The Shroud of Turin, which many believe to be the actual burial cloth of Jesus, continues to be a mystery. On Sunday, April 6 ...
The linen, which is kept in Turin and measures 4.3 metres ... which are now barely visible on the Shroud, have been identified as first-century Roman lepton coins, minted under Pontius Pilate ...
There are some things in this world that refuse to be explained away. The Shroud of Turin is one of them. For centuries, this ...
Founded by the late funeral director Robert Waltrip in 1992, The National Museum of Funeral History houses the history of the ...
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 ...
Just in time for the current Easter season, news emerged from Italy that a new approach to dating the Shroud of Turin has located it squarely in the time frame necessary for it to have wrapped the ...
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 ...
The linen cloth many believe is the burial shroud of Jesus Christ draws thousands of pilgrims during rare public displays ...
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 ...
Scientists and theologians have often quarrelled about the origins of the mysterious shroud, although a team of Italian boffins claim to have proved its authenticity ...
New tests have placed the Turin Shroud at 2,000 years old He describes ... have been identified as first-century Roman lepton coins, minted under Pontius Pilate between 29 and 32 AD.