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The Bones of Jesus' Disciple Might Not Be His


The Bones of Jesus’ Disciple Might Not Be His
Candida Moss
© Provided by The Daily Beast
Photo Illustration by The Daily Beast/Getty
For 1,500 years pilgrims have been visiting Rome’s Basilica dei Santi XII Apostoli to venerate the remains of two of Christianity’s most important saints: the Apostles Philip and James the Younger. In 2016, after lying unmoved for 150 years, the Vatican granted the Franciscan friars who manage the church permission to open the case that holds their remains. Inside the reliquary the Franciscans discovered pieces of the foot of St. Philip and the femur of St. James. Initial forensic analysis sent a ripple of excitement throughout the Church: the remains appeared to show evidence of the manner of the saints’ executions. These new observations suggested that the relics were authentic; a small fragment of St. Philip even made its way to the United States. ....

Israel General , United States , Al Iskandariyah , Christian Romans , Agnello Stoia , Santi Apostoli , Kaare Lund Rasmussen , University Of Pisa , University Of Southern Denmark , National Museum Of Denmark , Pontifical Institute Of Christian Archaeology , University Of Groningen , Cranfield Forensic Institute , Photo Illustration , Daily Beast Photo Illustration , Apostles Philip , New Testament , Asia Minor , Both Philip , Common Era Christians , Sarah Bond , Lund Rasmussen , Southern Denmark , Pontifical Institute , Christian Archaeology , National Museum ,

Early Christian relics examined and dated by reseachers


Medievalists.net
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In Rome lies the Santi Apostoli church, cared for by Franciscan brothers for more than 500 years. For more than 1500 years, this site has held the believed remains of two of the earliest Christians and Jesu apostles: St. Philip and St. James the Younger – relics of the Holy Catholic Church.
In the first few centuries of Christianity, life was difficult for the Christian minority, but gradually towards fourth century Christianity became the dominant religion and after Emperor Theodosius in 380 declared Christianity the state religion, churches were erected all over the Roman Empire.
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Shortly after the churches were erected, remains of Christian martyrs were moved from their graves to designated worship churches in the towns. This also applied for the remains of the two apostles, St. Philip and St. James. Such movements of remains were called translations. ....

Al Iskandariyah , Caesar Gallus , Santi Apostoli , Kaare Lund Rasmussen , Maria Perla Colombini , Ulla Kj , Lautaro Roig Lanzillotta , Erika Ribercini , Simone Schiavone , Lilian Skytte , Thomas Delbey , University Of Pisa , University Of Southern Denmark , National Museum Of Denmark , Holy Catholic Church , Pontifical Institute Of Christian Archaeology , University Of Groningen , Cranfield Forensic Institute , Holy Catholic , Emperor Theodosius , Kaare Lund , Southern Denmark , Pontifical Institute , Christian Archaeology , National Museum , Governor Caesar ,

Ideas, Inventions And Innovations : Scientific Investigations of Believed Remains of Two Apostles


Ideas, Inventions And Innovations
Scientific Investigations of Believed Remains of Two Apostles
In Rome lies the Santi Apostoli church, cared for by Franciscan brothers for more than 500 years. For more than 1500 years, this site has held the believed remains of two of the earliest Christians and Jesu apostles: St. Philip and St. James the Younger - relics of the Holy Catholic Church.
In the first few centuries of Christianity, life was difficult for the Christian minority, but gradually towards sixth century Christianity became the dominant religion and after Emperor Constantine on his deathbed declared Christianity the state religion, churches were erected all over the Roman Empire. ....

Al Iskandariyah , Birgitte Svennevig , Emperor Constantine , Caesar Gallus , Santi Apostoli , Kaare Lund Rasmussen , University Of Pisa , University Of Southern Denmark , National Museum Of Denmark , Holy Catholic Church , Pontifical Institute Of Christian Archaeology , University Of Groningen , Cranfield Forensic Institute , Holy Catholic , Kaare Lund , Southern Denmark , Pontifical Institute , Christian Archaeology , National Museum , Professor Kaare Lund Rasmussen , Professor Kaare Lund , Governor Caesar , பேரரசர் மாறிலி , சீசர் கல்லஸ் , காரே லண்ட் ராஸ்மஸெந் , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் பீசா ,

Scientific investigations of believed remains of two apostles


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IMAGE: A piece of the femur, believed to be of St James the Younger, mounted on a wooden peg and with a gilded ring
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Credit: Kaare Lund Rasmussen/SDU
In Rome lies the Santi Apostoli church, cared for by Franciscan brothers for more than 500 years. For more than 1500 years, this site has held the believed remains of two of the earliest Christians and Jesu apostles: St. Philip and St. James the Younger - relics of the Holy Catholic Church.
In the first few centuries of Christianity, life was difficult for the Christian minority, but gradually towards fourth century Christianity became the dominant religion and after Emperor Theodosius in 380 declared Christianity the state religion, churches were erected all over the Roman Empire. ....

Al Iskandariyah , Emperor Constantine , Caesar Gallus , Santi Apostoli , Kaare Lund Rasmussen , University Of Pisa , University Of Southern Denmark , National Museum Of Denmark , Holy Catholic Church , Pontifical Institute Of Christian Archaeology , University Of Groningen , Cranfield Forensic Institute , Holy Catholic , Southern Denmark , Pontifical Institute , Christian Archaeology , National Museum , Professor Kaare Lund Rasmussen , Professor Kaare Lund , Governor Caesar Gallus , பேரரசர் மாறிலி , சீசர் கல்லஸ் , காரே லண்ட் ராஸ்மஸெந் , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் பீசா , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் தெற்கு டென்மார்க் , தேசிய அருங்காட்சியகம் ஆஃப் டென்மார்க் ,

WiRe scholarship strengthens women in science


WiRe scholarship strengthens women in science
Scholarship holders give an insight into their work - two guest articles
The University of Münster launched the Women in Research (WiRe) scholarship in 2018 to inspire more women to pursue a career in science. The programme supports excellent international female scientists from the PostDoc level onwards in the rush hour of life - the balance between academic career and family. An important component of the WiRe programme is supporting the female fellows in professional science communication. So far, 15 female academics have received funding and conducted research at Münster University for several months. This year, the female scholarship holders received a so-called Research@Home scholarship due to corona, in which they get in touch virtually with colleagues at Münster University. The archaeologist Dr Aleksandra Kubiak-Schneider from Poland and the chemist Dr Leyre Marzo from Spain give an insight into their current r ....

Jordan General , Aleksandra Kubiak Schneider , Dura Europos , Achim Lichtenberger , Leyre Marzo , Olga Garc , Giacomo Ciamician , Institute Of Classical Archaeology , Women In Research Wire , Chemistry Institute Of The University , Middle East , Classical Archaeology , Christian Archaeology , Organic Chemistry Institute , ஜோர்டான் ஜநரல் , அலெக்ஸாண்ட்ரா குபியாக் ஶ்நைடர் , ஓல்கா கர்க் , நிறுவனம் ஆஃப் பாரம்பரிய தொல்பொருள் , பெண்கள் இல் ஆராய்ச்சி கம்பி , வேதியியல் நிறுவனம் ஆஃப் தி பல்கலைக்கழகம் , நடுத்தர கிழக்கு , பாரம்பரிய தொல்பொருள் , கிறிஸ்துவர் தொல்பொருள் , ஆர்க்யாநிக் வேதியியல் நிறுவனம் ,