The Holy Sudarium of Oviedo

If you pay attention, you know that the Bible is filled with little details that sometimes make you scratch your head. Consider John 20:5-7 — “And when he [St. John, the Beloved Disciple] stooped down, he saw the linen cloths lying; but yet he went not in. Then cometh Simon Peter, following him, and went into the sepulchre, and saw the linen cloths lying, and the napkin that had been about his [i.e. Our Lord's] head, not lying with the linen cloths, but apart, wrapped up into one place” (Douay-Rheims Version).

Well, the part about St. John waiting for St. Peter’s arrival has to do with Petrine Supremacy, so that’s easy enough. But why an entire verse to explain that the “napkin” that wrapped Our Lord’s head was somewhere other than with the rest of the shroud cloths? Well, the “linen cloths” are very famous. At various times they have been called the Cloth of Edessa, the Mandylion, and the Shroud of Turin. I am among those who believe that the genuine Shroud was brought to Edessa by the Apostle St. Jude Thaddeus, known locally as Addai, thence to Constantinople, Southern France (via the Fourth Crusade), and Turin. The “napkin” (Latin: sudarium, Grk.: soudarion, literally “towel for wiping off sweat”) however, as John 20:7 hints, has been preserved separate from the Shroud — perhaps to make sure that both would not be lost or destroyed simultaneously? It is currently kept as a revered relic in Oviedo, Spain.

Here is detailed history of the Sudarium by Mark Guscin, a Sindonologist (scholar who studies the Shroud, It. Sindone, of Turin). The tale, as told by Pelayo, Bishop of Oviedo in the early 12th century, is one of high adventure. The Sudarium stayed in Jerusalem until the Sassanid Emperor Chosroes II of Persia sacked the city in 614. (He did so with the assistance of the local Jews, who unleashed what we would call an “ethnic cleansing” of Christians in the area, even assaulting Tyre in Lebanon — topical, huh?) This is the same Chosroes who stole the True Cross, and the Feast of the Exaltation of the Cross on Sept. 14 became popular because of the Byzantine Emperor Heraclius’ recovery of the Cross from the Persians in 629. (Btw, from at least the 1st century B.C., the Persians/Parthians have made a national pastime of stealing legionary standards and other symbolic prizes from the Romans.) Well, Christian refugees first secreted the Sudarium away to Alexandria, until Chosroes sacked that city in 616. Then they transported it to the other end of the Mediterranean, to Spain, where it would be well out of the way of Persian hordes.

At the time, Sisebutus was the king of the Visigoths in Spain. Ironically, he had just expelled the last of the Byzantine forces from the Iberian Peninsula at about the same time that Chosroes was rolling back the Byzantine armies in the Levant. Unlike his heretical Arian ancestors, however, Sisebutus was a pious Catholic. Bishop Pelayo writes, “As he was also a perfect Catholic, he made the Jews who were in his kingdom convert to faith in Christ,” as Their Catholic Majesties Ferdinand and Isabella would do in 1492 (my note). The Sudarium was entrusted to Sisebutus’ close collaborator, St. Isidore of Seville, one of the thirty-three Doctors of the Church. In turn, his pupil, St. Ildefonso, took it from Seville to Toledo when he became Archbishop of that city.

The Sudarium would not be safe from anti-Catholic barbarians for long, though. In 711, jihad reached Spain when Mohammedan Arabs, Moors, and Berbers invaded from Africa. (Many Spanish Jews also assisted these “liberators” — is there a pattern here?) Sometime thereafter the Sudarium was transferred from Toledo, now in infidel hands, to Oviedo. King Alfonso II the Chaste halted the Moslem onslaught and made Oviedo the capital of his Catholic kingdom, Asturias. He built San Salvador Cathedral, where the Sudarium remains today in its own Camara Santa, or Sacred Chamber. The cloth’s reliquary is called the “Ark,” so Pelayo compares Alfonso to King Solomon and his cathedral to the Temple of Jerusalem, which housed the Ark of the Covenant. According to Mary Jo Anderson’s article, Bishop Pelayo also claimed that the “holy ark” was “made out of oak by followers of the twelve apostles” and also contained “several relics of the Virgin Mary and the apostles and a piece of the cross on which Jesus was crucified.”

Anderson’s article contains even more of what Johnboy rightly would call “crazy-in-a-good-way” stories about the Ark. Some priests opened the reliquary without fasting and were blinded by a bright light emanating from within (think Raiders of the Lost Ark). Later, one Rodrigo D’az de Vivar joined King Alfonso VI and his sister in recording the contents of the Ark. They did so at Eastertime, only after carefully prepared themselves throughout Lent so as not to share the fate of the blinded priests. Who was Rodrigo D’az de Vivar? He is known to subsequent history and literature as El Cid, the fabled national hero of Spain.

Anderson also records a song sung by pilgrims on their way to the Shrine of the Apostle St. James the Greater at Compostela. For those who don’t know, St. James visited Spain and there received the first recorded apparition of the Blessed Virgin, Our Lady of the Pillar, during Mary’s lifetime. He later returned to Jerusalem and, at the hands of the Jewish King Herod Agrippa I, he became the first of the Twelve Apostles to win the palm of martyrdom (Acts 12:1-2). In Spain, though, he became patron saint of the Reconquista, under the title Santiago Matamoros — that is, St. James the Moor-Killer! I propose him as a patron saint for ecumenism ;). Where was I? Oh, right, his shrine at Santiago de Compostela became one of the three major pilgrimage sites of medieval Christendom, along with Rome and Jerusalem. The pilgrims used to sing,

“Who has been to St. James
And not to San Salvador
Visits the servant and
Neglects the master.”

They were referring, of course, to Our Lord’s Precious Blood as preserved on the Sudarium at Oviedo’s San Salvador Cathedral. And who built the first shrine at Santiago de Compostella? Why, King Alfonso the Chaste, who also built the shrine for the Sudarium. According to one tradition, he was also the first pilgrim to the martyred Apostle’s tomb.

What of the cloth itself and its relationship to the Shroud of Turin? Well you can consult Guscin’s and Anderson’s articles, but I shall relate some of the facts. Scientiests have concluded that the Sudarium of Oviedo was wrapped around the head of a man who had multiple bleeding head wounds, as from a crown of thorns. Fluid from a pulmonary edema flowed out of the mouth and nostrils. This indicates that he died of asphyxiation, just as a victim of crucifixion would, not long before the cloth was applied. The Blood on the cloth is type AB, just like the Blood on the Shroud. The pattern of the head wounds match the Shroud. Pollens on the Sudarium show that it has been in Palestine, North Africa, and Spain, just as one would expect the real headcloth of Jesus to show. The Shroud’s pollen samples show that it has been in Palestine, Syria, Asia Minor, Southern France, and Northern Italy, as one would expect of the real Shroud of Jesus, as recorded in extant accounts.

The Sudarium verifies the Shroud. They have a separate history. The Sudarium arrived in Spain prior to 1000. While the Shroud of Turin can only be verifiably traced back in historical records to the beginning of the 14th century, it is highly likely that it is identical with the earlier Cloth of Edessa and the Byzantine Mandylion. There is no way that the two cloths, the Sudarium and Shroud, could have been forged in such a way as to confirm each other’s veracity. There is no way that they could have been forged independently and still mirrored each other so perfectly by mere coincidence. Despite the highly suspect Carbon-14 dating of the Shroud to the 14th century, the Sudarium indicates that it is in fact genuine. Not only that, the Sudarium has a rich and colorful history of its own. So perhaps that is why, some sixty years after the fact, the Holy Ghost inspired St. John in verses 20:5-7 of his Gospel to specify that the “napkin” had been rolled up in its own place apart from the burial cloths.

(For pictures of the Sudarium, please go here. I would copy some for this post, but I am not sure about copyright rules vis-a-vis photos.)

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12 Responses to “The Holy Sudarium of Oviedo”


  1. 1 Tobias Petrus Jul 21st, 2006 at 4:31 pm

    Thank you, whoever helped me edit the post. If you link to the Jewish Encyclopedia citation for Chosroes II, you’ll see that the Jews of Palestine wanted him to set up a Jewish commonwealth for them. Chosroes’ Sassanid Empire included both present-day Iraq and Iran. Imagine that — Zionists asking Iraqis and Iranians to help build a Israeli State!? My, times have changed.

  2. 2 Tobias Petrus Jul 21st, 2006 at 4:37 pm

    Er, “an” Israeli State. Now, what we need is for someone in the Vatican to let the purported Veil of St. Veronica be analyzed. It is supposedly kept in St. Peter’s Basilica. The problem is that some Sindonologists think that the legend of St. Veronica arose from copies made of the Mandylion cloth (i.e. the Shroud) when only the image of Christ’s Holy Face was exposed. I don’t know, but I think it would be much cooler if the Veil were genuine and lined up with the other cloths.

    Question: why do some images of St. Jude Thaddeus show him with a medal with (I guess) Our Lord’s Face on it? If this association is ancient, then maybe it backs up the legend that St. Jude brought the Shroud to Edessa. Thanks for any info.

  3. 3 Tobias Petrus Jul 21st, 2006 at 5:30 pm

    “If you link to the Jewish Encyclopedia citation for Chosroes II . . .” I link to this article in the main body of the post when I write about the “ethnic cleansing” of Christians. Thanks to Iosephus for pointing out that I wasn’t being clear when I referred back to this.

  4. 4 chattr Jul 21st, 2006 at 7:41 pm

    In Sacred Blood, Sacred Image: An interview with Janice Bennett about the Sudarium of Oviedo | August 6, 2005:

    The use of a sudarium was required when blood flowed at the time of death, because blood was believed to contain the soul of the individual as the “seat of life,” and was considered just as much a part of the body as the flesh. Any blood spilled at the time of death had to be buried, which would have included clothing, soiled linens and blood-soaked earth. The scene in Mel Gibson’s film The Passion of the Christ that portrays Jesus’ mother mopping up his blood after the scourging is not pious fiction. This practice was necessary so that the blood could be buried. …

  5. 5 Tobias Petrus Jul 21st, 2006 at 8:11 pm

    Thanks, Chattr, for your link. The interview with Janice Bennett identifies one of the other relics contained in the Oviedo “ark”: a chasuble that Our Lady miraculously gave to St. Ildefonso during an apparition. This must have been a famous miracle, because I saw at least one Renaissance-era painting of the same event at the Louvre.

  6. 6 Tobias Petrus Jul 21st, 2006 at 8:47 pm

    The Janice Bennett interview also contains an interesting claim by one Isodad (or Ishodad) of Merv (fl. 850). He claimed that St. Peter put the Sudarium on his head when he healed people. Sounds strange, but there may be a parallel in Acts 19:12. St. Paul touched “towels and aprons” that then were “carried away” to be used to exorcize demons from sick people. The word for “towels” here is “soudaria” in Greek and “sudaria” in Latin — the same word for the face-cloth of Our Lord. So the Apostles really did use cloths like the Holy Sudarium when working miracles.

    On another note, the Sassanid Empire of Persia was Zoroastrian. Zoroastrianism is a pagan religion, involving fire-worship and dual deities of good and evil. Although Chosroes II was a Zoroastrian, his queen (one out of a harem of 3,000) was a Jacobite heretic. In addition to recovering the True Cross during his invasion of Iraq, the Byzantine Emperor Heraclius destroyed a major fire-temple. Persia then fell to Islam in the time of Chosroes’ successor; the vengeance that Heraclius wrought when recovering the True Cross may well have inspired the Mohammedans’ confidence. So in addition to saving the Sudarium from hostile Zorastrians and Jews, its caretakers preserved it from falling into the hands of the Moslem invaders of Palestine a few decades later. For whatever that information is worth; I’m relying entirely on the 1913 Catholic Encyclopedia article “Persia.”

  7. 7 dobby Jul 25th, 2006 at 10:41 am

    Janice Bennett has written an entire book on the Holy Sudarium of Oviedo titled: Sacred Blood, Sacred Image. It is published by Ignatius Press.

  8. 8 Anonymous Jul 25th, 2006 at 4:25 pm

    That’s really interesting - I had never heard of the Sudarium Shroud. I saw the shroud of turin recently, well not the really thing, but where it was stored, because it’s only shown every 25 years or so. The man in the church who gave a talk about it said that it was consistant with the crucifixion according to the gospel of John among other very convincing and interesting facts. I bought the book they had there - very extensive scientific research on it. Going to look into this Sudarium Shroud now…

  9. 9 Tobias Petrus Jul 25th, 2006 at 8:06 pm

    “Sacred Blood, Sacred Image”? Does the title, which recalls, “Holy Blood, Holy Grail,” highlight the authors opposition to that whole line of blasphemous books?

  10. 10 Tobias Petrus Jul 26th, 2006 at 3:56 pm

    Another point: If you look at the last link in my post, you will see a photo of the cloth. If it were forged, you would think that there would be some miraculous image of the Holy Face, or that the Blood would form some recognizable pattern. No, the cloth and Blood patterns look like a normal cloth placed over a face would — indistinct. There is no miraculous image, as on the Shroud (some speculate that the image on that cloth was “burned” into it during the Resurrection). That argues, I believe, in support of the Sudarium’s authenticity.

  11. 11 Iosephus Jul 26th, 2006 at 4:01 pm

    It was yesterday while listening to the “Victimae paschali laudes” that I remembered that the sudarium receives mention in this very famous Easter Sequence:

    Dic nobis Maria,
    Quid vidisti in via?
    Sepulcrum Christi viventis,
    et gloriam vidi resurgentis.

    Angelicos testes,
    sudarium et vestes.

  12. 12 dobby Jul 26th, 2006 at 9:36 pm

    The Sudarium of Oviedo was a type of napkin that was used to cover the face of those who died a violent death so as to spare the family the sight of the face. It was also used to contain the blood and liquid flowing from the facial orifaces. Janice Bennett’s book describes the painstaking process a Spanish group has done to recreate how the napkin was placed on Jesus’ face. It would have been tied on while He was still on the cross, then used to staunch the flow of fluids as He was lowered to the ground and wrapped in the shroud. Once the shroud was in place the napkin was laid to the side. In keeping with orthodox Jewish burial customs, all cloths containing body fluids, especially blood, would be buried with the body. The body of a victim of a violent death would not have been washed so as to keep any blood and tissue with the body.

    Janice Bennett’s book explains all of this. The blood patterns on the napkin match very well those on the Shroud of Turin.

    Read it for yourself.

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