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1 y separately published work icon Two Crowns John G. O'Neill , Mike Palmer-Allen (editor), Kaitlyn Palmer-Allen (editor), Narrabundah : Mercadier Publishing , 2015 8773276 2015 single work novel

'The Crown of Thorns held in the Notre Dame Cathedral is a fake.

'The reliquary revered by the Christian world is not the Crown of Thorns that Jesus Christ had brutally thrust on his head at his crucifixion.

'In 34 C.E, Joseph of Bethany took the Crown that fell from Jesus Christ’s head as he was brought down from the cross. With the real Crown of Thorns in the hands of a ten-year-old boy, the Roman soldiers were forced to make another crown to deliver to the Church. The revelation of the real Crown of Thorns’ existence stands to destroy the belief that the Notre Dame Cathedral has held the revered reliquary since 1239.

'Thirty-five years after Christ’s crucifixion, an old priest of the Church of Zion chisels words onto a small stone tablet, declaring that the Crown of Thorns held by the Church is a fake.

'Many years later, Bertrando Ferrante, a Venetian merchant, discovers evidence that the Crown he sold to King Louis IX of France is not the real Crown of Thorns. He foolishly admits this to the corrupt Archbishop of Vincennes. The enraged archbishop tries to arrest Bertrando, but the merchant manages to escape. The Church pursues Bertrando and the Ferrante family over the centuries to force them to admit to the crimes of heresy and blasphemy.

'Centuries later, a German general serving in Turkey during the First World War becomes an unwilling possessor of the real Crown and decides to help the Ferrante family clear its name.

'As the real Crown of Thorns passes from possessor to possessor, each realise that the Crown has the power to heal. But there’s a catch. The Crown can heal those who are still alive, but it cannot heal the possessor.

'What’s more, a coded message on the floor of the Crown’s leather case defies attempts at being deciphered by any of the possessors throughout its journey. That is until Charles Edmonds and Lord James Halliday stumble upon the Crown in 1989.

'The epic journey of the real Crown through the ages reveals the love, greed, wickedness, tragedy, and passion of those who have either possessed the Crown or stolen it.' (Publication summary)

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