The Shroud of Turin has long been treated as a fragile snapshot of a crucified man, but a new wave of 3D modeling argues it ...
Tech artists say they've re-created Jesus' true face from the Shroud of Turin. March 30, 2010— -- Using cutting-edge technology on the famed Shroud of Turin, a team of computer artists has ...
Believed by many to be the burial shroud of Jesus Christ, the Holy Shroud of Turin has been an object of fascination, reverence and close study for centuries ever since it emerged in the late Middle ...
This holy linen’s origins remain shrouded in mystery. Contrary to popular belief, the sacred Shroud of Turin was not used to cover Jesus’ post-crucifixion and was actually a recreation created by ...
The Vatican has never officially pronounced on the shroud’s authenticity, though popes have held it up as an object of veneration. Shroud of Turin featuring positive (left) and negative (right) ...
However, after millions visited the Shroud’s public exhibitions in 1998, 2000, 2010, and 2015, the Church realized that people were interested in burial cloth even without additional date testing.
Nora Creech, director of Othonia North America, points to a replica of the Shroud of Turin at a new interactive museum dedicated to the shroud, Monday, Nov. 17, 2025, at the Christ Cathedral campus in ...
The Shroud of Turin is one of the most studied and controversial religious artifacts in the world. Housed in the Cathedral of St. John the Baptist in Turin, Italy, the linen cloth bears the image of a ...
A newly discovered medieval document has revealed that the authenticity of the Shroud of Turin—14-foot linen cloth that many believe wrapped the crucified body of Jesus—was being called into question ...