A group of Italian researchers have uncovered new information about the Shroud of Turin that adds even more mystery to what some Christians believe is the burial garment of Jesus Christ. The ...
With 360-degree projection-room theaters, replicas, a life-size Jesus corpus and more, “The Shroud of Turin: An Immersive ...
The Shroud of Turin is, in a way, a mirror: it shows the beholder whatever they wish to see. For devoted Christians, it’s the holiest of icons: the linen cloth that wrapped Jesus Christ’s crucified ...
For almost 800 years, scholars and clerics have been locked in dispute over whether a piece of linen known as the Shroud of Turin was used to wrap the body of Jesus Christ after his crucifixion. And ...
For centuries, devout Christians have flocked to the Italian city of Turin to pay their respects to one of the most famous relics in the world. The Shroud of Turin is a piece of linen, measuring 14ft ...
(The Conversation) — Many believe the Shroud of Turin to be the cloth used to bury Jesus after his crucifixion. Scientists have investigated the claim and here’s what they found. (The Conversation) — ...
The Shroud of Turin (Sindone di Torino in Italian) is a length of linen cloth that bears a faint image of the front and back of a naked man. Because the details of the image are consistent with ...
“As someone once said, if this had been the shroud of Julius Caesar, no one would care. But since this is potentially the shroud of Jesus — probably the central figure of human history — that makes it ...
A Belgian academic has uncovered writings by a 14th-century theologian who called the shroud a "clear" and "patent" fake. Installation view of "Tent of the Shroud" with a life-sized digital replica of ...
The Cathedral of St. John the Baptist in Turin, Italy, houses a fascinating artifact: a massive cloth shroud that bears the shadowy image of a man who appears to have been crucified. Millions of ...