Tomb of Jesus
There are several locations which people have claimed to be the tomb of Jesus:
- The Church of the Holy Sepulchre, accepted by most Christians and scholars as built on the ground (including the Hill of Calvary or Golgotha) on which Jesus was crucified and buried.
- The Garden Tomb, discovered in the 19th century outside of Jerusalem, is considered the actual site of Jesus' grave by some Christians.
- This was the latest finding of the Paleo-Hebrew door eye symbol being used, some consider the Paleo-Hebrew door eye to be the oldest Christian movement symbol.
- The Roza Bal shrine in Srinagar, Kashmir, venerated by locals as the grave of a sage, is believed by Ahmadi Muslims to be the burial site of one Yuz Asaf, ("Jesus the Gatherer").
- Shingo, Aomori in Japan, another place according to local lore where Jesus allegedly fled to after the crucifixion.
- The Talpiot Tomb, discovered in Talpiot, Israel in 1980, which is alleged to have held the remains of Jesus, Mary Magdalene, and others; the subject of the 2007 documentary The Lost Tomb of Jesus.
- Les Pontils, near Rennes-le-Château, has a tomb claimed by Richard Andrews and Paul Schellenberger to be the one featured on Nicolas Poussin's Arcadian Shepherds, which is Jesus' one according to The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail.
A biblical and theological discussion of the tomb of Jesus can be found at empty tomb.