It comes with a certificate of authenticity, which comes with a certificate of authenticity, which comes with a...
Document Forgery [Explained]
Transcript Under the Cut

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It comes with a certificate of authenticity, which comes with a certificate of authenticity, which comes with a...
Document Forgery [Explained]
Transcript Under the Cut
battle axe sharpening ☆
“The leading families of Renaissance Italy, the Visconti and the Sforza dukes in Milan, the Estes and Gonzagas in Ferrara and Mantua, or the Medicis in Florence, were certainly willing to pay huge sums of money for authenticated ancient gems: Piero de’ Medici is reported to have remarked that an engraved gemstone was ‘worth more than gold itself.’ They became treasured family heirlooms.” [John Mack, The Art of Small Things]
Because of the market for ancient Roman and Gnostic carved gems, new ones were also being made and sold. They are generally referred to as 'forgeries,' but maybe they were just trendy and less costly, for those nouveau-riche who couldn't afford the real deal and weren't too concerned about authenticity. Regardless, it's interesting to see how these 'forgeries' attempted to emulate the syncretization that was going on in the earlier centuries.
Here are a few examples
Crucified 'Orpheus-Bacchus'
Human-headed scarab with ouroboros
Osiris-Christ
Another human-headed scarab with ouroborus
Madeline Stenhouse, 24, is set to serve her sentence of two years less a day in the community for what a judge described as a series of lies
A 24-year-old Kingston, Ont., woman has been sentenced to house arrest for what a judge called a series of lies that included forging nursing credentials that allowed her to treat roughly 200 patients before being found out. Madeline Stenhouse appeared in the Ontario Court of Justice on Tuesday wearing a black suit and glasses. She nodded as Justice Alison Wheeler described her "youthfulness" as a reason to show restraint in sentencing. "Ms. Stenhouses's offending was the product of immaturity in not knowing how to accept or deal with the fact that she failed nursing school," the judge read from her decision.
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Tagging: @newsfromstolenland
designs for my next character in a pathfinder game w pals (: their name is forgery and they're a catfolk changeling bard
Don Incognito.
So a few years back, this guy Scott Wolter claimed that he was getting his hands on an old journal that contained secrets of the Knights Templar.
People were quick to point out that his "antique" journal looked suspiciously like the kind of thing you could order off of Amazon, Etsy, etc. And it was pretty obvious the journal had been artificially aged.
Wolter backtracked and claimed that well uhhhh actually the journal is new but the information could totally be legitimate, you guys!
Lol. Lmao.
You can read more about it on Jason Colavito's blog:
Exciting and historic day! This journal arrived from Europe today and contains shocking Templars in America secrets including the answers to
Someone should establish a museum dedicated to fakes and forgeries of art and historical relics.
Everything from shitty copies of the Mona Lisa to archaeological fraud.
Assuming there isn’t one already.