H
Hugh_Farey
Guest
“In 944 A.D. the Byzantine Roman Emperor, Romanus Lecapenos, sent General John Curcuras with an army of 80,000 to the walls of Edessa, not to conquer that city, but to negotiate for the surrender of the Image of Edessa.” Well, not exactly.
General Kourkouas set off in 942 AD, and enjoyed both success and setback in the attempt to extend the limits of the Byzantine Empire, including three unsuccessful assaults on Edessa. Both attackers and defenders were well worn out by the time the Emir agreed to surrender the Image in exchange for prisoners and a vast amount of cash, an arrangement which enabled the conflict to end without either side losing face, and enabling Kourkouas to return in triumph to Constantinople.
There is no doubt that the Image of Edessa was extremely important to Edessa, although to its Muslim rulers it probably had more political than religious significance, and I think it quite possible that after its arrival in Constantinople, it became the basis for the portraits of Christ on icons, mosaics, frescoes and coins. However shortly after its arrivale, it was placed among a vast collection of other alleged relics, among which, as we have seen, it was of no great significance.
Ian Wilson’s books are all essential reading to any scholar of the Shroud, but in some cases his account is clearly a personal interpretation of the, admittedly rather scarce, sources available.
On the video recommended above, whose findings, to Wm777, “basically prove the shroud couldn’t be anything other than authentic”, there is little to say. Its ideas are wholly based on blurring Enrie’s photo to the extent that almost anything can be seen in the resulting smudges - a technique which Giuseppe Maria Catalano has the chutzpah to call “very high resolution scans’”. Among his more controversial ‘discoveries’ is that Jesus was placed face down on the cloth, clothed in a skirt. Needless to say not a single authority on the Shroud, for or against authenticity, concurs.
"The International Institute for Advanced Studies of Spacial Representation Sciences” does not exist and never has, being entirely the invention of Catalano, and is not doing any studies. A Youtube video of the same name appears to be nothing more than drone footage of Catalano’s family house.
General Kourkouas set off in 942 AD, and enjoyed both success and setback in the attempt to extend the limits of the Byzantine Empire, including three unsuccessful assaults on Edessa. Both attackers and defenders were well worn out by the time the Emir agreed to surrender the Image in exchange for prisoners and a vast amount of cash, an arrangement which enabled the conflict to end without either side losing face, and enabling Kourkouas to return in triumph to Constantinople.
There is no doubt that the Image of Edessa was extremely important to Edessa, although to its Muslim rulers it probably had more political than religious significance, and I think it quite possible that after its arrival in Constantinople, it became the basis for the portraits of Christ on icons, mosaics, frescoes and coins. However shortly after its arrivale, it was placed among a vast collection of other alleged relics, among which, as we have seen, it was of no great significance.
Ian Wilson’s books are all essential reading to any scholar of the Shroud, but in some cases his account is clearly a personal interpretation of the, admittedly rather scarce, sources available.
On the video recommended above, whose findings, to Wm777, “basically prove the shroud couldn’t be anything other than authentic”, there is little to say. Its ideas are wholly based on blurring Enrie’s photo to the extent that almost anything can be seen in the resulting smudges - a technique which Giuseppe Maria Catalano has the chutzpah to call “very high resolution scans’”. Among his more controversial ‘discoveries’ is that Jesus was placed face down on the cloth, clothed in a skirt. Needless to say not a single authority on the Shroud, for or against authenticity, concurs.
"The International Institute for Advanced Studies of Spacial Representation Sciences” does not exist and never has, being entirely the invention of Catalano, and is not doing any studies. A Youtube video of the same name appears to be nothing more than drone footage of Catalano’s family house.