Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Image_of_Edessa> ?p ?o }
- Image_of_Edessa abstract "According to Christian tradition, the Image of Edessa was a holy relic consisting of a square or rectangle of cloth upon which a miraculous image of the face of Jesus had been imprinted—the first icon (\"image\"). In the Orthodox Churches, including English-speaking Orthodoxy, the image is generally known as the Mandylion.By this account, King Abgar of Edessa wrote to Jesus, asking him to come cure him of an illness. Abgar received a reply letter from Jesus, declining the invitation, but promising a future visit by one of his disciples. Instead, one of the seventy disciples, Thaddeus of Edessa, is said to have come to Edessa, bearing the words of Jesus, by the virtues of which the king was miraculously healed.This tradition was first recorded in the early 4th century by Eusebius of Caesarea, who said that he had transcribed and translated the actual letter in the Syriac chancery documents of the king of Edessa, but who makes no mention of an image. The report of an image, which accrued to the legendarium of Abgar, first appears in the Syriac work, the Doctrine of Addai: according to it, the messenger, here called Ananias, was also a painter, and he painted the portrait, which was brought back to Edessa and conserved in the royal palace.The first record of the existence of a physical image in the ancient city of Edessa (now Urfa) was in Evagrius Scholasticus, writing about 593, who reports a portrait of Christ of divine origin (θεότευκτος), which effected the miraculous aid in the defence of Edessa against the Persians in 544. The image was moved to Constantinople in the 10th century. The cloth disappeared from Constantinople during the Sack of Constantinople in 1204, during the Fourth Crusade, and by some believed to be reappearing as a relic in King Louis IX of France's Sainte-Chapelle in Paris. This relic disappeared in the French Revolution.The provenance of the Edessa letter between the 1st century and its location in his own time are not reported by Eusebius. The materials, according to the scholar Robert Eisenman, \"are very widespread in the Syriac sources with so many multiple developments and divergences that it is hard to believe they could all be based on Eusebius' poor efforts\" (Eisenman 1997:862).The Eastern Orthodox Church observes a feast for this icon on August 16 (August 29 in N.S.), which commemorates its translation from Edessa to Constantinople.".
- Image_of_Edessa thumbnail Abgarwithimageofedessa10thcentury.jpg?width=300.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageExternalLink Mandylion.pdf.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageExternalLink shroud.htm.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageExternalLink 1.php.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageExternalLink topic.php?lng=en&top_id=122.
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- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageExternalLink Web.jpeg.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageExternalLink guscin3.pdf.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageExternalLink history.htm.
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- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageID "599540".
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageLength "19960".
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageOutDegree "91".
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageRevisionID "701408350".
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Abgar_V.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Acheiropoieta.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Ancha_icon.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Andronikov_Monastery.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Apostolic_Palace.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Baldwin_II,_Latin_Emperor.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Category:Jesus_in_art.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Category:Medieval_Anatolia.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Category:Relics_associated_with_Jesus.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Category:Roman_Anatolia.
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- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Chambéry.
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- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Depiction_of_Jesus.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Doctrine_of_Addai.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Doge_of_Genoa.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Eastern_Orthodox_Church.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Edessa.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Egeria_(pilgrim).
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Egypt.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Ernst_Kitzinger.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Euphrates.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Eusebius.
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- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Fourth_Crusade.
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- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Genoa.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink George_Kedrenos.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Georgia_(country).
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Great_Palace_of_Constantinople.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Ian_Wilson_(author).
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Icon.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Image_of_Edessa.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Jerónimo_Lobo.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Jesus.
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- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Leiden_University.
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- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Robert_Eisenman.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Romanos_I_Lekapenos.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Saint_Catherines_Monastery.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Sainte-Chapelle.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink San_Bartolomeo_degli_Armeni.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink San_Silvestro_in_Capite.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Sasanian_Empire.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Seventy_disciples.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Shroud_of_Turin.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Siege_of_Constantinople_(1204).
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Syriac_language.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Terminus_post_quem.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Thaddeus_of_Edessa.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink The_Gathering_(band).
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Translation_(relic).
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Vatican_Library.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Veil_of_Veronica.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Veliky_Novgorod.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink Şanlıurfa.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLink File:Abgarwithimageofedessa10thcentury.jpg.
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLinkText "''Mandylion''".
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLinkText "Acheiropoietos icon".
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLinkText "Edessa".
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLinkText "Holy ''Mandylion''".
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLinkText "Holy Face of Edessa".
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLinkText "Holy Face of Genoa".
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLinkText "Holy Image of Saviour Not Made by Hands".
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLinkText "Holy Image of the Saviour Not Made by Hands".
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLinkText "Holy Mandylion".
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLinkText "Image of "The Saviour Not Made by Hands"".
- Image_of_Edessa wikiPageWikiLinkText "Image of Edessa (Mandylion)".