Throughout the
Middle Ages Montreuil was a place of pilgrimage on account of its possession of the
Sainte Face (i.e. Holy Face) as the
Veil of Veronica. This representation of the face of
Christ, which was regarded by many as the original relic, was really a copy of the
Vera Effigies in
St. Peter's Basilica at Rome. It was presented in 1249 to the then Abbess of Montreuil, Sybilla, by her brother Jacques Pantaleon, afterwards
Pope Urban IV. The painting, apparently of Eastern origin and already ancient when it came into the hands of the nuns, bore an inscription that seemed undecipherable, baffling even
Mabillon. Subsequently, however, some
Russian scholars asserted that the words were
Slavonic, and read
Obraz gospoden na-oubrouse (in
Latin,
Imago Domini in linteo): "the image of the Lord in a linen cloth". The
Sainte Face was not destroyed along with the abbey in the French Revolution, as was once believed, but was instead deposited in 1807 in the treasury of
Laon Cathedral, where it remains. The term
Holy Face of Jesus has, however, in recent years been more closely associated with the image obtained via the negative plate of the 1898 photograph taken by
Secondo Pia of the
Shroud of Turin. ==References==