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  JESUS ON CLOTH  

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Veronica veil

Above: In the 15th-century legend of Veronica, Jesus leaves a print of his face on a cloth on his way to the crucifixion. The cloth is offered to him by Veronica to wipe the sweat from his face.

Left: King Abgar of Syria holding the cloth bearing the face of Christ.

Click here for more on the Shroud of Turin.

Visit the Shroud website: click here.

    Turin shroud  
    The idea of spontaneous images of Jesus has a long history, but the earliest ones are of prints on cloth. The shroud of Turin is the most famous example of what are known as "acheropter" images (from a Greek word meaning, "not made by human hands").   King Abgar  
   

The shroud, which is 4.5 metres long, is a burial cloth and carries the clear imprint of a man who has died a bloody death, probably by crucifixion. While many Christians have believed the shroud comes from the tomb of Jesus himself, scientists in 1988 declared that carbon-14 dating tests show it to be no older than AD 1260.

Another famous image on cloth of Christ is detailed in an old folk story of the Eastern Church, which goes way back, concerning King Abgar of Syria, a contemporary of Jesus. King Abgar (see picture above) suffered from leprosy, and he sent a delegation to Jesus requesting him to come to Syria. He also sent an artist with the delegation, hoping that he would be able to capture the portrait of this teacher that he had heard so much about.

Jesus wasn't able to go to see the King, because he was on his final journey to Jerusalem. But when he noticed the artist failing to make a good likeness of him, he washed his face in water and miraculously imprinted a cloth with the image of his face, which was sent to the king.

This image (known as the "mandelion") was said to have been hidden away in the first century and rediscovered in the 6th century, when it was taken with great ceremony to Constantinople. It disappeared when the city was sacked by Western troops in 1204.

 
 
 

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