The Garden Tomb The Garden Tomb is a
rock-cut tomb in Jerusalem, which was unearthed in 1867 and at the time was considered by some
Protestants to be a possible location of the tomb of Jesus. The tomb has been dated by Israeli archaeologist
Gabriel Barkay to the 8th–7th centuries BC.
Talpiot Tomb The
Talpiot Tomb (or Talpiyot Tomb) is a
rock-cut tomb discovered in 1980 in the
East Talpiot neighborhood, five kilometers (three miles) south of the
Old City in
East Jerusalem. It contained ten
ossuaries, six inscribed with
epigraphs, including one interpreted as "
Yeshua bar Yehosef" ("Jeshua, son of Joseph"), although the inscription is partially illegible, and its translation and interpretation is widely disputed. It is widely believed by scholars that the Jesus in Talpiot (if this is indeed his name) is not Jesus of Nazareth, but a person with the same name, since he appears to have a son named Judas (buried next to him) and the tomb shows signs of belonging to a wealthy Judean family, while Jesus came from a low-class Galilean family.
Roza Bal shrine in
Srinagar,
Kashmir The
Roza Bal is a shrine located in the
Khanyar quarter in
downtown area of
Srinagar in
Kashmir. The word
roza means tomb, the word
bal mean place. Locals believe a sage is buried here,
Yuzasaf (alternatively Yuz Asaf or Youza Asouph), alongside another Muslim holy man, Mir Sayyid Naseeruddin. The shrine was relatively unknown until the founder of the
Ahmadiyya movement,
Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, claimed in 1899 that it is actually the tomb of
Jesus. This view is maintained by Ahmadis today, though it is rejected by the local
Sunni caretakers of the shrine, one of whom said "the theory that Jesus is buried anywhere on the face of the earth is blasphemous to Islam."
Kirisuto no haka Shingō village in
Japan contains another location of what is purported to be the last
resting place of
Jesus, the so-called "Tomb of Jesus" (
Kirisuto no haka), and the residence of Jesus's last descendants, the family of Sajiro Sawaguchi. According to the Sawaguchi family's claims, Jesus Christ did not die on the cross at
Golgotha. Instead his brother, Isukiri, took his place on the cross, while Jesus fled across
Siberia to
Mutsu Province, in northern Japan. Once in Japan, he changed his name to Torai Tora Daitenku, became a
rice farmer, married a twenty-year old Japanese woman named Miyuko, and raised three daughters near what is now Shingō. While in Japan, it is asserted that he traveled, learned, and eventually died at the age of 106. His body was
exposed on a hilltop for four years. According to the customs of the time, Jesus's bones were collected, bundled, and buried in the mound purported to be the grave of Jesus Christ. ==References==