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Contrary to popular belief, the sacred Shroud of Turin was not used to cover Jesus’ post-crucifixion and was actually a recreation created by artists, per a study published in the journal Archaeometry ...
The Shroud of Turin is a famous artifact with obscure origins. How and when it was made has long been the subject of debate ...
A study suggests the Shroud of Turin likely draped over a sculpture, not Jesus’ body, using 3D simulations that challenge old ...
A 3D analysis comparing the way fabric falls on a human body versus a low-relief sculpture shows that the Shroud of Turin was ...
The Shroud of Turin is a legendary piece of burial cloth that is believed to bear the image of a deceased Jesus Christ. While ...
Instead of being a burial shroud it was an old tablecloth used to wrap up a statue of the Fisher King to protect it in ...
The revered fabric has been a source of mystery and controversy since its first recorded mention in the 14th century.
THE mystery surrounding one of the world’s most famous religious relics may finally be solved, according to new research. The ...
"The Shroud of Turin offers us the image of how his body lay in the tomb during that time (of death); time that was brief chronologically — about a day and a half — but was immense, infinite ...
Then in 2016, I wrote a 175-page article titled “The Politics of the Radiocarbon Dating of the Turin Shroud.” After retiring in 2018, I expanded that article, which grew into an 800-page book.
In 1946, the Shroud was returned to Turin, where it now resides in a heavily fortified underground vault. Many in the secular media dismiss the Shroud as a “medieval forgery” or a clever hoax.
The shroud has not been on public display since 2000. Already, 1.5 million people have made reservations for a three-to-five-minute look at the cloth. Pope Benedict XVI will visit May 2 to pray ...