseeable future
but the church is yet to rule out the possibility that one day the
interior itself will be opened and examined.