The Changing Camper Club has set up about forty people at the Exposition Camper Shroud of Turin.
The stop was conducted over a given area by the city, with recizione and custody. We are working to provide it with loading and unloading.
It also provides a considerable influx of campers.
We Club They change we will be happy campers spit friends for the occasion.
Some useful information for those interested.
LOCATION: We are located 15 km from Turin - Exit Freeway SANTENA - CHANGING
Via Via Campi 23 10020 Changing Round (at Palavoitila)
place Camper From Turin accessible by train (station at 400m.) By Bus No 45 (stop at 200 m.)
TOURIST SITES OF NEARBY: Museum Martini (wine), Martini and Rossi Pessione (cycling through the countryside)
Astronomicio Observatory of Pino Torinese: Group visits, booking by delCamperClub
Superga (beautiful view from the caravan site)
CAMPERISTI FRIENDS ARE INTERESTED, CALL 3482422812 or by mail to info@camperclubcambiano.it or vannino42@hotmail.com
you there!
And here are some news about the Shroud of Turin: The Shroud of Turin
, also known as the Holy Shroud, is a linen cloth that has impressed the image of a man who bears the marks of torture, abuse and crucifixion, and that the Christian tradition Jesus is sacred cloth is preserved inside the Cathedral of Turin for the past more than four centuries.
The term "Shroud" is derived from the greek s? D? (Shroud), indicating a good quality linen fabric. The term has become synonymous with the shroud of Jesus
Having analyzed the "Holy Shroud" some scholars believe that the Shroud dates back to the first-century Palestine.
According to the stories of the gospels, after his death the body of Jesus was taken down from the cross, wrapped in a sheet with bandages and laid in the tomb. Luke and John mention the funeral tissue even after the resurrection. Gospel of the shroud, there is no description about the size, shape, material, is, however, indicated that a towel was used for the body and a shroud for the head.
is reasonable to hypothesize that the cloth and the cloth is no indication in this sense in some ancient documents have been preserved by the early Christian community. The Shroud was kept secret because of persecution of the Jewish belief that thought and impure objects come into contact with a corpse.
History of the Shroud of Turin
On June 20, 1353 Geoffrey of Charny, owner of the Shroud, donated it to the canons of the collegiate chapter of Lirey, which he had founded, the first public exhibition was in 1357. Marguerite de Charny in 1415, a descendant of Godfrey, regained the sheet (it originated a long dispute with the canons) and in 1453 sold it to the Dukes of Savoy.
They kept it in Chambery, where in 1532 survived a fire that damaged at several points. In 1578 she was taken to Turin, where the Savoy in the meantime had moved their capital and remained there continuously since then until today, except for brief intervals. In 1898 he was photographed for the first time on that occasion it was discovered that the image imprinted on sheet had the characteristics of a photographic negative.
In 1983, Umberto II of Savoy, the last king of Italy, dying, bequeathed to the Pope that he delegated the case to the Archbishop of Turin.
Over the past 30 years the exhibitions of the Shroud of Turin have been three: 1978, 1998 and 2000 at the Jubilee. The next exposition is scheduled for 2010, between April 10 and May 23 and are expected to Turin over two million visitors.
(from the Vatican website)
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