Testing History
Testing History
Part of the task of the historian can be likened to a prospector panning for gold and being able to distinguish between the real stuff and fool’s gold, little bits of pyrite that glitter and shine, that look like gold but are all but worthless.
We started our journey through the Edessa to Constantinople history by looking at the shroud that is in Turin, in an obvious sort of way, so that we might test the nuggets of history we found and see if they were gold. We have a long ways to go. We need to find a plausible way for the cloth to get from Constantinople to Turin. We need to then look at the history of astonishing discoveries that happened in the 20th and early part of the 21st century. The journey gets very exciting.
The divided images looking out of and into the cloth of the shroud and the burial garment of the Hymn of the Pearl, the tetradiplon fold marks, the unusual images that seemed like sweat or fine pigments, seemingly not made by human hands, the poker holes. We took a detour through Spain to look at the Oviedo cloth. At first it looked like we might in this cloth have extraordinary confirmation. Then we were not so sure. How significant is the carbon dating of the Oviedo Sudarium? Not much, as we will see.
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Testing History
Have We Missed Something?
Max Frei thought so.
Pollen Identification
Scanning Electron Microscope
Attacking Frei
Der Stern
Avinoam Danin and Uri Baruch
Baruch was Guarded
Threshold For Perceiving Images
The Situationist
Pareidolia
The Face on Mars
Things People See on the Shroud
Photons by the Millions
Dirty, Creased and Wrinkled
So does the banding patterns, the variegated appearance of
Photography is Part of the Problem
Fluffy Shaped Sponge?
The Lepton
Francis Filas
Points of Congruence
Barrie Schwortz on the Coins
Limestone Dust
Textile Analysis
Stitching
Variegation
The Making of Linen
Ancient Bleaching
Bleaching in the Middle Ages
It has been noticed that the Shroud of Turin—except
The Decomposition of Vanillin
Vanillin as a Validation of Carbon Dating
Making Sense of History in Context