This is where Jesus is said to have been buried — and then resurrected.
But is it the real tomb? How do we know?
Well, in 2016 it was opened for the first time in centuries... (thread) 🧵
The tomb looks like this. It's inside a shrine called the Edicule, in Jerusalem's Church of the Holy Sepulchre.
A few years ago something remarkable was found inside...
The Gospels say Christ was buried in a rock-cut tomb belonging to Joseph of Arimathea, outside the walls of Jerusalem and near the location of the Crucifixion: Calvary.
In the 4th century, great interest was forming to confirm the location and to gather any relics of Christ. It was no less than Helena, mother of the Emperor Constantine, who led this charge.
A few years earlier, her son had embraced and legalized Christianity after being inspired by a vision of a burning cross. Christianity was quickly becoming the religion of the empire...
At nearly 80 years old, Helena set out on her pilgrimage to the Holy Land, and in 325 AD found a site fitting the Biblical description. It was just outside the old city walls.
But somebody got there first: the Emperor Hadrian.
200 years earlier, he had built a temple there to assert pagan dominance — in his attempt to eradicate the influence of Christianity.
Helena destroyed that temple and began excavating beneath. She found a tomb and burial bed cut from a limestone cave, according to the historian Eusebius.
Legend says she also found three crosses, one of which being Christ's...
So, Constantine had a church built over the tomb: the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. We've since found remains of that church, and of Hadrian's temple, at the modern-day site.
But the church from then on had a tumultuous history. It was rocked by fires, earthquakes, sacked by the Persians and completely destroyed by a Muslim caliph in 1009 — and rebuilt in the 11th century.
With these events, and all the time that has passed, how can we know the current tomb is the real one?
Until 2016, the earliest archaeological evidence there dated to the Crusades — so only about 1,000 years ago.
Well, Jesus is said to have been laid on a limestone burial bed.
But the bed inside the current church has been covered by marble cladding since at least 1555, and probably centuries earlier.
In all that time, nobody has actually seen it.
That is, until 2016, when some researchers were allowed to open it (because the edicule was long overdue essential repairs)...
This is what they found:
• A marble slab with a cross carved into it
• A layer of mortar beneath
• A bed carved into the original limestone rock wall
Scientists analyzed the mortar to determine the last time it had been exposed to light. The result:
345 AD.
Securely in the time of Constantine.
With that stunning discovery, we're much more confident that this is the site Constantine found.
The question then remains: did Constantine's men find the right spot?
Well, according to accounts, Christians that had been praying there for centuries prior to Helena's arrival so believed that Hadrian's temple was the site that they persuaded her to demolish it, at great cost.
And while there are competing sites in Jerusalem, none have the weight of history behind them that the Church of the Holy Sepulchre does.
During the restorations, the workers left a small window in the marble — pilgrims can peer at the limestone below for the first time.
Whether they're peering at the true burial place might forever remain a mystery...
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Why are there thousands of paintings of Jesus and Mary, but none of Muhammad?
How art became a gateway to the divine... (thread) 🧵
In the Islamic world, depictions of God or Muhammad are forbidden. You look up in their holy buildings at colors and geometries, not mosaics of God.
But why does Christianity allow Christian art?
Depictions of Christ were scarce in the early days. People were hesitant of idolatry, like other religions are now. Early images of Jesus looked like this:
When you think of American cities you think of places built for maximum efficiency and commerce - not necessarily for beauty and harmony. This photo often does the rounds...
But in the early days, Americans prioritized great architecture for the very purpose of inspiring citizens.
As Sir Christopher Wren once said, great public buildings are "the ornament of a country" - a way to establish a nation.
A brief history of marble sculpture in 9 masterpieces... (thread) 🧵
1. Laocoön and His Sons (c.323 BC - 31 AD)
The first truly advanced and naturalistic sculptures came from Ancient Greece - marble was the preferred medium from which to extract extreme detail. And they usually depicted idealized human anatomies...
This one came from the Hellenistic era, when sculptures accelerated from static, graceful figures to far more expressive ones.
Because this was rediscovered in Rome during the Renaissance, many thought it wasn't genuine, and that Michelangelo himself must've carved it.
100 years ago the entire world looked to Paris - it was leading in culture, technology, and sheer ambition.
A thread of videos from the "Belle Époque"... 🧵
For a brief time they had moving sidewalks - pioneered for the 1900 world's fair. Two sidewalks ran in parallel: one at 3mph and one at 5mph, on top of a great iron viaduct.
World's fairs were all the rage at the turn of the century - and the fairs hosted in Paris were among the best.
This footage is from the 1900 event, which 48 million people attended.