Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. The mysterious Shroud of Turin, which is believed by many Christians to have laid atop Jesus Christ's body after his crucifixion, ...
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The guardians of the famed Shroud of Turin are disputing the results of a recent study that purports to disprove the cloth’s origins as the burial shroud of Jesus Christ. Cicero Moraes, a Brazilian 3D ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Bishops and priests prayed in front of the Shroud of Turin in 2010 in the Cathedral in Turin. - Vincenzo Pinto/AFP/Getty Images ...
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 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) ...
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 ...
Italian scientists have unveiled new evidence that seems to validate the authenticity of the Shroud of Turin, potentially confirming that it was used to wrap Jesus Christ after his crucifixion. The ...
The blood, sweat and tears on these threads are still — sorta — shrouded in mystery. New findings provide more evidence on what Jesus might have been buried in after he was crucified. A recent study ...
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 ...
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 published in the journal Heritage ...
The Shroud of Turin — a 14-foot-long linen cloth bearing an image of a crucified man — has captivated people for centuries, stirring debate over whether the relic once wrapped the body of Jesus Christ ...