In Christoffel's 1869 paper in which he introduced the Christoffel symbols on the 3rd and 4th pages, they are written as $\left[\substack{ij \\ k}\right]$ and $\{\substack{ij \\ k}\}$. The notation $\Gamma_{kij}$ and $\Gamma_{ij}^k$ that is used now is not there. I would like to know who first introduced this $\Gamma$-indexed notation for Christoffel symbols. Specifically, was it Einstein?
Here is what I have been able to find.
The paper of Ricci and Levi-Civita (Crelle 1900, pp. 125--201) uses Christoffel's braces notation (see p. 138 here).
Einstein's 1916 paper on general relativity uses $[\substack{\mu\nu\\ \sigma}]$ and $\{\substack{\mu\nu\\ \sigma}\}$ initially (see pp. 791 and 792) but in the middle of p. 802 he writes "$\Gamma_{\mu \nu}^\tau = -\{\substack{\mu\nu\\ \tau}\}$" and doesn't go back to using braces or brackets except on pp. 817 and 818.
Weyl's "Space, Time, Matter" (1918) uses $\left[\substack{ij \\ k}\right]$ and $\{\substack{ij \\ k}\}$. See p. 119 of the German edition here and p. 196 of the English translation here.
Levi-Civita's book "The Absolute Differential Calculus" (1923), which had an English translation in 1928, uses $[ij,k]$ and $\{ij,k\}$ (see p.111 here).
So up to a sign factor (the issue of the physical relevance of that sign is discussed on MO here), the $\Gamma$-indexed notation was introduced no later than Einstein's work (the books by Weyl and Ricci came after that, and I mention them in order to point out that the original notation of Christoffel was still being used after Einstein). I am not familiar with the history of differential geometry, so I would like either a confirmation that the notation is due to Einstein (his wording just before using it suggests the notation is new) or a pointer to earlier use of it.