Shroud of Turin—real or fake, and why?

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Magenta

Senior Member
Jul 3, 2015
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You cannot definitively claim it is a fake unless you can replicate how it was done
That has been stated before, but on what basis is such a statement true?
 

ResidentAlien

Well-known member
Apr 21, 2021
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in the early 1990's a South African Art Historian & Scientist named Nicholas Allen was able to reproduce a shroud-like image using a camera-obscura and a linen cloth treated with silver & sulphur nitrate. the camera-obscura technique was certainly known as far back as Plato, lenses of the quality necessary were easily available & manufactured in Italy in the 13th century, and knowledge of the light-sensitive chemical elements was documented as far back as the 11th century. that is, he used methods and materials that could have been possible and known of in the early 1300's when the shroud first appeared.

article:
https://repository.up.ac.za/bitstream/handle/2263/14525/Mare_Science(1999).pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y

he called the thing he produced the 'shroud of Port Elizabeth'

images:

View attachment 229738


View attachment 229739



View attachment 229740
Excellent post, thank you. (y)
 

ResidentAlien

Well-known member
Apr 21, 2021
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There are only two possible conclusions at this point, either the forger is the greatest forger in human history and did this forgery without any motive of making money or even of seeing his forgery fool others or it is legitimate.
Or a third option as posthuman described in his post #98 above (https://christianchat.com/threads/shroud-of-turin—real-or-fake-and-why.200221/post-4607880).

This is the missing link that everyone has apparently overlooked. It wouldn't require the greatest forger in the world but only someone skilled in this technique.
 

ZNP

Well-known member
Sep 14, 2020
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Or a third option as posthuman described in his post #98 above (https://christianchat.com/threads/shroud-of-turin—real-or-fake-and-why.200221/post-4607880).

This is the missing link that everyone has apparently overlooked. It wouldn't require the greatest forger in the world but only someone skilled in this technique.
No, I read that post and it was a very poor attempt. The first thing the forensic analysis looked for was some kind of dye or pigment, they would have certainly determined if this were a kind of photographic paper. In other words how did they recreate the image without leaving a trace of these photographic chemicals. You can't claim that you have recreated the shroud unless you can do that.

Besides this ignores many other aspects of the Shroud.

1. The blood type on the shroud matches the blood on the head covering which has an excellent historical record and is considered to be authentic. You have a 1/10 chance of doing that and this was done before anyone knew about blood types.

2. It uses human blood, not pig blood or chicken blood which a typical forger would have done.

3. The wounds on the back match the historical object used by the Romans in scourging. That would have been a wonderfully detailed flourish for a forger.

4. The weave of the cloth matches the weave from the time of Christ, another wonderful touch.

5. The cloth matches that of the Jews and the flax apparently was local to Jerusalem, another wonderful touch.

6. They found pollen from 40 different plant species native to Jerusalem that would be giving off pollen during the spring. The only way to do that would have been for the forger to have done the forgery in Jerusalem at the same time of year as Jesus was crucified and to have sprinkled the cloth with flowers as was done at that time. Again, done hundreds of years before they knew we could identify different pollen and use it forensically to identify the region.

7. The wounds from the crown of thorns on the head do not match the paintings of the time, instead of a woven crown it looks like they just took a thorn bush and stuffed it on his head. This seems much more logical for soldiers who are mocking him, but is a fantastic thing for a forger to do because it flies in the face of what all those simpletons they were planning on fooling would expect.

8. The wound on his hands is different from what the paintings portray but again was anatomically correct and accurate for what the Romans did.

9. Traces of Limestone were found on the cloth that can be matched with the same place that Jesus tomb was located. Limestone can be identified by trace elements which act like a fingerprint. Therefore whoever made this "forgery" not only did it at the same time of year that Jesus was crucified, in the same place Jesus was crucified, with the same instruments and cloth that He was crucified in and with, but they also placed this "forgery" in a tomb there as well.

10. But to me the really hard thing to explain is the one thing that is completely contrary to the account in the Bible. What they normally do is cut a strip from the cloth down the length of the cloth and then use that strip to tie the cloth to the body. That strip was sewn back onto the Shroud. There is no reason for a forger to do that, there is no practice where you go in after a person has died and take the burial shroud off and sew that strip back on. Not only so but it was done so expertly that it wasn't all that apparent until they examined this very closely. It looks like a labor of love by someone who wanted to make sure that nothing was lost.
 

ResidentAlien

Well-known member
Apr 21, 2021
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The first thing the forensic analysis looked for was some kind of dye or pigment, they would have certainly determined if this were a kind of photographic paper. In other words how did they recreate the image without leaving a trace of these photographic chemicals. You can't claim that you have recreated the shroud unless you can do that.
Yes, that's a good point.
 

presidente

Senior Member
May 29, 2013
9,163
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According to the Jewish burial custom of the time, bodies were wrapped in strips of cloth. For example, in John 11:44, Lazarus is described as being wrapped in "linen strips."

But the accounts in the gospels differ. The synoptics take their cues from Mark, saying He was wrapped in a linen shroud provided by Joseph of Arimathea. John, however, says "they took the body of Jesus and bound it in linen cloths with the spices, as is the burial custom of the Jews."

In John 20:6-7, when Peter and John rushed to the tomb, it says: "Then Simon Peter came, following him, and went into the tomb. He saw the linen cloths lying there, and the face cloth, which had been on Jesus’ head, not lying with the linen cloths but folded up in a place by itself."

If there was a face cloth that was separate from the rest, then this obviously couldn't refer to the Shroud of Turin since it (the Shroud of Turin) is all one piece. John's gospel is the only one that records this detail.

I have mixed feelings. The shroud is a negative image of a person. If it's a forgery, how would that have even been done (in negative I mean)? But the idea of a single piece of cloth runs counter to the burial customs of the Jews at the time. However, Matthew, Mark and Luke says they wrapped Him in a linen shroud.

What are your opinions?
A shroud could have been placed over the cloths...or under. Not saying it happened, but this is not a clear contradiction.
 

posthuman

Senior Member
Jul 31, 2013
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No, I read that post and it was a very poor attempt. The first thing the forensic analysis looked for was some kind of dye or pigment, they would have certainly determined if this were a kind of photographic paper. In other words how did they recreate the image without leaving a trace of these photographic chemicals. You can't claim that you have recreated the shroud unless you can do that.

Besides this ignores many other aspects of the Shroud.

1. The blood type on the shroud matches the blood on the head covering which has an excellent historical record and is considered to be authentic. You have a 1/10 chance of doing that and this was done before anyone knew about blood types.

2. It uses human blood, not pig blood or chicken blood which a typical forger would have done.

3. The wounds on the back match the historical object used by the Romans in scourging. That would have been a wonderfully detailed flourish for a forger.

4. The weave of the cloth matches the weave from the time of Christ, another wonderful touch.

5. The cloth matches that of the Jews and the flax apparently was local to Jerusalem, another wonderful touch.

6. They found pollen from 40 different plant species native to Jerusalem that would be giving off pollen during the spring. The only way to do that would have been for the forger to have done the forgery in Jerusalem at the same time of year as Jesus was crucified and to have sprinkled the cloth with flowers as was done at that time. Again, done hundreds of years before they knew we could identify different pollen and use it forensically to identify the region.

7. The wounds from the crown of thorns on the head do not match the paintings of the time, instead of a woven crown it looks like they just took a thorn bush and stuffed it on his head. This seems much more logical for soldiers who are mocking him, but is a fantastic thing for a forger to do because it flies in the face of what all those simpletons they were planning on fooling would expect.

8. The wound on his hands is different from what the paintings portray but again was anatomically correct and accurate for what the Romans did.

9. Traces of Limestone were found on the cloth that can be matched with the same place that Jesus tomb was located. Limestone can be identified by trace elements which act like a fingerprint. Therefore whoever made this "forgery" not only did it at the same time of year that Jesus was crucified, in the same place Jesus was crucified, with the same instruments and cloth that He was crucified in and with, but they also placed this "forgery" in a tomb there as well.

10. But to me the really hard thing to explain is the one thing that is completely contrary to the account in the Bible. What they normally do is cut a strip from the cloth down the length of the cloth and then use that strip to tie the cloth to the body. That strip was sewn back onto the Shroud. There is no reason for a forger to do that, there is no practice where you go in after a person has died and take the burial shroud off and sew that strip back on. Not only so but it was done so expertly that it wasn't all that apparent until they examined this very closely. It looks like a labor of love by someone who wanted to make sure that nothing was lost.
if you read the linked article, what Mssr. Allen was able to produce had zero trace of pigment, was a negative image with 3D information, was not destroyed with water or chemical wash, etc -- it met every criteria that had previously defied any attempt at explaining how this object could be created by a human.
obviously blood could be added to the canvas before or after using the camera-obscura technique to create the image.
traces of herbs and minerals are not *proof* that anything originated at any given time or place. the plantlife traces that were identified were common both to europe & the Levant, and the limestone traces were not a 'fingerprint' of an exact locale but 'similar' to those found in Israel -- but also 'similar' to those found in Italy.

while it doesn't prove that the Turin shroud is a forgery, it does prove that it is possible for the the shroud to be a human-origin artwork passed off as a relic, moreover, that it is possible to have done this using techniques and materials know in the late 13th / early 14th century.
it would have had to be a genius - but there are always very cunning and clever men.
 

posthuman

Senior Member
Jul 31, 2013
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There are only two possible conclusions at this point, either the forger is the greatest forger in human history and did this forgery without any motive of making money or even of seeing his forgery fool others or it is legitimate.
what makes you think that *if* it was human-produced, the artist received no money and wasn't around to see it passed off as real?

because no one has produced a receipt or his bank accounts? ((guffaw!))

dude. pretend you're a corrupt Catholic abbot in 1355 and you want to find someone to produce the best fake-relic ever, so you & your diocese can become incredibly wealthy & powerful. you think you're gonna leave a paper trail?
 

ZNP

Well-known member
Sep 14, 2020
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if you read the linked article, what Mssr. Allen was able to produce had zero trace of pigment, was a negative image with 3D information, was not destroyed with water or chemical wash, etc -- it met every criteria that had previously defied any attempt at explaining how this object could be created by a human.
obviously blood could be added to the canvas before or after using the camera-obscura technique to create the image.
traces of herbs and minerals are not *proof* that anything originated at any given time or place. the plantlife traces that were identified were common both to europe & the Levant, and the limestone traces were not a 'fingerprint' of an exact locale but 'similar' to those found in Israel -- but also 'similar' to those found in Italy.

while it doesn't prove that the Turin shroud is a forgery, it does prove that it is possible for the the shroud to be a human-origin artwork passed off as a relic, moreover, that it is possible to have done this using techniques and materials know in the late 13th / early 14th century.
it would have had to be a genius - but there are always very cunning and clever men.
Which brings up another key point, initially some tried to do this with a sheet hanging up in front of Sunlight with the shadow of a person. But then a wonderful study based on Nasa imaging was done which showed that 3d information is encoded in the image so you have to wrap a 3d sculpture that would be the light source to get this and you are getting an image in every direction both front and back.

This in turn resulted in the very strange image of Jesus on the Shroud (Some had theorized that Jesus had a strange disease) but when they did this study they determined "the true face of Jesus" which was a very typical middle eastern face.

However, this gives an entirely new problem to those claiming it is a forgery. For about the first two hundred years after the crucifixion you get a wide variety of artwork concerning Jesus and then around 200 years afterward you begin to see this strange face which from that point on seems to be the face that all artists use. It is bizarre that this strange face would automatically become the default image 200 years after the crucifixion and then 1,000 years later it shows up on the Shroud? It seems like artists for over 1,000 years (before the Shroud existed?) were using the face on the Shroud as the Face of Jesus. Especially since we know that this would not be the face that anyone who had actually seen Jesus would have seen.
 

ZNP

Well-known member
Sep 14, 2020
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what makes you think that *if* it was human-produced, the artist received no money and wasn't around to see it passed off as real?

because no one has produced a receipt or his bank accounts? ((guffaw!))

dude. pretend you're a corrupt Catholic abbot in 1355 and you want to find someone to produce the best fake-relic ever, so you & your diocese can become incredibly wealthy & powerful. you think you're gonna leave a paper trail?
According to the record they give us it first shows up in Turin being displayed more than 100 years after they say it was forged. There is a very clear historical record of when it first began to be displayed in Italy, and even with the carbon date there is still quite a good gap in time.
 

posthuman

Senior Member
Jul 31, 2013
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Which brings up another key point, initially some tried to do this with a sheet hanging up in front of Sunlight with the shadow of a person. But then a wonderful study based on Nasa imaging was done which showed that 3d information is encoded in the image so you have to wrap a 3d sculpture that would be the light source to get this and you are getting an image in every direction both front and back.

This in turn resulted in the very strange image of Jesus on the Shroud (Some had theorized that Jesus had a strange disease) but when they did this study they determined "the true face of Jesus" which was a very typical middle eastern face.

However, this gives an entirely new problem to those claiming it is a forgery. For about the first two hundred years after the crucifixion you get a wide variety of artwork concerning Jesus and then around 200 years afterward you begin to see this strange face which from that point on seems to be the face that all artists use. It is bizarre that this strange face would automatically become the default image 200 years after the crucifixion and then 1,000 years later it shows up on the Shroud? It seems like artists for over 1,000 years (before the Shroud existed?) were using the face on the Shroud as the Face of Jesus. Especially since we know that this would not be the face that anyone who had actually seen Jesus would have seen.

it's clear that you haven't read the article i linked, and that you don't know very much about art history.


here's a painting of Jesus from ~ 200's AD

good_shepherd_02b_close.jpg


it's the second-oldest known image of Christ. there is only one known picoral representation of Jesus before the 200's ((not 'all kinds' like you say -- which, pretty sure you just pulled that completely out of the air)). here it is, here's your 'all-kinds before 200 years after Jesus,' which in reality is exactly 1:

alexorig.jpg



the shroud first appeared in history in the 1350's.
well let's see if a typical European was ever portrayed as Jesus in the thousand years before that, eh?

spas_vsederzhitel_sinay.jpg



o wow, that one's from the 500's AD.

huh.


i guess you have no idea what you're talking about, @ZNP
 

ZNP

Well-known member
Sep 14, 2020
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According to the record they give us it first shows up in Turin being displayed more than 100 years after they say it was forged. There is a very clear historical record of when it first began to be displayed in Italy, and even with the carbon date there is still quite a good gap in time.
Sorry about me being fuzzy on the details here, the Shroud was in a fire in a Cathedral 46 years prior to its first being displayed in Turin. If this was a forgery this means they stored it for close to 50 years in a Cathedral before displaying it. That is bizarre behavior for any forger.
 

ewq1938

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Oct 18, 2018
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which was a very typical middle eastern face.
There is no such thing anymore than saying "a very typical American face" or "a very typical Jewish face" etc.

In the middle east there are many different peoples and colors of skin and facial features.
 

posthuman

Senior Member
Jul 31, 2013
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According to the record they give us it first shows up in Turin being displayed more than 100 years after they say it was forged. There is a very clear historical record of when it first began to be displayed in Italy, and even with the carbon date there is still quite a good gap in time.
what are you even talking about?

the earliest mention of the shroud is in the 1300's. Mssr. Allen showed that it's possible combining techniques & materials known & available as early as the 1100's to reproduce the shroud. that is all.
 

ZNP

Well-known member
Sep 14, 2020
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it's clear that you haven't read the article i linked, and that you don't know very much about art history.


here's a painting of Jesus from ~ 200's AD

View attachment 229770


it's the second-oldest known image of Christ. there is only one known picoral representation of Jesus before the 200's ((not 'all kinds' like you say -- which, pretty sure you just pulled that completely out of the air)). here it is, here's your 'all-kinds before 200 years after Jesus,' which in reality is exactly 1:

View attachment 229771



the shroud first appeared in history in the 1350's.
well let's see if a typical European was ever portrayed as Jesus in the thousand years before that, eh?

View attachment 229772



o wow, that one's from the 500's AD.

huh.


i guess you have no idea what you're talking about, @ZNP
Either you didn't read what I said or you didn't understand. This is my point, the artists appear to be using the Shroud as the Face of Jesus.

If it were the other way around and the forger was using these paintings as the model then it doesn't make sense because in reality the Shroud is using a 3d image that looks like a typical Mid Eastern man and the strange image is a result of distortion from a Shroud being wrapped on the face encoding 3d information.
 

ZNP

Well-known member
Sep 14, 2020
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what are you even talking about?

the earliest mention of the shroud is in the 1300's. Mssr. Allen showed that it's possible combining techniques & materials known & available as early as the 1100's to reproduce the shroud. that is all.
If the earliest mention is 1300s then the carbon dating is wrong.
 

posthuman

Senior Member
Jul 31, 2013
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Sorry about me being fuzzy on the details here, the Shroud was in a fire in a Cathedral 46 years prior to its first being displayed in Turin. If this was a forgery this means they stored it for close to 50 years in a Cathedral before displaying it. That is bizarre behavior for any forger.
the shroud was recorded to be in the hands of a certain knight in 1354. that is the earliest known reference to it.
it was first displayed publicly in 1389, and was at that time decried as a forgery. the pope at the time, Clement IV, did not attest to its authenticity but sanctioned it for display as a 'representation of the true shroud'
it was damaged by fire & water ((to put out the fire)) in 1532.
at the time of the fire it was thought to have faded from exposure to light, and after being damaged further by the fire, various steps were taken to maintain its preservation.
previous to being moved to Turin it was displayed often. once it was in Turin ((moved there in 1578)) it has only been displayed sparingly.
 

ZNP

Well-known member
Sep 14, 2020
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There is no such thing anymore than saying "a very typical American face" or "a very typical Jewish face" etc.

In the middle east there are many different peoples and colors of skin and facial features.
The point is that using NASA imaging software to figure out of 3d information was encoded in the image they were able to work backwards to get the image of the face that made the image on the Shroud.

Now the image on the Shroud can be seen in all sorts of artwork concerning Jesus, but the face that made that image is not.

I think NOVA did a special on this called "The Face of Jesus".

So if you think this is a forgery then the forger created a wonderful sculpture of Jesus based on a brilliant technique (for that day), and this sculpture was also a light source for the photographic image, so think of a lightbulb as the scupture, a light bulb with the scourge marks, wounds, hair, nose, etc. This person is a world class genius for the 1300s. Not only are they excellent at photography, they have also invented a light bulb and electricity.
 

posthuman

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Jul 31, 2013
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Either you didn't read what I said or you didn't understand. This is my point, the artists appear to be using the Shroud as the Face of Jesus.
that's absolute rubbish.
the facts are that people in Ethiopia portrayed Jesus like an Ethiopian, people in Greece like a Greek, people in Turkey like a Turk, and people in Northeast Europe, like a Northeast European.
read some art history.