Excerpted from The complete Blood Type Encylopedia
Wiki says that the earliest dating found for type AB is 700 CE, but that’s Wiki, so take it for what it’s worth. The source quoted above suggests that it was even later than that.
Excerpted from The complete Blood Type Encylopedia
Wiki says that the earliest dating found for type AB is 700 CE, but that’s Wiki, so take it for what it’s worth. The source quoted above suggests that it was even later than that.
But Israel is not part of Europe.
So what? There was no AB in Asia either.
Your cites don’t support that claim.
Not that I think the shroud is really that of Jesus’, but I’m not convinced there were no AB blood types in the Middle East around the time Jesus is supposed to have lived.
Sorta breaking news. First Century Burial Shroud Found.
All of which is confirmation for what DtC already said.
Yes it does.
No intermingling of groups until 300-800 CE. A and B were separate until then.
It doesn’t specify Europe.
If you can show evidence for type AB in 1st Century Asia (or anywhere else in the world), cough it up.
“Little evidence” means there is some evidence, just not much. Also:
There is no date applied to the part that “may have been peaceful”.
No, that’s not the way it works. You made a claim, and you gave a cite which does not support that claim. Now, it may be true-- I really don’t know. I’m just not convinced by your cites.
My claim is fully supported. You’re grasping at straws. The way to rebut is by showing evidence for the date you would like to be true, not just by trying to make specious arguments for gaps in my cites. For what it’s worth, here is the Wiki:
The ball is in your court. Your thesis that the A and B groups were intermingled in Palestine before the 1st Century is based on what evidence?
This whole angle is kind of moot anyway, since there has been no blood discovered on the shroud.
Yeah, isn’t iron oxide the usual pigment used in red paint since pigments have been used?
Yes. The STURP researchers interpreted the iron oxide from decayed paint as “blood,” because that’s what they wanted to find (or what they wanted the public to believe they had found).
If you believe that Jesus is the Son of God, finding type AB blood on the shroud wouldn’t rule out it being Jesus’ blood, even if there were no other humans with type AB blood at the time.
Not that I’m arguing with this point.
If type A was common in European peoples, and B was common in Asian peoples, then AB would be common anywhere that those two populations mingled. And there must surely have been some region where those populations mingled, unless you’re positing that there was some uninhabited swath of barrier-land between them. That region of intermingling might not have drifted into Europe until 700 or 900 or whenever, but it had to be somewhere.
Of course, quibbling about the blood type is irrelevant, anyway, until and unless we know something about the genetics of the Annunciation. Jesus’ parents, according to those who claim the Shroud’s authenticity, were not a Middle-Eastern man and a Middle-Eastern woman; his father was God, and presumably He could have contributed whatever genes He wanted to Jesus.
But then, I figure that if God did miraculously bring about the conception of Jesus, He wouldn’t have missed the chance for a bit of extra symbolism, and so would have made Jesus type O negative.
This has been demonstrated not to be the case. If you wrap a cloth around a human head and measure the distance between the ears you will see that it is quite a bit bigger than the measurement on the shroud. It will also be quite distorted and not look anything like the shroud.
Joe Nickell was able to make a passable copy by using, instead of a real person, corpse, or statue, a bas relief. This gave him the image with the same distortion seen in the real shroud. See his book ** Inquest on the Shroud of Turin** for details.
The “shroud” is a 14th century forgery. The only mystery is, how was it made?
My theory (on why it displays a negative image): the shroud was originally painted in vivid colors. It was then hung up where it was exposed to strong sunlight. Over the centuries, the exposed linen darkened-meanwhile, the shroud was washed several times-this resulted in the original image disappearing (and most of the iron oxide and vermilion pigments being washed out).
This is simple, but it explains why:
-the image is a negative (no forger would want this)
-the small amounts of pigments in the cloth
-the fact that the dark area of the image has only shallow surface penetration
primary relics (part of a person) are more valuable than secondary relics (something they touched). the only primary relics in this case would be blood on the shroud or the ‘holy foreskin’ (either it was divided or there were competing claims for this). i don’t have a cite handy but did come across that issue when reading on the shroud. i don’t recall i ever heard a claim of the ‘holy placenta/umbilical’.
I love the way they portrayed him as a skeptical scientist, determined to show the misguided believers who brought the ‘new evidence’ to him, saying he could disprove it in 5 minutes, but then, stunned by the revelation (heh) that it was absolutely true! What a load.
It didn’t smell right, but thought I’d ask here to get the 'dope on it. Thanks for the responses everyone…feel free to continue to discussion in any direction you want.
-XT
Chronos has won all Shroud of Turin threads forever. Congratulations!