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The Shroud of Turin is a famous artifact with obscure origins. How and when it was made has long been the subject of debate ...
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 ...
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 length of linen cloth bearing the faint image of a man, believed by some to be the burial shroud of ...
The Shroud of Turin was not Jesus's burial cloth, new research has claimed. The 14.5-foot by 3.7-foot linen bears the image ...
For almost 800 years, scholars and clerics have been locked in dispute over whether a piece of linen known as the Shroud of ...
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 is no different. We want it to be real — because we long for physical tokens that help sustain our path of faith. During Easter, that longing is only intensified.
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, when photographed in 1898, had been in Turin over three hundred years, having been brought there from France by Emmanuel Philibert of Savoy in 1578.