Thursday, December 22, 2016

Negative #19: The man on the Shroud: The evidence is overwhelming that the Turin Shroud is authentic!

The evidence is overwhelming that the Turin Shroud is authentic!
The man on the Shroud
NEGATIVE #19
Copyright © Stephen E. Jones[1]

This is part #19, "The man on the Shroud: Negative," of my series, "The evidence is overwhelming that the Turin Shroud is authentic!" See the "Main index #1" and "The man on the Shroud #8" for more information about this series. As previously stated, the order of topics in this "The man on the Shroud," section is from what a person looking at the Shroud would notice first, e.g. the man is naked, through to what is less obvious, e.g. his image is a photographic negative. Emphases are mine unless otherwise indicated.

[Main index #1] [Previous: Superficial. #18] [Next: Three-dimensional #20]


  1. The man on the Shroud #8
    1. Negative #19

Introduction. The image of the man on the Shroud is a photographic negative[2].

[Right (enlarge): The negative of Secondo Pia's full-length photograph of the Shroud [provided by Barrie Schwortz] taken in Turin Cathedral on the evening of 28 May 1898 during the 1898 Exposition. That this is a true negative is evident in that the black burnt areas from the 1532 fire are white and the white patches applied in the 1534 repair [see 25Feb13] are black[3]. And yet the Shroud man's image in Pia's photograph is a positive, which means that the image is a photographic negative! (see below).]

In 1898 Secondo Pia took the first official photograph of the Shroud. During the 1898 Exposition of the Shroud from 25 May to 2 June[4], Turin lawyer[5], city councillor[6] and amateur[7] but expert[8] photographer, Secondo Pia (1855–1941), photographed the Shroud[9]. Pia's first attempt to photograph the Shroud on 25 May was only partially successful[10]. But he "managed two exposures and although they were less than perfect, already evident on these negatives was a rather strange effect"[11].

"On the evening of 28 May he [Pia] returned to the cathedral and tried again. This time his equipment worked perfectly. Having exposed four photographic plates, he returned to his studio around midnight and began the process of developing them. What Pia saw that night in his darkroom astounded him. For, as the image on the negative plate took shape before his eyes, he found himself staring not at a confusing array of lights and darks, the usual effect of a photographic negative, but at a coherent likeness of a crucified man. Instead of the flat, enigmatic image seen on the cloth, the negative plate gave the impression of a substantial figure emerging from the background, a figure that looked like a real human body lit from in front ... Instead of the glaring mask of the Shroud, the negative revealed a remarkably convincing, three-dimensional image of man's face, his eyelids closed ... It was as if the Shroud itself was a photographic negative that could be developed into a breathtaking, positive image of the crucified Jesus. `Shut up in my darkroom,' Pia later recalled, 'all intent on my work, I experienced a very strong emotion when, during the development, I saw for the first time the Holy Face appear on the plate, with such clarity that I was dumbfounded by it..."[12].
Unofficial photographs of the Shroud were also taken during the 1898

[Left (enlarge): Negative of an unofficial photograph of the Shroud face taken by Fr. Giovanni Sanna Solaro (1824-1908) during the 1898 Exposition[13]. As can be seen, Solaro's negative is also a positive, confirming even in 1898 that Pia's photographs were not frauds (as claimed by sceptics-see below) and the Shroud image really is a photographic negative!]

exposition by members of the Turin amateur photographers' club that Pia belonged to: Prof. Noguier de Malijay (whose idea it was to photograph the Shroud[14]), Lt. Felice Fino (the cathedral's head of security) and Fr Giovanni Sanna Solaro[15]. The negatives of Fino's and de Malijay's photographs also showed a positive image[16].

The Shroud man's image is a photographic negative. Since on

[Above (enlarge): Secondo Pia's 1898 negative photograph of the Shroud face[17]. Note that the bloodstains, which are dark red on the Shroud as one looks at it, being white on this negative, proves that the blood is not part of the image[18].]

the negative of Pia's (and Solaro's) photograph, the Shroud man's image is a photographic positive, then the image itself must be a photographic negative[19]! A negative of a negative is a positive[20]. The Shroud body image seen with the unaided eye is itself a photographic negative that becomes a photographic positive image only when photographed[21]. On Pia's and Solaro's negatives the bloodstains appear as white blotches (see above), the camera therefore does record a negative image of these positive stains[22], which means that on the Shroud the bloodstains are not an image of blood, but the remains of blood[23].

The general public became aware of the Shroud. The Shroud had become an obscure relic by 1898, its owners the House of Savoy having before 1898 publicly exhibited it only five times in the nineteenth century[24], in 1814, 1815, 1822, 1842 and 1868[25]. But Pia's photographs made the Shroud famous[26]. The realization that the Shroud contained a negative image was shocking not only to Pia but to the owner of the Shroud, King Victor-Emmanuel III (1869–1947) and his advisors[27]. They agreed that no public announcement should be made until they had considered the implications, but the news soon leaked out anyway[28]. Newspapers around the world announced Pia's exciting discovery and the reading public was tantalized by the description of the mysterious, if not miraculous, nature of the Shroud's image[29]. However, no newspaper published Pia's photographs in 1898-99, as photographs had not yet begun to appear in that medium[30]. Only two magazines carried Pia's photographs, but one was a very poor reproduction of the full-length Shroud and the other was only of the face[31]. Nevertheless as newspapers and journals around the world began to publish Pia's photographs, a better understanding of his discovery and the Shroud gradually spread[32].

Beginning of scientific study of the Shroud. The Shroud entered the field of science on 28 May 1898, when Secondo Pia found that the image of the man on the Shroud was a photographic negative[33]. Indeed it was not until the advent of photography in the 19th century that scientific study of the Shroud could begin[34]. Pia's photographing the Shroud was the first scientific experiment on the Shroud without him realising it[35]. The clarity of detail in Pia's negative photographs of the Shroud enabled it to be an object of serious scientific study for the first time[36]. Scientific interest was aroused by the fact that Secondo Pia's photographic negative of the body showed details more clearly and gave a more natural appearance than the visually observed image on the cloth[37]. Medical experts studied Pia's photographs and discovered that the image on the Shroud contained a degree of anatomical detail that far surpassed the medical knowledge of the fourteenth century[38]. As the Shroud's known history from the mid-1350s predated by over 400 years the invention of photography in the 1820s, this observation stimulated scientific inquiry[39]. In 1900, Yves Delage (1854–1920), an agnostic professor of anatomy at the Sorbonne and a director of the Museum of Natural History, showed his assistant, Paul Vignon (1865-1943), a Roman Catholic[40], the Pia photographs and encouraged him to begin a scientific investigation of the Shroud[41]. From 1900 to 1902, Vignon and Delage, assisted by other scientists, undertook their investigation, based solely on Pia's Shroud photographs[42]. In 1902 Delage reported to the French Academy of Science their findings which concluded that, "The man of the shroud was the Christ"[43]!

Sceptics attacked Pia and his photograph Scholars were also forced to take notice of Pia's photographs[44]. Those scholars who were opposed to the Shroud's authenticity accused Pia of having forged his photographs[45] or dismissed it as a a hoax[46]. Even the evidence of Solaro's negative photograph of the Shroud (above) was not sufficient to convince those who didn't want the Shroud to be authentic[47]. Doubts were expressed about Pia's amateur status as a photographer[48]. In an age when most were still ignorant of photography, some claimed that Pia's photographic plate had been 'over-exposed'[49]; others that it had been made by `transparency' with the light source behind the cloth[50]. But as Pia pointed out, the Shroud had a red silk backing sewn on to it (in 1868 by Princess Clotilde of Savoy (1843–1911)[51]), which had not been removed and would have prevented any transparency[52].

In 1899, in response to Pia's photographs, a Roman Catholic historian, Ulysse Chevalier (1841–1923), published his edition of a memorandum purportedly written c.1389 by a Bishop of Troyes Pierre d'Arcis (r. 1377-1395), which claimed that one of his predecessors, Bishop Henri de Poitiers (r. 1354–1370) had in c. 1355 investigated and discovered that the Shroud had been "cunningly painted" and had even obtained the confession of "the artist who had painted it"[11Jul16]. But in this Chevalier was guilty of "intellectual dishonesty"[53] in that he failed to disclose that the d'Arcis memorandum was an unsigned, undated, unaddressed, draft[11Jul16]. And what's more Chevalier committed academic fraud in that he had without disclosing it, combined two documents and had added a date of "1389" and an address to Pope Clement VII (r. 1342-94) on the new combined document[11Jul16]. Moreover there is no evidence for (and much evidence against) that Bishop de Poitiers conducted an investigation into, or had a problem with, the Shroud[11Jul16]. The final refutation of the d'Arcis memorandum is that the Shroud image is not painted[11Jul16]! Chevalier's attack on the authenticity of the Shroud was taken up in England by Fr. Herbert Thurston (1856–1939), who translated Bishop d'Arcis memorandum from the Latin into English[11Jul16]. Thurston therefore must have known that Chevalier was guilty of dishonesty and fraud regarding the d'Arcis memorandum but covered it up and therefore Thurston was also guilty of being an accessory to Chevalier's dishonesty and fraud. And just as the d'Arcis memorandum was wrong about the Shroud being a painting, so were Chevalier and Thurston also wrong about that, which was the basis of their entire argument! Chevalier did present one item of non-literary evidence against Pia's photographs, an opinion by a friend, amateur photographer Hippolyte Chopin[54]. But Dorothy Crispino (1916-2014) called Chopin's 1900 letter of reply to Chevalier a "dizzy juggling of positive-negative," "a photographer's nightmare" and a "pretentious muddle"[55]! Vignon summarised Chopin's argument into two parts[56]. First, "under certain conditions ... [photographic] plates may give direct positives," but as Vignon pointed out, "Such exceptional conditions were not present, since M. Pia's plate is really a negative"[57] (see above Pia's photograph where the black burn marks on the Shroud are white and the white repair patches are black). Second, "although a plate may be generally negative, certain parts of it may not be perfectly so, owing to the effect of colour — yellow, for instance, often comes out black"[58]. But as Vignon pointed out, "The argument is only tenable if parts of the object are many coloured, which is not the case here"[59] (see "Colour #12" of this series that, "The colour of the image of the man on the Shroud is a uniform straw-yellow.")

Confirmed in 1931 by Giuseppe Enrie Despite what we now know was the weakness and indeed fraudulence (see above) of the Chevalier-Thurston arguments against Pia's photographs, it was they who prevailed in scholarly and public opinion[60]. Chevalier was even awarded in 1901 a gold medal of 1,000 francs by the Academie des Inscriptions with a censure against any future attempt to impose upon the credulity of the faithful by a fraudulent misrepresentation[61]! In 1912 Thurston wrote an article against the Shroud for the Catholic Encyclopedia[62]. (which is still there in the online edition) and for the next three decades few Roman Catholics and even fewer Christians of other denominations, believed in the authenticity of the Shroud[63]. Then, after 33 years[64] the Shroud was exhibited in 1931[65] for 21 days[66] from 4 to 24 May[67] in Turin cathedral[68]. The exposition was to mark the wedding on 8 January 1930[69] of the Crown Prince and later King of Italy, Umberto II (1904–83) and Princess Marie Jose of Belgium (1906– 2001)[70]. A Turin professional photographer, Giuseppe Enrie (1886-1961)[71], was commissioned by the Shroud's

[Left (enlarge): Negative of the full-length photograph of the Shroud taken in 1931 by Giuseppe Enrie[72]. As can be seen, it is essentially identical to Secondo Pia's negative photograph above, including black burnt areas white and white repair patches black, thus confirming that Pia was right and his anti-authenticist critics like Chevalier and Thurston were wrong!]

owner, King Victor-Emmanuel III (1869–1947)[73] to take a new definitive[74] set of black-and-white photographs of the Shroud[75]. They were to confirm (or otherwise) the results Pia had obtained over 30 years previously[76] and to improve on them given the technical advances in photography over that time[77]. Enrie was one of the foremost photographers in Italy[78],the editor of Vita Photographica ltaliana and owner of a studio and laboratory in Turin[79]. On the night of 3 May 1931[80], Enrie took twelve photographs of the Shroud[81]: four of the whole Shroud, three of sections of the image, the whole dorsal image, the face and chest, the face two-thirds size; the face full-size and the nail wound in the left wrist enlarged sevenfold[82]. Enrie's camera had large glass photographic plates with filters designed to enhance image details[83]. Princess Clotilde had insisted that there be a glass screen between Pia's camera and the Shroud[84] but there was nothing between the Shroud and Enrie's camera[85]. Enrie's photographs turned out to be of excellent quality[86] and far superior to Pia's[87]. Enrie's photographs [88] and many others taken by visitors to the 1931 exposition, proved that the Shroud image is a photographic negative[89] (compare Pia's full-length negative with Enrie's) and disproved anti-authenticists' accusations of fraud and a hoax against Pia[90]. To prevent any accusation of fraud against Enrie, as had been made against Pia[91], Enrie developed his photographs immediately in a dark-room set up in the sacristy of the cathedral[92]. Also Enrie took and developed his photographs in the presence of many witnesses[93], among whom were Prince Umberto II, Paul Vignon and Secondo Pia aged 76[94]! In addition, Enrie had invited five professional photographers to attend and study his plates to verify his work[95]. They each testified in writing before an invited public notary that none of Enrie's plates had been retouched and all had accurately captured what they could see on the Shroud[96].

Problem for the forgery theory (see previous three: #16, #17 & #18). The virulence of the anti-authenticists' attack on Pia and his photographs is itself evidence that they were a major problem for the forgery theory! The agnostic, yet pro-authenticist art historian Thomas de Wesselow has stated that "The negative photo of the Shroud is Exhibit A in the case for the cloth's authenticity":

"The negative photo of the Shroud is Exhibit A in the case for the cloth's authenticity. It demonstrates that the image possesses a hidden structure, which could hardly have been conceived in the fourteenth century, when the relic is first documented in Europe. Simply glancing at the automatic inversion of the image is enough to dispel the idea that it is a regular work of art. If it is a fake, it would have to be the most ingenious and improbable fake in history, a work of supreme skill and cunning. If it is not a fake, then the chances are that it is connected, as traditionally supposed, with the death and burial of Jesus."[97]
■ First, since photographic negativity was not invented until the early nineteenth century[98], a medieval artist/forger could not have conceived of the Shroud man's image being a photographic negative. The very concept of a photographic negative only came into existence with the discovery of photography in the early nineteenth century[99]. A negative image therefore would have been an unimaginable conception before the invention of photography[100]. Those who maintain that the Shroud is a medieval forgery, must assume that it was made by an artist whose grasp of the negative-positive properties of photography was five centuries in advance of his time[101]!

■ Second, a medieval artist/forger could not have created a photographic negative of the Shroud man. Since the very concept of photographic negativity only came into the range of human knowledge when photography was invented in the early nineteenth century, it is impossible that a medieval artist/forger could have created the Shroud's photographic negative image[102]. A medieval artist/forger creating a photographic negative of the Shroud man would not have been able to see what he was doing, so he could not have included the fine detail that there is on the Shroud[103]. Moreover, a medieval forger creating a photographic negative Shroud image, centuries before the age of photography, would have had no means of checking his work[104]. Modern artists who have tried to depict the Shroud with its negative image have all failed, even though they had a copy of the Shroud's negative photograph before them, their positive copies of the Shroud when photographed were very different from that of the Shroud[105]. They all failed because the Shroud's photographic negative has a realistic perfection that no artist can achieve and which is only found in photographs[106]. Indeed, when in the late 1970s the British artist John Weston, an agnostic, was commissioned to produce, tone by tone, a duplicate Shroud for the television documentary The Silent Witness, he became convinced of the Shroud's genuineness[107]!

■ Third, a medieval artist/forger would not have wanted to create a photographic negative of the Shroud man, Jesus. An artist/forger depicting Jesus' body as it might have appeared on his burial garment, would not have chosen to do so with an artistry and detail that would have not been discovered for another 500 years, until the invention of photography which his age knew nothing about[108]. Even if a medieval artist/forger could have created the Shroud image as a photographic negative, why would he have done so when no one of his time would have been able to appreciate his cleverness[109]?

Resurrection The evidence is overwhelming that the Turin Shroud is authentic[110]! That is, it is the very burial sheet of Jesus Christ, bearing the photographically negative imprint of His dead body as it lay wrapped in a linen shroud in His tomb (Mt 27:59-60; Mk 15:46; Lk 23:53) awaiting His resurrection (Mt 28:6-7; Mk 16:5-7; Lk 24:4-7; Jn 20:5-9). And therefore that photographically negative image is "a literal `snapshot' of the [Jesus'] Resurrection"!:

"Even from the limited available information, a hypothetical glimpse of the power operating at the moment of creation of the Shroud's image may be ventured. In the darkness of the Jerusalem tomb the dead body of Jesus lay, unwashed, covered in blood, on a stone slab. Suddenly, there is a burst of mysterious power from it. In that instant ... its image ... becomes indelibly fused onto the cloth, preserving for posterity a literal `snapshot' of the Resurrection."[111]
That is, the photographically negative image on the Shroud is that of "the body of the Lord Jesus" imprinted on His burial shroud when He "was raised [from the dead] by the glory of the Father'":
"... in the Turin Shroud we have not only the linen cloth in which the body of the Lord Jesus was wrapped, but also a representation of that body portrayed by other than human hands, by some supernatural process which confounds all explanation. ... the radiant incandescence of that almighty act of love and power when the Son of God `was raised by the glory of the Father' [Rom 6:4] has scorched his image and likeness on the Shroud, a sign for our scientific century which demands scientific proof ..."[112].
That the Shroud image is a photographic negative is explained by STURPs John P. Jackson's "Cloth Collapse Theory":
"Jackson believes that today, twenty centuries later, we may have in our possession an image analogous to [a photograph taken by] a camera that recorded, in the darkness of the tomb, something that no human eye had ever seen. What John describes in the tomb [Jn 20:5-7] is that the burial cloths of Jesus were seen lying on the shelf where the body had been placed, but clearly flattened or deflated, without the body that they once contained. For Jackson, this is precisely the end condition of the Shroud after it has fallen through the body it wrapped, according to his hypothesis of image formation."[113].
See also 22Dec11, where "to instantly color the surface of linen that corresponds to a human of average height," would require "a total power of VUV [vacuum ultraviolet] radiation" of "34 thousand billion watts!"

Objections The standard anti-authenticist objection to the Shroud man's image being a photographic negative is that the man's hair (and blood) are not negative because their normal light and dark values are not reversed. For example Steven Schafersman (1998):

"The alleged photographic negative quality of the Shroud image has been championed by Shroud enthusiasts as evidence for authenticity since 1898 when the feature was first discovered. According to these accounts, a photographic negative of the Shroud image reveals a photographic positive, and both the original image and its photographic negative have been repeatedly published in books devoted to the Shroud. However, a number of investigators have documented the fact that the Shroud image is NOT a true photographic negative but only an apparent one - a faux-photographic negative. As with a true negative, light features such as skin are dark on it and light on the positive and shadows are light on it and dark on the positive. Unlike a true photographic negative, however, dark features like the beard, mustache, hair, and blood are dark on it and light on the positive. So unless Jesus was blond or white-haired and his blood was white, the Shroud image cannot be a true photographic negative"[114].
And Joe Nickell (2007):
"In 1898 the shroud was photographed for the first time, and the glass-plate negatives showed a more lifelike image of a man ... Thus began the modern era of shroud inquiry, with proponents asking how a mere medieval forger could have produced a perfect `photographic' negative before the development of photography. In fact, the analogy with photographic images is misleading: the `positive' image shows a figure with white hair and beard, the opposite of what would be expected of a Palestinian Jew in his thirties"[115].
First, as can be seen in the positive and negative photographs of the Shroud face below, Schafersman is simply wrong! The "blood" is not

[Above (enlarge): Comparison of photographs of the Shroud face positive (L)[116] and negative (R)[117], showing that the blood is dark on the positive (as one looks at the Shroud) and light on the negative, therefore proving that the blood is not part of the image and that the negative photograph of the Shroud is a true photographic negative.]

"dark on it" (the negative) "and light on the positive." In fact the blood is light on the negative and dark on the positive and so the Shroud image is indeed "a true photographic negative"! And, like the preacher whose sermon notes said, "argument weak here - shout!", Schafersman cites three features, "the beard, mustache, hair" when they are only one - "hair." (see next). Nickell at least does not cite the blood as a problem for the Shroud image being a photographic negative. But he does cite as two features, "white hair and beard" when again it is only one - "hair." And note that both Schafersman and Nickell don't address the fact that the Shroud body image is in fact a photographic negative!

Fanti explains that "the hair that in the Pia's plate are almost white" as most probably the effect of a "corona discharge":

"Even if the body image is not a true negative of the reproduced body, it globally appears as such, in a first approximation. For example the hair that in the Pia's plate are almost white, then typical of an old man, they were not probably of that color. This result was achieved on the Relic because all the anatomic elements enveloped in the Cloth interacted with the linen fabric in a similar way independently from their own color. The most probable effect that caused that image, as it was previously discussed, was the corona discharge (Fanti, Lattarulo and Scheuermann, 2005): in this context it must be evidenced that the point effect (that yields in correspondence of little curvature radii) which causes a local increase of the electrical discharges intensity, well explains why the hair, geometrically constituted by many cylinders having very little radii, imprinted their image better than many other body parts"[118]
And of course dead bodies don't generate a corona discharge but a resurrected body might have[119]!

Indeed, Shroud researcher, medical doctor Gilbert R. Lavoie points out that there is Biblical evidence that Jesus' hair was white at the instant of His resurrection:

"Dr. Gilbert R. Lavoie ... Another observation he makes is that it is most interesting is that the hair of this man is dark in the negative impression of the Shroud, an indication that the color of the hair in reality was white or light blond. If one keeps in mind the dazzling whiteness spoken of in the Gospels in the narratives about the Transfiguration [Mt 17:1-13; Mk 9:2-13; Lk 9:28-36], could this be the image of the resurrected Jesus, suspended for a moment as He passed through the cloth of the shroud?"[120]
So, far from it being a problem for the Shroud's image being a photographic negative, that the man on the Shroud's hair is dark on the negative of a Shroud photograph, it is further evidence for the Shroud's authenticity!

Continued in the next part #20 of this series.

Notes
1. This post is copyright. Permission is granted to quote from any part of this post (but not the whole post), provided it includes a reference citing my name, its subject heading, its date and a hyperlink back to this post. [return]
2. Morgan, R.H., 1980, "Perpetual Miracle: Secrets of the Holy Shroud of Turin by an Eye Witness," Runciman Press: Manly NSW, Australia, pp.133, 175; Weaver, K.F., 1980, "Science Seeks to Solve...The Mystery of the Shroud," National Geographic, Vol. 157, June, pp.730-753, 743; Murphy, C., 1981, "Shreds of evidence: Science confronts the miraculous-the Shroud of Turin," Harper's, Vol. 263, November, pp.42-65, 45; Tribbe, F., 1988, "Has Science Judged the Shroud to be a Fake?," Shroud News, No. 50, pp.32-39, 37; Yurchey, D., 2002, "Shroud of Turin or Carbon 14," The Shroud of Turin, World-Mysteries.com; Oxley, M., 2010, "The Challenge of the Shroud: History, Science and the Shroud of Turin," AuthorHouse: Milton Keynes UK, p.6; Brennan, P.V., 2011, "The Holiest of Relics or the Hoariest of Hoaxes?," April 22; Longenecker, D., 2015, "The Shroud the Pope and the `Strip of Cloth'," Patheos, June 23; San Martín, I., 2015, "Is the Shroud of Turin real? Some say it doesn't matter," Crux, April 23. [return]
3. Vignon, P., 1902, "The Shroud of Christ," University Books: New York NY, Reprinted, 1970, p.111. [return]
4. Otterbein, A.J., "Introduction," in Stevenson, K.E., ed., 1977, "Proceedings of the 1977 United States Conference of Research on The Shroud of Turin," Holy Shroud Guild: Bronx NY, pp.3-9,4; Wilson, I., 1979, "The Shroud of Turin: The Burial Cloth of Jesus Christ?," [1978], Image Books: New York NY, Revised edition, pp.264-265; Wilson, I., 1998, "The Blood and the Shroud: New Evidence that the World's Most Sacred Relic is Real," Simon & Schuster: New York NY, pp.298-299; Wilson, I., 2010, "The Shroud: The 2000-Year-Old Mystery Solved," Bantam Press: London, pp.306-307. [return]
5. Morgan, 1980, p.120; Stevenson, K.E. & Habermas, G.R., 1981, "Verdict on the Shroud: Evidence for the Death and Resurrection of Jesus Christ," Servant Books: Ann Arbor MI, p.56; Ruffin, C.B., 1999, "The Shroud of Turin: The Most Up-To-Date Analysis of All the Facts Regarding the Church's Controversial Relic," Our Sunday Visitor: Huntington IN, pp.68-69; Fanti, G. & Malfi, P., 2015, "The Shroud of Turin: First Century after Christ!," Pan Stanford: Singapore, p.70. [return]
6. Wilson, 1979, p.26; Wilson, 1998, p.17; Wilson, 2010, p.306. [return]
7. Drews, R., 1984, "In Search of the Shroud of Turin: New Light on Its History and Origins," Rowman & Allanheld: Totowa NJ, p.3; Iannone, J.C., 1998, "The Mystery of the Shroud of Turin: New Scientific Evidence," St Pauls: Staten Island NY, p.5; Ruffin, 1999, p.69; Wilson, 1998, p.17; Wilson, 2010, p.18. [return]
8. Wuenschel, E.A., 1954, "Self-Portrait of Christ: The Holy Shroud of Turin," Holy Shroud Guild: Esopus NY, Third printing, 1961, p.15; Cruz, J.C., 1984, "Relics: The Shroud of Turin, the True Cross, the Blood of Januarius. ..: History, Mysticism, and the Catholic Church," Our Sunday Visitor: Huntington IN, p.49; Wilson, I. & Schwortz, B., 2000, "The Turin Shroud: The Illustrated Evidence," Michael O'Mara Books: London, p.29; Oxley, 2010, p.5; de Wesselow, T., 2012, "The Sign: The Shroud of Turin and the Secret of the Resurrection," Viking: London, p.18; Wilson, 2010, p.306. [return]
9. Wilson, I., 1992, "Recent Publications," British Society for the Turin Shroud Newsletter, No. 30, December 1991/January, 1992, p.12. [return]
10. Walsh, J.E., 1963, "The Shroud," Random House: New York NY, pp.20-22; Wilson, 1979, pp.27, 264; Morgan, 1980, pp.122-123; Wilson, I., 1986, "The Evidence of the Shroud," Guild Publishing: London, p.10; Wilson, I., 1992, p.12; Ruffin, 1999, p.69; Wilson, 2010, p.18; de Wesselow, 2012, p.18. [return]
11. Wilson, 2010, p.18. [return]
12. de Wesselow, 2012, pp.18-19. See also Walsh, 1963, pp.22-25; McNair, P., 1978, "The Shroud and History: Fantasy, Fake or Fact?," in Jennings, P., ed., "Face to Face with the Turin Shroud," Mayhew-McCrimmon: Great Wakering UK, p.26; Wilson, 1979, pp.27, 265; Morgan, 1980, pp.123-124; Stevenson & Habermas, 1981, p.56; Wilson, 1986, p.10; Petrosillo, O. & Marinelli, E., 1996, "The Enigma of the Shroud: A Challenge to Science," Scerri, L.J., transl., Publishers Enterprises Group: Malta, pp.167-168; Wilson, 1998, pp.17-18; Ruffin, 1999, pp.13,69. [return]
13. Fanti & Malfi, 2015, p.71. [return]
14. Van Haelst, R., 1987, "Honouring an Almost Forgotten Shroud Scholar," Shroud News, No. 40, April, pp.8-10,9. [return]
15. O'Rahilly, A. & Gaughan, J.A., ed., 1985, "The Crucified," Kingdom Books: Dublin, p.50; Van Haelst, 1987, p.9; Wilson, 1998, p.298; Wilson, 2010, p.18; Fanti & Malfi, 2015, p.71. [return]
16. O'Rahilly & Gaughan, 1985, p.50; Van Haelst, 1987, p.9; Fanti & Malfi, 2015, p.71. [return]
17. "Holy Face of Jesus," Wikipedia, 28 September 2016. [return]
18. Drews, 1984, p.15. [return]
19. Vignon, 1902, p.35; Walsh, 1963, pp.25-27; Jackson, J.P., Jumper, E.J., Mottern, R.W. & Stevenson, K.E., ed., 1977, "The Three Dimensional Image on Jesus' Burial Cloth," in Stevenson, 1977, pp.74-94, 74; Culliton, B.J., 1978, "The Mystery of the Shroud of Turin Challenges 20th-Century Science," Science, Vol. 201, 21 July, pp.235-239, 236; McNair, 1978, p.27; Wilson, 1979, p.30; Morgan, 1980, pp.63, 124; Weaver, 1980, p.743; Drews, 1984, p.3; Wilson, 1986, p.10; Habermas, G.R., 1987, "Affirmative Statement: Gary R. Habermas," in Habermas, G.R., Flew A.G.N., & Miethe, T.L., ed., "Did Jesus Rise From The Dead?: The Resurrection Debate," Harper & Row: San Francisco CA, p.28; Trenn, T., "The Shroud of Turin: Resetting the Carbon-14 Clock," in van der Meer, J.M., ed., 1996, "Facets of Faith and Science: Vol. 3: The Role of Beliefs in the Natural Sciences," University Press of America: Lanham, MD, p.119; Iannone, 1998, p.5; Whanger, M. & Whanger, A.D., 1998, "The Shroud of Turin: An Adventure of Discovery," Providence House Publishers: Franklin TN, p.9; Wilson, 1998, p.18; Moretto, G., 1999, "The Shroud: A Guide," Neame, A., transl., Paulist Press: Mahwah NJ, p.26; Oxley, 2010, p.ix. [return]
20. Antonacci, M., 2000, "Resurrection of the Shroud: New Scientific, Medical, and Archeological Evidence," M. Evans & Co: New York NY, p.35. [return]
21. Antonacci, 2000, p.35. [return]
22. Iannone, 1998, p.5. [return]
23. Drews, 1984, p.15. [return]
24. Stevenson & Habermas, 1981, p.56. [return]
25. Wilson, 1998, pp.297-298. [return]
26. Stevenson & Habermas, 1981, p.56. [return]
27. Adams, F.O., 1982, "Sindon: A Layman's Guide to the Shroud of Turin," Synergy Books: Tempe AZ, p.54. [return]
28. Walsh, 1963, pp.28-31; Adams, 1982, p.54. [return]
29. Shepard, L., 1970, "New Foreword," Vignon, 1902, p.vi; Drews, 1984, p.3. [return]
30. Antonacci, 2000, p.282. [return]
31. Ibid. [return]
32. Wilson, 1998, p.18. [return]
33. Scavone, D.C., 1989, "The Shroud of Turin: Opposing Viewpoints," Greenhaven Press: San Diego CA, p.20; Wilson, I., 1993, "The II International Scientific Symposium on the Shroud of Turin Rome, 10, 11, 12, June 1993 - Why go to Rome?," British Society for the Turin Shroud Newsletter, No. 33, February 1993, p.3; Whanger, A.D. & M.W., "Revisiting the Eye Images: What are They?," in Fanti, G., ed., 2009, "The Shroud of Turin: Perspectives on a Multifaceted Enigma," Proceedings of the 2008 Columbus Ohio International Conference, August 14-17, 2008, Progetto Libreria: Padua, Italy, p.134. [return]
34. Oxley, 2010, p.195. [return]
35. Rogers, R.N., 2008, "A Chemist's Perspective on the Shroud of Turin," Lulu Press: Raleigh NC, p.17; de Wesselow, 2012, p.100. [return]
36. Stevenson & Habermas, 1981, p.56; de Wesselow, 2012, p.100. [return]
37. Adler, A.D., 2000a, "The Shroud Fabric and the Body Image: Chemical and Physical Characteristics," in Adler, A.D. & Crispino, D., ed., 2002, "The Orphaned Manuscript: A Gathering of Publications on the Shroud of Turin," Effatà Editrice: Cantalupa, Italy, pp.113-127, 115; de Wesselow, 2012, p.100. [return]
38. Stevenson & Habermas, 1981, p.31. [return]
39. Otterbein, 1977, p.4; Adler, 2000a, p.115. [return]
40. Shepard, 1970, p.vii. [return]
41. Shepard, 1970, p.vii; Antonacci, 2000, p.4; de Wesselow, 2012, pp.19-20. [return]
42. Otterbein, 1977, p.4; Antonacci, 2000, p.4; Fanti & Malfi, 2015, p.70. [return]
43. Walsh, 1963, pp.98-101; Otterbein, 1977, p.4; Scavone, 1989, p.22; Antonacci, 2000, p.4; de Wesselow, 2012, p.20. [return]
44. Drews, 1984, p.3. [return]
45. Wilson, 1998, p.18; Fanti & Malfi, 2015, p.71. [return]
46. Wilson, 1998, p.18. [return]
47. Ibid. [return]
48. Wilson, 1998, p.18. [return]
49. Ibid. [return]
50. Walsh, 1963, pp.25-27; Wilson, 1998, p.18. [return]
51. Wilson, 1979, pp.24, 264; Iannone, 1998, p.4; Oxley, 2010, p.5; Wilson, 2010, p.273. [return]
52. Vignon, 1902, pp.110-111; Crispino, D.C., 1986, "A Letter from Secondo Pia," Shroud Spectrum International, No. 18, March, pp.7-11, 7. [return]
53. "Ulysse Chevalier," Wikipedia, 2 November 2016. [return]
54. Crispino, D.C., 1992, "A New Look at Two Incompatible Views," Shroud Spectrum International, No. 41, December, pp.22-28, 22; O'Rahilly & Gaughan, 1985, p.50 [return]
55. Crispino, 1992, p.22 [return]
56. Vignon, 1902, p.112. [return]
57. Vignon, 1902, pp.112-113. [return]
58. Vignon, 1902, p.113. [return]
59. Ibid. [return]
60. McNair, 1978, p.27; Adams, 1982, pp.54-55; Drews, 1984, p5; Wilson & Schwortz, 2000, p.30; Wilson, 2010, p.20. [return]
61. Walsh, 1963, p.57; Adams, 1982, pp.54-55; Wilcox, R.K., 2010, "The Truth About the Shroud of Turin: Solving the Mystery," [1977], Regnery: Washington DC, p.7; de Wesselow, 2012, p.19. [return]
62. Wilcox, 2010, p.121. [return]
63. Scavone, 1989, p.23. [return]
64. Morgan, 1980, p.127; Adams, 1982, p.56; Wilson, 1998, p.18; Fanti & Malfi, 2015, p.71. [return]
65. Wilcox, R.K., 1977, "Shroud," Macmillan: New York NY, p.5; Fanti & Malfi, 2015, p.71. [return]
66. Wilcox, 1977, p.5; McNair, 1978, p.27; Wilson, 1979, p.265; Adams, 1982, p.56; Wilson, 1998, p.18; Wilson & Schwortz, 2000, p.31. [return]
67. Wilson, 1979, p.265; Fanti, G. & Basso, R., 2008, "Turin Shroud: Optical Research in the Past Present and Future," Nova Science Publishers: Hauppauge, NY, p.15; Wilson, 2010, p.307. [return]
68. Wilcox, 1977, p.5; Wilson, 2010, p.307. [return]
69. Moretto, 1999, p.27. [return]
70. Wilson, 1979, p.265; Morgan, 1980, p.127; Petrosillo & Marinelli, 1996, pp.168-169; Moretto, 1999, p.27; Wilson, 2010, pp.20, 307; de Wesselow, 2012, p.21. [return]
71. McNair, 1978, p.27; Wilson, 1979, p.265; Scavone, 1989, p.23; Wilson, 1998, p.18; Wilson, 2010, p.20; de Wesselow, 2012, p.21; Fanti & Malfi, 2015, p.71; Wilson & Schwortz, 2000, p.31. [return]
72. Extract from Latendresse, M., 2010, "Shroud Scope: Enrie Negative Horizontal," (rotated left 90 degrees), Sindonology.org. [return]
73. Otterbein, 1977, p.5; Wilson, 1998, p.18. [return]
74. Wilson, 1979, p.265; Wilson, 2010, pp.20, 307. [return]
75. Otterbein, 1977, p.5; Wilson & Schwortz, 2000, p.31; Wilson, 2010, p.307. [return]
76. Morgan, 1980, p.127; Wilson, 2010, p.20. [return]
77. Otterbein, 1977, p.5; Morgan, 1980, p.127; Adams, 1982, p.56; Wilson, 1998, p.18; Wilson & Schwortz, 2000, p.31; Wilson, 2010, p.20. [return]
78. Bulst, W., 1957, "The Shroud of Turin," McKenna, S. & Galvin, J.J., transl., Bruce Publishing Co: Milwaukee WI, p.25; Petrosillo & Marinelli, 1996, p.169; Iannone, 1998, p.5. [return]
79. Wilcox, 1977, p.5; Adams, 1982, p.56. [return]
80. Wilcox, 1977, p.5; Fanti & Basso, 2008, p.15. [return]
81. McNair, 1978, p.27; Morgan, 1980, p.127; Fanti & Basso, 2008, p.15; Wilson, 2010, p.20. [return]
82. Morgan, 1980, p.127; Petrosillo & Marinelli, 1996, p.169; Iannone, 1998, p.5; Wilson, 1998, p.18; Wilson & Schwortz, 2000, p.31; Wilson, 2010, p.20. [return]
83. Whanger & Whanger, 1998, p.9; Danin, A., Whanger, A.D., Baruch, U. & Whanger, M., 1999, "Flora of the Shroud of Turin," Missouri Botanical Garden Press: St. Louis MO, p.11; Fanti & Basso, 2008, p.15; Whanger & Whanger, 2009, p.134. [return]
84. Morgan, 1980, p.123; Wilson, 1998, p.298. [return]
85. McNair, 1978, p.27; Adams, 1982, p.56; Wilson, 1998, p.18; Wilson & Schwortz, 2000, p.31. [return]
86. Bulst, 1957, p.25; McNair, 1978, p.27; Morgan, 1980, p.127; Whanger & Whanger, 1998, p.9. [return]
87. Otterbein, 1977, p.5. [return]
88. Petrosillo & Marinelli, 1996, p.169; de Wesselow, 2012, p.21. [return]
89. Bulst, 1957, p.25; Wilson, 1998, p.18; Antonacci, 2000, p.47; Wilson & Schwortz, 2000, p.31; Wilson, 2010, p.21. [return]
90. Adams, 1982, p.57; Antonacci, 2000, p.47; Wilson, 2010, p.21. [return]
91. Adams, 1982, p.56; Petrosillo & Marinelli, 1996, p.169. [return]
92. Petrosillo & Marinelli, 1996, p.169. [return]
93. Bulst, 1957, p.25; Morgan, 1980, p.128; Petrosillo & Marinelli, 1996, p.169. [return]
94. Morgan, 1980, p.127; Adams, 1982, pp.56-57; Wilson & Schwortz, 2000, p.31; Wilson, 2010, p.20. [return]
95. Bulst, 1957, p.25; Adams, 1982, p.56. [return]
96. Bulst, 1957, p.25; Adams, 1982, p.56, Petrosillo & Marinelli, 1996, p.169; Wilson, 2010, p.21. [return]
97. de Wesselow, 2012, p.100. [return]
98. "History of photography: Development of chemical photography," Wikipedia, 9 December 2016. [return]
99. Bulst, 1957, p.33; Morgan, 1980, p.64; Stevenson & Habermas, 1981, pp.31, 57; Antonacci, 2000, pp.35-36. [return]
100. Barbet, P., 1953, "A Doctor at Calvary," [1950], Earl of Wicklow, transl., Image Books: Garden City NY, Reprinted, 1963, p.30. [return]
101. Cahill, T., 1999, "Desire of the Everlasting Hills: The World before and after Jesus," Nan A. Talese/Doubleday: New York NY, p.291. [return]
102. Morgan, 1980, pp.64-65. [return]
103. Brent, P. & Rolfe, D., 1978, "The Silent Witness: The Mysteries of the Turin Shroud Revealed," Futura Publications: London, p.36. [return]
104. Wilson, 1986, pp.10-11, 13. [return]
105. Barbet, 1953, p.30; Wilson, 1986, p.13. [return]
106. Barbet, 1953, p.30. [return]
107. Wilson, 1986, p.13; Wilson & Schwortz, 2000, p.121. [return]
108. Stevenson & Habermas, 1981, p.57. [return]
109. Wilson, 1986, pp.10-11, 13; de Wesselow, 2012, p.136. [return]
110. Barnes, A.S., 1934, "The Holy Shroud of Turin," Burns Oates & Washbourne: London, p.14; Morgan, 1980, pp.116-117, 141; Adams, 1982, p.86; Stevenson, K.E. & Habermas, G.R., 1990, "The Shroud and the Controversy," Thomas Nelson: Nashville TN, p.60; Case, T.W., 1996, "The Shroud of Turin and the C-14 Dating Fiasco," White Horse Press: Cincinnati OH, p.27; Antonacci, 2000, p.6. [return]
111. Wilson, 1979, p.251; Wilson, 1998, p.234. [return]
112. McNair, 1978, p.39. [return]
113. Bennett, J., 2001, "Sacred Blood, Sacred Image: The Sudarium of Oviedo: New Evidence for the Authenticity of the Shroud of Turin," Ignatius Press: San Francisco CA, pp.167-168. [return]
114. Schafersman, S.D., 1998, "Unraveling the Shroud of Turin," Approfondimento Sindone, Vol. 2. Footnote omitted. [return]
115. Nickell, J., 2007, "Relics of the Christ," The University Press of Kentucky: Lexington KY, p.140. [return]
116. Extract from Latendresse, M., 2010, "Shroud Scope: Durante 2002 Vertical," Sindonology.org. [return]
117. Extract from Latendresse, M., 2010, "Shroud Scope: Enrie Negative Vertical," Sindonology.org. [return]
118. Fanti & Basso, 2008, p.14. [return]
119. Stevenson & Habermas, 1990, pp.40-41. [return]
120. Bennett, 2001, p.168. [return]

Posted: 22 December 2016. Updated: 5 March 2021.

Wednesday, December 7, 2016

Chronology of the Turin Shroud: Sixth century

Chronology of the Turin Shroud: AD 30 to the present
SIXTH CENTURY
© Stephen E. Jones
[1]

This is part #6, "Sixth century," of my "Chronology of the Turin Shroud: AD 30 - present" series. See part #1, "First century" and index, for more information about this series.

[Index #1] [Previous: 5th century #5] [Next: 7th century #7]


6th century (501-600)

[Above (enlarge): Face of the "Christ Enthroned" mosaic [c.526] in the Sant'Apollinare Nuovo church, Ravenna, Italy[2] (see full mosaic below) compared to the Vignon markings[3] (see 11Feb12). According to Maher, this "early (sixth-century) ... mosaic of Christ enthroned" has "eight Vignon markings"[4], which is proof beyond reasonable doubt that it was based on the Shroud, over 700 years before its earliest 1260 radiocarbon dating[5]! And since this is a mosaic, created in situ, not a portable painting, it is evidence that the Shroud ("four-doubled" = tetradiplon as the Mandylion), was in Ravenna in the early sixth century! See below that Ravenna was the capital city of the Western Roman Empire from 402-476, after which it was the capital city of the Ostrogoth Kingdom until, very significantly, 540. [See "540a" below].]

525 Edessa suffered a major flood of its river, the Daisan ("the Leaper"), killing one-third of the city's population (about 30,000) and destroying buildings, including the cathedral, and much of the city's wall[6]. The city, its wall, and a new Hagia Sophia ("Holy Wisdom") cathedral, were then rebuilt by the Byzantine Emperor Justin I (r.518 to 527), although the actual work was carried out by his nephew and future Emperor, Justinian I (r.527-565)[7]. According to the 945 `Official History of the Image of Edessa' [see "945c"] the Mandylion/Shroud, had been hidden in the city wall above Edessa's public gate, early in the reign of Abgar V's pagan grandson [Ma'nu VI (r.57–71)], then been completely forgotten, and was not rediscovered until the 544 [see "544"below] siege of Edessa by the Persian King Khosrow I (r. 531-579), aka. Chosroes I, which was in 544[8].

[Right (enlarge)[9]: A 17th-century icon in the Verkhospassky Cathedral, Moscow, depicting the discovery of the Mandylion in the sixth century, which had (supposedly) been hidden in a niche above one of the city's gates[10]

However this story of the Mandylion/Shroud having been hidden in Edessa's wall, completely forgotten, for almost 500 years, contains multiple implausibilities [see "60"]. Likewise Ian Wilson's theory, based on that `Official History' story, that the Mandylion/Shroud was discovered in, or soon after 525, during the rebuilding of Edessa's flood damaged wall[11], suffers from the same multiple implausibilities and it does not even have the support of the `Official History' that the Mandylion/ Shroud was discovered during the Persian siege of Edessa.

526a Completion of mosaic, "Christ enthroned with four angels," in

[Above (enlarge): "The enthroned Christus with four vanguard angels."[12]. Art historian Heinrich Pfeiffer (1939-) observed:

"The Christological Cycle of Mosaics in St. Apollinare Nuovo ... The mosaics of the last register of the central nave, all from the time of King Theodoric in the second decade of the VIth c., represent the most complete Christological cycle known in paleochristian art"[13] .]
the Basilica of Sant'Apollinare Nuovo in Ravenna, Italy. Faced with the threat to Rome by the Germanic Visigoths (Western Goths) under the leadership of Alaric I (c.370–410), Roman Emperor Honorius (384–423) relocated the capital of the Western Roman Empire to Ravenna in 402. The sack of Rome by the Visigoths led by Alaric did occur in 410, and Ravenna remained the capital city of the Western Roman Empire from 402 until its final collapse in 476, when the Ostrogoth (Eastern Goths) king Theoderic the Great (493-526), an Arian, executed the Roman Flavius Odoacer (433-493), the first King of Italy (476–493) at Ravenna. Theoderic thereby became King of Italy (493–526) and based his Ostrogothic Kingdom at Ravenna. Ravenna remained the capital of the Kingdom of the Ostrogoths until the Ostrogoth king Vitiges (536-540) died in 540 [see "540a" below] in Constantinople under captivity to the Byzantine Emperor Justinian I (c.482–565). Ravenna then became part of the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire until 751 when it was conquered by the Lombard king Aistulf (r.749-756).

My Ravenna Theory that the Image of Edessa/Shroud was at Ravenna in 526 and was taken to Edessa in c.540 The Arians believed that Jesus Christ, as the Son of God, had been created in time by God the Father, and so was not eternal[14]. In 325 Arianism was rejected as heretical by the Council of Nicaea[15]. However, the Syrian city of Antioch, which was an important centre of early Christianity (Acts 11:19-26), to where the Shroud had likely been taken in Apostolic times[16], had become predominantly Arian[17]. In 357 the Arians gained control of Antioch cathedral, which held the city's Passion relics, and so the Shroud may then have (and it is my theory that it did) come under the control of Antioch's Arian faction[18]. Evidence of that is in 362, when the Roman Emperor Julian the Apostate (r.361-363) ordered the closure of Antioch's cathedral and demanded to know the whereabouts of its relics, the Arian cathedral treasurer Theodoretus died under torture rather than reveal that secret[19]. In 380 the Emperor Theodosius I (347–395), established Nicaean orthodoxy as the official religion of the Roman Empire, so the Arians were expelled from Antioch and custody of its cathedral was returned to the Orthodox[20]. Emperor Theodosius also fought to expel the Arian Goths who had settled inside the Roman Empire between 376–382. It is my theory that the Antioch Arians did obtain possession of the Mandylion/Shroud in 357 and took it with them when they fled Antioch in 380. And that they sought refuge from their common enemy, Theodosius I, with their fellow Arians, the Ostrogoths. And so the Shroud came to be in the Ostrogoth Kingdom at Ravenna, as evidenced by the "Christ enthroned" mosaic above completed in situ by 526, with its 8 of the 15 Vignon markings. Then in, or before, 540 [see "540a" below], when the Ostrogoth kingdom was about to end and Ravenna was about to become part of the Byzantine Empire, the Mandylion/Shroud was taken from Ravenna to Arian-friendly Edessa[21]. As far as I am aware, no one had previously proposed that the Mandylion/Shroud was present in Ravenna, Italy, in 526 and then was taken to Edessa in c.540 [see "540a" below]. But this seems more plausible than Wilson's theory that the Mandylion/Shroud had been hidden, and then completely forgotten, in Edessa's wall from c.60-525 [see 525 above]; and that part of Jack Markwardt's theory (in italics), that "the Shroud was taken, in apostolic times, to the Syrian city of Antioch, concealed and lost in 362, rediscovered in ca. 530, and conveyed to Edessa when Antioch was destroyed in 540."[22] [see below]

526b Antioch was severely damaged by a major earthquake, followed by a fire, which killed 250,000. Most of Antioch's buildings and walls were destroyed. Then a major aftershock earthquake in 528 did further damage[23]. This unrepaired damage to Antioch's walls was a major factor in Khosrow I's sacking and burning of Antioch in 540[24][see "540b" below].

540a In 535 Byzantine Emperor Justinian I (c.482–565) had commissioned his General Flavius Belisarius (c.505–565) to attack the Ostrogoth Kingdom in Italy, as part of Justinian's strategy to recover the territory of the Western Roman Empire that had been lost in the previous century [See "476"]. Belisarius captured Ravenna in early 540 and took the Ostrogoth king Vitiges captive to Constantinople where he died that same year. It is my theory (see above) that immediately before the 540 Byzantine capture of Ravenna, the Mandylion/Shroud was taken by Ravenna's Arians to Arian-friendly Edessa.

540b Persian king Khosrow I (501–579) (aka Chosroes I) in late 540 sacked and burned Antioch. According to Markwardt's theory the Mandylion/Shroud was taken to Edessa shortly before Antioch's destruction in 540[25]. However, Markwardt produces no hard evidence for this, and he himself states that the Arians controlled Antioch cathedral's relic collection (which he agrees would have included the Mandylion/ Shroud) when they were expelled from Antioch in 380[26]. Although Markwardt claims without evidence and implausibly that the Mandylion/Shroud had been concealed so well by Theodoretus the Arian cathedral treasurer, who died under torture rather than reveal its whereabouts (see above), that the Mandylion/Shroud was lost within Antioch cathedral for ~178 years from 362 to 540[27]) But the Arians would surely have found Theodoretus' hiding place of the Mandylion/Shroud within Antioch cathedral (that is if they did not know it) in the ~18 years between 362 and 380, and would have taken the Mandylion/Shroud with them in 380, as my theory proposes. And the 526 "Christ Enthroned" mosaic in Arian Ravenna (above) is evidence that the Antioch Arians had taken the Mandylion/Shroud to Ravenna, when according to Markwardt's theory it was still lost within Antioch cathedral[28]!

544 Persian king Khosrow I lays siege to Edessa. It is a fact of history that in 544 Persian King Khosrow I (aka Chosroes I) besieged Edessa but the city resisted the siege and the Persians were "forced to retreat from Edessa":

"Khosrow turned south towards Edessa and besieged the city. Edessa was now a much more important city than Antioch was, but the garrison which occupied the city was able to resist the siege. The Persians were forced to retreat from Edessa ..."[29]
Historian Evagrius Scholasticus (c.536-594), recorded in c.593 [see below "c. 593"] in his Ecclesiastical History that the Persians built a huge mound of timber higher than Edessa's wall, that was to be moved next to the wall from which his army could attack the city[30]. The Edessans countered by tunneling under the wall with the aim of setting the mound on fire from below before it could be moved forward to the wall[31]. Evagrius described the crucial role of "the divinely made image not made by the hands of man" (the Mandylion/Shroud) in the defense of the city:
"The mine was completed; but they [the Edessans] failed in attempting to fire the wood, because the fire, having no exit whence it could obtain a supply of air, was unable to take hold of it. In this state of utter perplexity they brought out the divinely made image not made by the hands of man, which Christ our God sent to King Abgar when he desired to see him. Accordingly, having introduced this sacred likeness into the mine and washed it over with water, they sprinkled some upon the timber ... the timber immediately caught the flame, and being in an instant reduced to cinders, communicated with that above, and the fire spread in all directions"[32].
Evagrius' "not made by the hands of man" is the Greek word acheiropoietos, lit. a = "not" + cheiro = "hands" + poietos = "made" (Mk 14:58; 2Cor 5:1; Col 2:11)[33], which is the first known application of that word to the Mandylion/Shroud[34] and is the first historical evidence that the Mandylion/Shroud was in Edessa by 544[35]. Evagrius' account says that the "divinely made image not made by the hands of man," had been "sent to King Abgar" by Christ, but this is false (although Evagrius may have believed it to be true), since not only is the original Abgar V story a "pious fraud," it said nothing about an image of Jesus on a cloth[see "50"]. [But see 08Jan19]. According to the 945 `Official History,' it was during the Persian siege of 544 that Edessa's bishop Eulalius was led in a vision to find where "the divinely created image of Christ ... lay hidden in the place above the city gates"[36]. However that is part of the Abgar V pious fraud and is self-evidently highly implausible[see "60"]. Moreover, there is no bishop Eulalius known in the actual history of Edessa[37]. And if a bishop of Edessa had discovered "the divinely made image not made by the hands of man" hidden above Edessa's gate during the Persian siege of 544, Evagrius would surely have mentioned it[38]. A Syriac "Edessan Chronicle," written after 540 and just before the 544 siege mentions the 525 Edessa flood in detail, but says nothing about the rediscovery of an Image, which is strong evidence against Wilson's theory that the Mandylion/Shroud was rediscovered in the aftermath of the flood of 525[39]. So since Evagrius introduces the Image as already known to be at Edessa in 544[40], but with no viable explanation how it came to be there, the most likely (if not the only) explanation is that it had arrived in Edessa from elsewhere, shortly before 544, as my theory proposes. Secular historian Procopius of Caesarea (c.500–c.554) also wrote about Edessa's repulse of the 544 Persian siege, by digging a tunnel underneath the Persian siege tower, filling the tunnel with inflammable material and setting fire to it, which in turn consumed the tower[40a], but Procopius did not mention anything about an Image[41]. However, there are a number of important events in Edessa's history which Procopius does not mention, so he may simply have not known of the role of the Image in the siege[42]. Also, Procopius was writing secular history[43], and he himself was a skeptic who was not interested in recording such things[44].

549 Completion of a mosaic in the apse of the Basilica of Sant' Apollinare in Classe, Ravenna, featuring a huge jeweled cross, at the centre of which is the bearded head of Christ within a circle[45]. The

[Above (enlarge): Extract of the head of Christ at the centre of the large jeweled cross in the apse of the Basilica of Sant'Apollinare in Classe, Ravenna[46].]

disembodied head of Christ within a circle conforms to the way the head of Jesus would have appeared within the nimbus on the Mandylion[47]. This is further evidence that the Mandylion/Shroud had been in Ravenna up to 540.

c. 550 Christ Pantocrator, St Catherine's monastery, Sinai. This encaustic (hot coloured wax) on wood[48] (a technique which died out and became lost in the eight century)[49] icon of Christ Pantocrator

[Above (enlarge): The Vignon markings on the face of the Shroud of Turin[50] compared with that of the icon of Christ Pantocrator, Saint Catherine's Monastery, Mount Sinai. By my count there are at least eleven of the fifteen Vignon markings on this mid-sixth century icon which are also on the face of the Shroud[16Feb12].]

("ruler of all")[51] at the isolated Saint Catherine's Monastery, Mount Sinai, and so escaped the iconoclasm (Gk. eikon = "image" + klastes = "breaker")[52] of of the eighth through ninth centuries [see "723" and "842"]. Dated c. 550[53], this icon was a gift from the Byzantine Emperor Justinian I (c.482–565), who built the monastery between 548 and 565[54]. This is the earliest surviving painted icon of Christ[55]. It is nearly perfectly congruent to the Shroud-face, for example the high right eyebrow, the hollow right cheek, and the garment neckline[56]. So marked are these oddities, that the late Princeton University art historian, Professor Kurt Weitzmann (1904-1993), while making no connection with the Shroud, remarked of this icon that:

"... the pupils of the eyes are not at the same level; the eyebrow over Christ's left eye is arched higher than over his right ... one side of the mustache droops at a slightly different angle from the other, while the beard is combed in the opposite direction ... Many of these subtleties remain attached to this particular type of Christ image and can be seen in later copies ..."[57]
Using his polarized image overlay technique, Dr Alan Whanger found over 200 points of congruence between this icon and the Shroud[58]. Even creases and wrinkles on the Shroud cloth have been rendered by the artist[59]. Flower images in the halo around the head (nimbus) of this icon are found at the same locations on the Shroud [see 06Apr13][60]. The artist has even rendered the xray images of the Shroud man's teeth [see 10Dec15 and "X-rays #22"] as chapped lips![61] and see ["X-rays #23"]. This means that this icon must have been copied directly from the Mandylion/Shroud[62] in the mid-sixth century and so, once again, refutes the radiocarbon dating's 14th-century date of the Shroud[63].

c.560 Codex Purpureus Rossanensis. "The Rossano Gospels ... at the cathedral of Rossano in Italy, is a 6th-century illuminated manuscript

[Above (enlarge): Extract from "Miniature of the Last Supper from the Rossano Gospels"[64].]

Gospel Book written following the reconquest of the Italian peninsula by the Byzantine Empire [in 540 - See "540a" above]. Also known as Codex purpureus Rossanensis due to the reddish (purpureus in Latin) appearance of its pages, the codex is one of the oldest surviving illuminated manuscripts of the New Testament"[65]. CIELT's (Centre International d'Études sur le Linceul de Turin) Andre Van Cauwenberghe (-2009) pointed out of this sixth century manuscript that "Christ represented possesses all the noted [Vignon markings] features":

"The ... artists, apparently had a model ... showing the characteristics which we notice so positively on observing the Face of Christ on the Shroud: - A mass of hair surrounding the face - A nose, long and thin, which the artists of the era, on seeing it in dark shades, have translated naturally to white - A thin mouth surmounted by something they judged to be a moustache - A forked beard - A lock of hair. It is important to note that only Christ is portrayed in this manner. The oldest representation and the most striking, because of the quite particular character of the portrait of Christ, very similar to the Shroud, is the `Apostelcommunion', the `Communion of the Apostles' of the 6th century, originating in Constantinople (Codex Rossanensis). The twelve apostles are completely different to Christ. But the Christ represented possesses all the noted [Vignon markings] features"[66]
569 A Syriac hymn likened the marble of Edessa's new cathedral to "the image not the work of human hands."[67]. Because it is in Syriac "not the work of human hands" is not the Greek word acheiropoietos, but as Guscin points out:
"... any reference to an image not made by human hands in the city of Edessa would immediately have brought to mind the image of Christ, and the author of the poem must have been aware of this"[68].

c. 570 First mention of the continued existence of "the face cloth [soudarion] that had been on Jesus' head" (Jn 20:7), i.e. the Sudarium of Oviedo, by the chronicler of the pilgrimage of the anonymous pilgrim of Piacenza (wrongly called St Antoninus Martyr), in a cave convent on the banks of the Jordan: "in the same place is said to be the sudarium, which was over the head of Jesus"[69].

c. 575 Homs vase. This sixth century Byzantine style[70] silver vase from Homs (ancient Emesa), Syria[71] has a medallion face of Jesus[72] which bears a strong resemblance to the face on the Shroud[73] in

[Left: Face of the Shroudman on the sixth century Homs vase[74]

many of the `Vignon' and other respects[75]. These similarities include, "the narrowness of the face; the distortions carved into the right side of the face, where the Shroud face has two sizable bruises, the swollen cheek and the half-moon bruise below; and the `light-bulb' shape of the head on its outer edge"[76].

c. 593 Historian Evagrius Scholasticus (c.536-594) recorded in his Ecclesiastical History that the 544 Persian siege of Edessa was repulsed by a "divinely wrought likeness," that is, acheiropoietos, or "not made by hands"[77] [see "544" above.]

c. 600 Mosaic depiction of the Image of Edessa[78] (below), i.e. the

[Above (enlarge[79]): Shroud-like mosaic depiction of the Image of Edessa, dated sixth-seventh century, from a house near Sanliurfa (ancient Edessa). See 13Mar16 that this 6th-7th century Image of Edessa mosaic has at least 9 Vignon markings, and 1 non-Vignon marking, found on the Shroud face!]

Shroud "four-doubled' (tetradiplon)[80], hacked out of a wall of a house in Bireçik, a town on the banks of the Euphrates River about 73 km (45 miles) west of Sanliurfa (ancient Edessa)[81]. Shroud scholars Ian Wilson and Mark Guscin were in Sanliurfa museum in 2008 when they were shown the above 6 by 8 inch (~15 x ~20 cms) mosaic depiction of the Image of Edessa[82]. Guscin and Wilson dated the mosaic between the sixth and seventh centuries[83], which meant it was not only the earliest-known depiction of the Image of Edessa, it came from near the ancient city after which the Image of Edessa was named[84]!

Continued in the next part #7 of this series.

Notes
1. This post is copyright. Permission is granted to quote from any part of this post (but not the whole post), provided it includes a reference citing my name, its subject heading, its date, and a hyperlink back to this page. [return]
2. Extract from "File:Christus Ravenna Mosaic.jpg," Wikimedia Commons, 31 October 2016. [return]
3. Wilson, I., 1978, "The Turin Shroud," Book Club Associates: London, p.82E. [return]
4. Maher, R.W., 1986, "Science, History, and the Shroud of Turin," Vantage Press: New York NY, p.77. [return]
5. Wilson, I., 1991, "Holy Faces, Secret Places: The Quest for Jesus' True Likeness," Doubleday: London, p.3; Wilson, I., 1998, "The Blood and the Shroud: New Evidence that the World's Most Sacred Relic is Real," Simon & Schuster: New York NY, pp.125, 140-141; Wilson, I., 2010, "The Shroud: The 2000-Year-Old Mystery Solved," Bantam Press: London, p.108. [return]
6. Wilson, I., 1979, "The Shroud of Turin: The Burial Cloth of Jesus?," [1978], Image Books: New York NY, Revised edition, p.138; Wilson, 1998, pp.162, 266; Antonacci, M., 2000, "Resurrection of the Shroud: New Scientific, Medical, and Archeological Evidence," M. Evans & Co: New York NY, p.136; Guerrera, V., 2001, "The Shroud of Turin: A Case for Authenticity," TAN: Rockford IL, p.3; Guscin, M., 2009, "The Image of Edessa," Brill: Leiden, Netherlands & Boston MA, p.169; Wilson, 2010, pp.132, 142, 298. [return]
7. Wilson, 1979, p.139; Wilson, I., 2010, "The Shroud: The 2000-Year-Old Mystery Solved," Bantam Press: London, pp.142, 298. [return]
8. Wilson, 1979, pp.280-281; Wilson, 1998, p.158. [return]
9. Polverari, S., 2014, "From the Mandylion to the Shroud," Shroud of Turin: The Controversial Intersection of Faith and Science Conference, October 9-12, 2014, St. Louis, Missouri, pp.1-9, 4. [return]
10. Wilson, I. & Schwortz, B., 2000, "The Turin Shroud: The Illustrated Evidence," Michael O'Mara Books: London, p.107. [return]
11. Wilson, 1979, p.254; Stevenson, K.E. & Habermas, G.R., 1981, "Verdict on the Shroud: Evidence for the Death and Resurrection of Jesus Christ," Servant Books: Ann Arbor MI, p.18; Stevenson, K.E. & Habermas, G.R., 1990, "The Shroud and the Controversy," Thomas Nelson Publishers: Nashville TN, p.76; Antonacci, 2000, p.136; Wilson, 2010, pp.143, 298. [return]
12. "Basilica of Sant'Apollinare Nuovo [Ravenna]," Wikipedia, 22 November 2016. [return]
13. Pfeiffer, H., 1983, "The Shroud of Turin and the Face of Christ in Paleochristian, Byzantine and Western Medieval Art: Part I," Shroud Spectrum International, Issue #9, December, pp.7-20, 17. [return]
14. Guscin, M., 1999, "Recent Historical Investigations on the Sudarium of Oviedo," in Walsh, B.J., ed., 2000, "Proceedings of the 1999 Shroud of Turin International Research Conference, Richmond, Virginia," Magisterium Press: Glen Allen VA, pp.122-141, 126; Markwardt, J.J., 1999, "Antioch and the Shroud," in Walsh, 2000, pp.94-108, 96-97. [return]
15. Petrosillo, O. & Marinelli, E., 1996, "The Enigma of the Shroud: A Challenge to Science," Scerri, L.J., transl., Publishers Enterprises Group: Malta, p.189. [return]
16. Markwardt, 1999, pp.94-95; Markwardt, J.J., 2008, "Ancient Edessa and the Shroud: History Concealed by the Discipline of the Secret," in Fanti, G., ed., "The Shroud of Turin: Perspectives on a Multifaceted Enigma," Proceedings of the 2008 Columbus Ohio International Conference, August 14-17, 2008, Progetto Libreria: Padua, Italy, pp.382-407, 382; Oxley, M., 2010, "The Challenge of the Shroud: History, Science and the Shroud of Turin," AuthorHouse: Milton Keynes UK, p.17. [return]
17. Oxley, 2010, p.20. [return]
18. Ibid. [return]
19. Markwardt, 1999, p.100; Oxley, 2010, p.22. [return]
20. Markwardt, 1999, p.100; Oxley, 2010, p.22. [return]
21. "Ephrem the Syrian: Life," Wikipedia, 21 October 2016. [return]
22. Markwardt, 2008, p.382. Footnotes omitted. [return]
23. "526 Antioch earthquake," Wikipedia, 26 November 2016. [return]
24. "Khosrow I: War with the Byzantine Empire, 540–562," Wikipedia, 21 November 2016. [return]
25. Markwardt, 1999, p.101; Markwardt, 2008, p.382. [return]
26. Markwardt, 1999, p.100. [return]
27. Markwardt, 1999, p.101; Markwardt, 2008, p.382. [return]
28. Markwardt, 1999, pp.99-101; Markwardt, 2008, p.382. [return]
29. "Khosrow I: War with the Byzantine Empire, 540–562," Wikipedia, 21 November 2016. [return]
30. Antonacci, 2000, p.137. [return]
31. Ibid. [return]
32. Wilson, 1979, p.137; Antonacci, 2000, p.137. [return]
33. Abbott-Smith, G., 1937, "A Manual Greek Lexicon of the New Testament," [1921], T. & T. Clark: Edinburgh, Third edition, Reprinted, 1956, p.72; Bauer, W., Arndt, W.F., Gingrich, F.W. & Danker, F.W., 1979, "A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature," University of Chicago Press: Chicago IL, Second edition, p.128; Thayer, J.H., 1901, "A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament," T & T. Clark: Edinburgh, Fourth edition, Reprinted, 1961, p.90; Zodhiates, S., 1992, "The Complete Word Study Dictionary: New Testament," AMG Publishers: Chattanooga TN, Third printing, 1994, p.305. [return]
34. Wilson, 1979, p.140; Guerrera, V., 2001, "The Shroud of Turin: A Case for Authenticity," TAN: Rockford IL, p.4. [return]
35. Guerrera, 2001, p.4; Oxley, 2010, p.22. [return]
36. Wilson, 1979, p.282; Drews, R., 1984, "In Search of the Shroud of Turin: New Light on Its History and Origins," Rowman & Littlefield: Lanham MD, pp.57-58. [return]
37. Guscin, 2009, p.77. [return]
38. Wilson, 1979, p.138; Drews, 1984, p.60. [return]
39. Drews, 1984, pp.60-61. [return]
40. Drews, 1984, p.60. [return]
40a. Guscin, 2009, p.170. [return]
41. Scavone, D.C., 1991, "The History of the Turin Shroud to the 14th C.," in Berard, A., ed., 1991, "History, Science, Theology and the Shroud," Symposium Proceedings, St. Louis Missouri, June 22-23, The Man in the Shroud Committee of Amarillo, Texas: Amarillo TX, 1991, pp.171-204, 184; Scavone, D.C., 1989a, "The Shroud of Turin: Opposing Viewpoints," Greenhaven Press: San Diego CA, p.81; Wilson, 1998, p.161. [return]
42. Scavone, D.C., 2002, "Joseph of Arimathea, The Holy Grail & the Edessa Icon," British Society for the Turin Shroud Newsletter, No. 56, December. [return]
43. Wilson, 1998, p.161. [return]
44. Drews, 1984, p.60. [return]
45. Wilson, 1979, pp.141-142. [return]
46. "Basilica of Sant'Apollinare in Classe," Ravenna Tourism and Culture, 2016. [return]
47. Wilson, 1979, pp.141-142. [return]
48. Scavone, 1991, pp.186-187. [return]
49. Wilson, 1998, p.159; Wilson, 2010, p.135. [return]
50. Wilson, 1978, p.82E. [return]
51. Ruffin, C.B., 1999, "The Shroud of Turin: The Most Up-To-Date Analysis of All the Facts Regarding the Church's Controversial Relic," Our Sunday Visitor: Huntington IN, p.150; Greek pantokrator, from pan = "all" + kratos = "power," "rule," hence "almighty," "ruler of all". 2Cor 6:18; Rev 1:8; 4:8; 11:17; 15:3; 16:7,14; 19:6,15; 21:22. Abbott-Smith, 1937, p.336; Bauer, et al., 1979, pp.608-6098; Thayer, 1901, p.476; Zodhiates, 1992, pp.1093-1094. [return]
52. Scavone, 1991, p.186. [return]
53. Ibid; Whanger, A.D. & Whanger, M.W., "A Quantitative Optical Technique for Analyzing and Authenticating the Images on the Shroud of Turin," in Berard, 1991, pp.303-324, 306. [return]
54. Whanger & Whanger, 1991, p.306. [return]
55. Scavone, 1991, p.186. [return]
56. Ibid. [return]
57. Weitzmann, K., 1976, "The Monastery of St. Catherine at Mount Sinai: The Icons," Princeton University Press, p.15. In Wilson, I., 1986, "The Evidence of the Shroud," Guild Publishing: London, p.107; Ruffin, 1999, pp.110-111. [return]
58. Whanger & Whanger, 1991, 307. [return]
59. Scavone, 1991, p.186. [return]
60. Whanger & Whanger, 1991, pp.81,83; Guerrera, 2001, p.150. [return]
61. Whanger & Whanger, 1991, p.117. [return]
62. Scavone, D., 1989b, "The Shroud of Turin in Constantinople: The Documentary Evidence," in Sutton, R.F., Jr., 1989, "Daidalikon: Studies in Memory of Raymond V Schoder," Bolchazy Carducci Publishers: Wauconda IL, p.311-329, p.311; Scavone, 1991, p.186. [return]
63. Scavone, 1991, p.186. [return]
64. "File:RossanoGospelsLastSupper.jpg," (cropped), Wikimedia Commons, 12 December 2014. [return]
65. "Rossano Gospels," Wikipedia, 4 November 2016. [return]
66. Van Cauwenberghe, A., 1990, "A Tentative Account of Comparative Iconography," translated by Victoria Harper, First published in La Lettre Mensuelle du CIELT, Paris, October 1990. In Shroud News, No 63, February 1991, pp.12-15, 12-13. [return]
67. Wilson, 1979, pp.280-281; Wilson, 1998, pp.158, 266; Guscin, 2009, p.169. [return]
68. Guscin, 2009, pp.169-170. [return]
69. Green, M., 1969, "Enshrouded in Silence: In search of the First Millennium of the Holy Shroud," Ampleforth Journal, Vol. 74, No. 3, Autumn, pp.319-345; Wilson, 1979, p.93; Scavone, 1989a, p.76; Bennett, J., 2001, "Sacred Blood, Sacred Image: The Sudarium of Oviedo: New Evidence for the Authenticity of the Shroud of Turin," Ignatius Press: San Francisco CA, pp.22-23; Guscin, M., 1998, "The Oviedo Cloth," Lutterworth Press: Cambridge UK, p.12; Guscin, 1999, p.126; Whiting, B., 2006, "The Shroud Story," Harbour Publishing: Strathfield NSW, Australia, p.323; Oxley, 2010, p.185; Wilson, 2010, p.109. [return]
70. Wilson, 1979, p.102; Wilson, 1998, p.141. [return]
71. Iannone, J.C., 1998, "The Mystery of the Shroud of Turin: New Scientific Evidence," St Pauls: Staten Island NY, p.153; Wilson, 1998, p.141. [return]
72. Wilson, 1979, p.102; Maher, 1986, p.77; Wilson, 1998, p.141. [return]
73. Wilson, 1986, p.105; Ruffin, 1999, pp.110-111. [return]
74. "Vase from Emesa," Louvre Museum, Paris, 1992. [return]
75. Scavone, 1991, p.189. [return]
76. Scavone, 1991, pp.189-190. [return]
77. Ruffin, 1999, p.55; Wilson, 1998, p.268. [return]
78. Wilson, 2010, pp.1-2. [return]
79. Wilson, 2010, plate 19a. [return]
80. Wilson, I., 1977, "The Shroud's History Before the 14th Century," in Stevenson, K.E., ed., 1977, "Proceedings of the 1977 United States Conference of Research on The Shroud of Turin," Holy Shroud Guild: Bronx NY, pp.31-49, 44; Drews, 1984, pp.36-37; Wilson, 1979, pp.120-121, 307 n.16; Wilson, 1986, p.112-113, 145; Scavone, 1989, p.82; Wilson, 1991, pp.141-142; Petrosillo & Marinelli, 1996, p.174; Iannone, 1998, pp.104-105, 115; Ruffin, 1999, pp.54-55; Wilson, 1998, p.152; Antonacci, 2000, pp.132-133; Wilson & Schwortz, 2000, pp.110-111; Guerrera, 2001, pp.2-3; Oxley, 2010, pp.23-24; Wilson, 2010, pp.140-141; de Wesselow, T., 2012, "The Sign: The Shroud of Turin and the Secret of the Resurrection," Viking: London, pp.186-187. [return]
81. Wilson, 2010, p.2; Dayvault, P.E., 2016, "The Keramion Lost and Found: A Journey to the Face of God," Morgan James Publishing: New York NY, p.140. [return]
82. Wilson, 2010, p.2. [return]
83. Wilson, 2010, pp. 2, 138. [return]
84. Wilson, 2010, p.2. [return]

Posted 7 December 2016. Updated 29 February 2024.