The linen cloth of the Shroud of Turin – believed by some to have wrapped the body of Jesus following his crucifixion – may date back to around the time of his death, new evidence suggests.
A holy war is brewing after an Italian academic released new research claiming the fabled Shroud of Turin offers proof of Jesus Christ’s crucifixion wounds — but some of his peers are saying ...
Unwrapping the Shroud ... Turin In 1988 the definitive scientific verdict on the Shroud was announced a radiocarbon dating concluded the Shroud of Turin was a 700yearold medieval hoax But today ...
“And, finally, after 18 years of study, the evidence convinced me this cloth wrapped the historic Jesus ... In 2005, chemist Raymond Rogers, a fellow at the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New ...
The Turin Shroud is a linen cloth measuring 1.21m by 4.42m believed by some to bear the impression of Jesus Christ. For the first time in a decade it has gone on display in Turin. Here we have ...
A new study claims the Shroud of Turin likely never touched Jesus, sparking debate over the authenticity of Christianity’s most famous relic. Moraes found that a shallow sculptural technique ...
One of the most controversial debates for centuries has raged over a single piece of yellowed linen that bares the ghost-like image of a crucified man - the Shroud of Turin. It first appeared in ...
In recent years, new archaeological discoveries ... he had been nailed to the cross. The Shroud of Turin is another artifact considered by some to be evidence of Jesus's existence.