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The Shroud of Turin, a centuries-old linen cloth that many believe was used to wrap Jesus’ body after crucifixion, is unlikely to be from Biblical times, hi-tech new research asserts.
The Shroud of Turin is a centuries-old linen cloth that some believe is the burial shroud for Jesus Christ. Scientists examined the ancient cloth using a method known as Wide-Angle X-ray ...
Viral stories this week reported on a “new” study that points to scientific research confirming the Shroud of Turin, the purported burial cloth of Jesus Christ, does indeed date back 2,000 ...
Using a new X-ray technique, scientists have estimated that the shroud may have been made around 2,000 years ago, the same ...
But the cloth, housed in the Cathedral of St John the Baptist in Turin, continued to be studied and scrutinised. A controversial study carried out in the 1980s dated the shroud to between 1260AD ...
A new review by researchers from France and Italy has revisited a landmark 1988 UK study of the Turin Shroud which found the shroud was a Medieval forgery and not the cloth Jesus was buried in ...
A new review by researchers from France and Italy has revisited a landmark 1988 UK study of the Turin Shroud which found the shroud was a Medieval forgery and not the cloth Jesus was buried in ...
For centuries, Catholics have flocked to the Italian city of Turin to be in the presence of its famous shroud. The venerated piece of linen, measuring 14ft 5in by 3ft 7in, bears a faint image ...
Languages: English, Spanish A team of Italian researchers have entered the debate over the Shroud of Turin, the linen cloth believed by some to have been Jesus Christ's burial shroud. In a study ...
the 14-foot-long linen revered by some as the burial cloth of Jesus, on display at the Cathedral of Turin, Italy. Francis visited the long linen with the faded image of a bearded man, during his ...