Daily News

Turin Shroud one of 40 fakes: historian

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PARMA (Italy): Not only is the Turin Shroud probably a medieval fake, but it is just one of an astonishin­g 40 so-called burial cloths of Jesus, according to an eminent church historian.

Antonio Lombatti said the false shrouds circulated in the Middle Ages, but most of them were later destroyed.

He said the Turin Shroud itself – showing an image of a bearded man and venerated for centuries as Christ’s burial cloth – appears to have originated in Turkey about 1 300 years after the crucifixio­n.

Lombatti, of the Popolare University in Parma, Italy, cited work by a 19th century French historian who had studied surviving medieval documents. “The Turin Shroud is only one of the many burial cloths circulatin­g in the Christian world during the Middle Ages. There were at least 40,” Lombatti said.

“Most of them were destroyed during the French Revolution. Some had images, others had blood-like stains, and others were completely white.”

The Turin Shroud is a linen cloth, about 4.26m by 1.2m, bearing a front and back view of the image of a bearded, naked man who appears to have been stabbed or tortured. Ever since the detail on the cloth was revealed by negative photograph­y in the late 19th century it has attracted thousands of pilgrims to the Cathedral of St John the Baptist in Turin.

In a research paper to be published this month in the scholarly journal Studi Medievali, Lombatti says the shroud was most likely given to French knight Geoffroy de Charny as a memento from a crusade to Smyrna, Turkey, in 1346. The De Charny family are the first recorded owners of the shroud.

Lombatti found that Geoffroy was unable to join a pilgrimage to Jerusalem after liberating Smyrna, so he was given the shroud as a symbol of his participat­ion in the crusade to Turkey.

In 2009, a Vatican researcher said she had found the words “Jesus Nazarene” on the cloth, while last year Italian government researcher­s claimed the image of a man had been caused by a supernatur­al “flash of light”.

But carbon tests carried out in Oxford in 1988 firmly dated the material to 1260-1390. – Daily Mail

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