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Wikipedia Text: the image of Edessa

The Image of Edessa was reported to contain the image of the face of Christ, and its existence is reported reliably since the sixth century. Some have suggested a connection between the Shroud of Turin and the Image of Edessa. No legend connected with that image suggests that it contained the image of a beaten and bloody Jesus, but rather it was said to be an image transferred by Jesus to the cloth in life. This image is generally described as depicting only the face of Jesus, not the entire body. Proponents of the theory that the Edessa image was actually the shroud, led by Ian Wilson, theorize that it was always folded in such a way as to show only the face.

Although Ian Wilson deserves credit for the folded shroud theory, it is incorrect to say . . . See: the image of Edessa


raking light photograph revealing persistent folding creases
 

map of folding creases clearly show folds
 

the Edessa cloth found in the city walls ca. 644 AD
 


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