The Shroud of Turin is shrouded in mystery. Viewed as a holy relic for centuries, this artifact is not what it looks like, according to yet another study. The old linen cloth and its faint spectral ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. In this Sunday, June 21, 2015, file photo, Pope Francis prays in front of the Holy Shroud, the 14-foot-long linen revered by some ...
The Shroud of Turin, the linen cloth believed by Christians to have been Jesus Christ’s burial shroud, may date back to around the time of his death, a new study suggests. A team of Italian ...
New AI and 3D digital analysis of the Turin Shroud suggests the controversial cloth was likely created by a medieval artist, ...
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 ...
The Shroud of Turin has been a subject of long-standing debate regarding its origins. A recent study suggests that it is more likely a medieval work of art rather than an authentic burial cloth with ...
The exhibit is a response to the beloved saint’s call for greater understanding of and devotion to the shroud — the burial cloth that many believe was used to wrap the body of Christ after his ...
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 National Museum of Funeral History – The National Museum of Funeral History has opened a groundbreaking exhibit exploring one of the most debated artifacts in religious and scientific history—the ...
A new 3D digital analysis suggests the Turin Shroud was likely created by a medieval artist using a shallow sculpture method, ...
Garden Grove, Calif. — An interactive museum dedicated to the Shroud of Turin, which some say was Jesus’ burial cloth, opens its doors to the public Wednesday at the Christ Cathedral campus in ...
The mysterious Shroud of Turin, which is believed by many Christians to have laid atop Jesus Christ’s body after his crucifixion, may be even stranger than we previously thought. In a new study ...