"Vivid historical writing... a fascinating and factual defense for the authenticity of the famous Shroud" ( Christian Newswire). The Shroud of Turin, the traditional burial cloth of Jesus Christ, is either authentic or not. The Keramion, Lost and Found provides new answers to settle that centuries-old debate. In 2000, Philip Dayvault, a former FBI Special Agent, began a quest for ancient oil lamps in a faraway land, but it soon became an epic journey that gave rise to the questions...
- Could a small mosaic found in a faraway museum possibly have anything to do with numerous ancient, classical depictions of Jesus Christ?
- Could it bear an actual image of the God-Man, an image of God incarnate; and, perhaps, be the earliest known portrait image of Jesus Christ?
- Could it confirm vital, key elements of a 1700-year-old legend surrounding early Christianity?
- Could it possibly corroborate the authenticity of the Shroud of Turin as the first century burial cloth of Jesus Christ?
- Could the small mosaic, the ISA Tile, be the actual historical Keramion?








