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Old 01-31-2004, 03:57 AM   #11
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Partial repost of post by Vorkosigan:
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Also, you have way overreacted on Goren:



Moreover, in a review article in the Bible and Interpretation website, epigrapher Rochelle Altman suggested that by its text and style the inscription may be a modern forgery, including a puzzle of syntax and letter styles from various published epigraphic sources.[20] Such view was later suggested also by Prof. Frank Moore Cross of Harvard University.[21]


Cross says:

"My perverse conclusion was that both were forgeries and I could no longer sit on the fence' in the matter of the ossurary inscription. I now stand wholly and unambiguously with those who believe the ossuary inscription to be a forgery, a good forgery, but a forgery."

This may be the "view" that Goren is referring to -- that the Ossuary is a modern forgery.
Ah but in the quotation from Cross above the word (and the distinct concept of) "modern" does not appear. He is apparently on the fence as to when the forgery took place.

Furthermore on the styles of the letters: just about EVERYONE agrees that there is a mixing of styles. The disagreement is over:

1) how many distinct styles one can make out (Altman claims 5 cursive styles are being mixed together but no one else claims such a high number) and

2) the significance of the mixing of cursive and non-cursive styles (Cross, like Lemaire, doesn't consider this, per se, a problem; instead, he finds it--------even if a forgery is involved-------"clever" on the part of the forger, whereas Altman finds this decidedly unclever)(to repost the full quotation from Cross on this point: "The mixing of cursive and formal characters was particularly clever..."). To repeat: though she has several reasons for her belief in the inscription's forgery, the mixing of lettering styles is one of the two or three most salient: she thinks it a BAD forgery. Cross thinks it a good one (but apparently of uncertain chronology)

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Old 01-31-2004, 07:35 AM   #12
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Quote:
Originally posted by leonarde
Partial repost of post by Vorkosigan:

Ah but in the quotation from Cross above the word (and the distinct concept of) "modern" does not appear. He is apparently on the fence as to when the forgery took place.


He mentions the badly weathered rosettes and the unweathered inscription. He recognizes it as a modern forgery.
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Old 01-31-2004, 11:57 AM   #13
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I don't know whether Cross himself made this point or someone else but: there's a possibility that the box was reused ie a pre-existing ossuary was recycled for the purpose of holding the bones of James. Therefore the box (including presumably the rosettes) WOULD BE (under this scenario) older than the inscription, EVEN IF the inscription goes back to the 60s of the First Century.
Furthermore we have no idea of how the ossuary was stored/set aside for all these centuries. It is at least theoretically possible that the rosettes were more exposed to the elements than the inscription was anyway.
Of course, all that stuff is speculation; it is tests, tests, and more tests that will determine the final disposition of the ossuary....
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Old 01-31-2004, 02:01 PM   #14
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I should have noted in my previous post that the rosettes are on the OPPOSITE side of the ossuary from the side where the inscription is. This is an indication (but not a confirmation) that the ossuary was used more than once. It also COULD potentially account for differences in degrees of wear for the rosettes and inscription.
Intrigued by the subject of the rosettes I found here:
http://www.udayton.edu/news/nr/011603.html
an account of how they were discovered. Oddly enough, the man who discovered them and found them consistent with the idea of forgery, Daniel Eylon, thinks that a word, "Yeshua", of the second half of the inscription is the only genuine lettering: due again to the weathering of the incision (ie just like the rosettes); that part of linked story ensues:
Quote:
Other researchers have also questioned the writing on the box, stating that only the first part of the inscription reading "James, the son of Joseph" appears to be authentic. However, Eylon disagrees and concluded from his surface--feature analysis that the only authentic part is the word 'Yeshua' (Jesus) because the letters have all the attributes of worn--out, old inscription.
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Old 01-31-2004, 02:29 PM   #15
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For a couple photos of the reverse side of the ossuary look here:
http://www.rom.on.ca/ossuary/discovery.html
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Old 01-31-2004, 03:03 PM   #16
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Ah but in the quotation from Cross above the word (and the distinct concept of) "modern" does not appear. He is apparently on the fence as to when the forgery took place.
No. Cross knows it is a modern forgery.

Quote:
particularly clever..."). To repeat: though she has several reasons for her belief in the inscription's forgery, the mixing of lettering styles is one of the two or three most salient: she thinks it a BAD forgery. Cross thinks it a good one (but apparently of uncertain chronology)
You have misread. Cross believes it a modern forgery, as does Altman. The difference is that Altman believes the letter mixing is significant. Lemaire's attitude is not relevant -- he is an accomplice, I believe, of the forger.

Quote:
Of course, all that stuff is speculation; it is tests, tests, and more tests that will determine the final disposition of the ossuary....
Nothing will determine that, because there are people who refuse to believe no matter what. The fact is that science has already settled the issue. The patina over the inscription is fake. Golan owns a forgery workshop and everything that came through his hands is a fake.

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Old 01-31-2004, 05:52 PM   #17
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Quote:
Originally posted by Vorkosigan
Cross believes it a modern forgery, as does Altman. The difference is that Altman believes the letter mixing is significant.
I got a different idea from Altman, ie that the second half is a modern forger, and the first part was authentic:

Quote:
1. The graphs for the first part are not in Rahmani and do not appear as written anywhere else.
2. The "James bond" covers both sides of the inscription, but this does not mean that both sides were written at the same time. It merely means that the forgers coated both sides to make them appear to have been written at the same time and then carved the second part and went over the entire inscription again.
3. The heavier fake patina over the second part confirms that the second part is a very modern addition to an existing inscription.
4. The third point also explains why the first part is correctly written in sound bites and why the second part is written in the completely wrong continuous stream.
She argues that, as the letters from the first half don't match letters from Rahmani inscriptions, ie they are not copied from there, they are in all probability authentic.

Quote:
Lemaire's attitude is not relevant -- he is an accomplice, I believe, of the forger.
I think this is a legally dangerous statement and patently wrong. Lemaire has simply done what a lot of people do, jump on a bandwagon and convince oneself of the veracity of something too soon, and by that time it's too late to go back because you've hooked yourself. In this field the old school rarely changes its mind even in the face of a truckload of evidence. (Cross for example hasn't changed his mind over any of his slipshod assumptions regarding Hebrew palaeography.)


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Old 01-31-2004, 06:21 PM   #18
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It's not a forgery.

It's an interpolation.
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Old 01-31-2004, 08:16 PM   #19
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Partial repost:
Quote:
Ah but in the quotation from Cross above the word (and the distinct concept of) "modern" does not appear. He is apparently on the fence as to when the forgery took place.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



No. Cross knows it is a modern forgery.
This is ONE of the things I want to establish: which 'expert' said what about the ossuary and when, and on what basis they said it. Do you have a link or text where Cross explicitly states that the forgery is modern?

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Old 01-31-2004, 08:30 PM   #20
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Here's a good exchange among the three men, Shanks, Lemaire and Cross. I gather that Cross leans toward a modern forgery, though he does not explicitly state the 'modern' part but this is based, not on paleography, but on the scientific findings and making connections between the ossuary and Jehoash Inscription.....the latter he finds a forgery....
http://www.bib-arch.org/bswbbreakingHSALFMC.html

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