Dating the manufacture of the Shroud of Turin : An exercise in basic iconography
Loading...
Date
Authors
Allen, N.P.L. (Nicholas P.L.)
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Art Historical Work Group of South Africa
Abstract
This paper refutes the recent spate of
attempts to invalidate the 1988 carbon dating results which indicated with a 95% certainty, that the Shroud of Lirey-Chambery-Turin was manufactured from flax plants that grew sometime between 1260 and 1390. An attempt will be made to show how the iconography employed in the image of a tortured and crucified man as found on the Shroud of Turin corroborate the carbon dating results quite precisely, thereby confirming that this artefact is mediaeval and not a product of the first century CE.
Description
Article digitised using: Suprascan 1000 RGB scanner, scanned at 400 dpi; 24-bit colour; 100% Image derivating - Software used:
Adobe Photoshop CS3 - Image levels, crop, deskew Abbyy Fine Reader No.9 - Image manipulation + OCR Adobe Acrobat 9 (PDF)
Keywords
Religion -- Faith, Religion and science, Religion -- Antiquities & Archaeology, Religion -- Christianity -- History, Shroud of Turin, Carbon dating
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Allen, NPL 2001, 'Dating the manufacture of the Shroud of Turin: an exercise in basic iconography.' South African Journal of Art History, vol. 16, pp. 96-109.