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Skeptical Inquirer's Shroud of Turin Questions

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The true skeptical inquirer thinks . . .

When was the Edessa Cloth removed from Edessa?

In 944, Emperor Romanus I sent an army to remove the Edessa Cloth and transfer it to Constantinople. There are many references to it after 944. In 1080, Alexis Comnenus of Constantinople sought assistance from Emperor Henry IV and Robert of Flanders to protect some of the city’s relics including “the cloth found in the sepulcher after the resurrection.” A Roman codex in 1130 speaks of the cloth “on which the image, not only of My face, but of My whole body has been divinely transformed.”

See:     What is the Image of Edessa?     When was the Edessa Cloth removed from Constantinople?

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Shroud of Turin and the Skeptical Inquirer


Fact: The 1988 carbon 14 dating used invalid samples snipped from a discrete medieval repair. Furthermore, kinetics constants for the loss of vanillin from lignin indicates that the cloth is at least twice as old as the dates determined by the carbon 14 dating with the faulty samples.

By some estimates, from examination of documenting photographs, there is sufficient new thread (about 60%) to allow adjusting the cloth's date to approximately the first century.

Fact: The images are formed by a brownish, complex conjugated carbon substance within a carbohydrate layer of starch fractions no thicker than 1/100 the diameter of a human hair.

The images are probably the product of an amino/carbonyl reaction.

Fact: The bloodstains are real blood. The blood is unusually red for old blood.

The blood probably stayed red and did not turn black as blood normally does because trace chemicals found in the starch fractions are hemolytic. Also, the blood is rich in bilirubin, a bile pigment produced when a human body is under severe traumatic stress. Bilirubin is bright red and stays red.

Fact: There is a faint, superficial face image on the back of the cloth.

This supports the hypothesis of an amino/carbonyl reaction.

Fact: There are sufficient descriptive historical records to suggest that the Shroud of Turin is the Edessa cloth (ca. before 544 to 944 CE) and the Bucoleon Palace grave cloth of Constantinople (ca. 944 - 1204).

Fragmentary evidence suggests that the Edessa Cloth originated in Jerusalem in the 1st century and that it is the burial cloth of Jesus of Nazareth.