http://shadowshroud.com/
This is the link to a site describing a simple but highly original and interesting experiment about the famous Shroud of Turin, a mysterious object that has been in the keeping of the Dukes of Savoy (later Kings of Sardinia and Kings of Italy) for several centuries. It is allegedly the funeral shroud of Jesus Christ, described by an eyewitness in the Gospel of John (that John is eyewitness account is my own belief, which I will defend if challenged); however, in spite of several attempts to identify it with an object seen at various times in the Christian East, it does not appear in recorded history in about 1350, and the first thing we hear about it at all is that the local Bishop, Henry of Poitiers, condemned it as a fraud. At first he simply had the viewings stopped; but when the exhibitions were revived, thirty years later - evidently in the hope that with the Bishop dead, people would not remember his inquest and condemnation - his successor wrote a lengthy letter to Pope Clement VII.
"The case, Holy Father, stands thus. Sometime since in this dioceses of Troyes, The Dean of a certain collegiate church, to wit, that of Lirey, falsely and deceitfully, being consumed with the passion of avarice, and not of any motive of devotion but only of gain, procured for his church a certain cloth cunningly painted..." The bishop then described the image on the cloth, along with the circumstances of the exhibitions, and continued: "Eventually, after diligent inquiry and examination, he [the Bishop] discovered the fraud and how the said cloth was cunningly painted, the truth being attested by the artist who had painted it, to wit, that it was a work of human skill and not miraculously wrought or bestowed. I offer myself as ready to supply all information sufficient to remove any doubt concerning the facts alleged."
Clement VII considered the matter and issued a Papal Bull, which ordered that the Shroud of Turin be advertised only as a "copy." Since then, and in spite of its immense popularity, the Church has never admitted the Shroud as an acknowledged relic, calling it only "an object worth meditating over" - just like any other work of art. The issue seemed closed when, in the eighties, an Oxford lab proved by radiocarbon dating that the material of the Shroud was dated from the fourteenth century. I am one of those who think there are a few problems with radiocarbon dating, whatever the case may be, it certainly cannot cover the difference between first and fourteenth century AD!
However, a genuine riddle remained. How had the artist, whom Peter had actually found and questioned, managed the negative, "X-ray" effect that is much the most convincing feature of this fake? I think it is rather fitting that the best answer discovered thus far should be by a man who is, a), a Christian, and b), not a scientist. This site shows what almost certainly did happen - as well as that we are not the trusting fools that our enemies claim us to be.
This is the link to a site describing a simple but highly original and interesting experiment about the famous Shroud of Turin, a mysterious object that has been in the keeping of the Dukes of Savoy (later Kings of Sardinia and Kings of Italy) for several centuries. It is allegedly the funeral shroud of Jesus Christ, described by an eyewitness in the Gospel of John (that John is eyewitness account is my own belief, which I will defend if challenged); however, in spite of several attempts to identify it with an object seen at various times in the Christian East, it does not appear in recorded history in about 1350, and the first thing we hear about it at all is that the local Bishop, Henry of Poitiers, condemned it as a fraud. At first he simply had the viewings stopped; but when the exhibitions were revived, thirty years later - evidently in the hope that with the Bishop dead, people would not remember his inquest and condemnation - his successor wrote a lengthy letter to Pope Clement VII.
"The case, Holy Father, stands thus. Sometime since in this dioceses of Troyes, The Dean of a certain collegiate church, to wit, that of Lirey, falsely and deceitfully, being consumed with the passion of avarice, and not of any motive of devotion but only of gain, procured for his church a certain cloth cunningly painted..." The bishop then described the image on the cloth, along with the circumstances of the exhibitions, and continued: "Eventually, after diligent inquiry and examination, he [the Bishop] discovered the fraud and how the said cloth was cunningly painted, the truth being attested by the artist who had painted it, to wit, that it was a work of human skill and not miraculously wrought or bestowed. I offer myself as ready to supply all information sufficient to remove any doubt concerning the facts alleged."
Clement VII considered the matter and issued a Papal Bull, which ordered that the Shroud of Turin be advertised only as a "copy." Since then, and in spite of its immense popularity, the Church has never admitted the Shroud as an acknowledged relic, calling it only "an object worth meditating over" - just like any other work of art. The issue seemed closed when, in the eighties, an Oxford lab proved by radiocarbon dating that the material of the Shroud was dated from the fourteenth century. I am one of those who think there are a few problems with radiocarbon dating, whatever the case may be, it certainly cannot cover the difference between first and fourteenth century AD!
However, a genuine riddle remained. How had the artist, whom Peter had actually found and questioned, managed the negative, "X-ray" effect that is much the most convincing feature of this fake? I think it is rather fitting that the best answer discovered thus far should be by a man who is, a), a Christian, and b), not a scientist. This site shows what almost certainly did happen - as well as that we are not the trusting fools that our enemies claim us to be.
Whoops..
Date: 2005-02-27 06:51 pm (UTC)