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In the quiet northern hills of the Czech Republic, inside the ancient Basilica of Saint Lawrence, an 800-year-old sanctuary was quietly shattered. An intruder breached the security of the shrine, targeting its most sacred treasure: the skull of Saint Zdislava of Lemberk, a medieval noblewoman revered for her miraculous healings and deep compassion. When authorities finally tracked down the culprit, they uncovered a plot that reads less like a standard burglary and more like a macabre psychological thriller.
For over a millennium, the theft of sacred body parts, known historically as furta sacra, or holy theft, was practically a state-sponsored industry. In the Middle Ages, rival cities and even devout monks didn't view stealing a saint as a sin. They viewed it as a rescue mission to secure divine protection, power, and prestige for their own local towns.
From the impressive heist of Joan of Arc’s ring to the snatching of a vial containing the Brain of St. Bosco, are these modern incidents just isolated acts of vandalism, or are we witnessing the continuation of a centuries-old underground crusade to capture the physical anchors of history?
This case file, join the Theorists as we crack open the concrete, explore the history of holy smuggling, and decode the bizarre psychology of religious crime in… Holy Relic Heists
By Big Theory Podcasts4.6
18051,805 ratings
In the quiet northern hills of the Czech Republic, inside the ancient Basilica of Saint Lawrence, an 800-year-old sanctuary was quietly shattered. An intruder breached the security of the shrine, targeting its most sacred treasure: the skull of Saint Zdislava of Lemberk, a medieval noblewoman revered for her miraculous healings and deep compassion. When authorities finally tracked down the culprit, they uncovered a plot that reads less like a standard burglary and more like a macabre psychological thriller.
For over a millennium, the theft of sacred body parts, known historically as furta sacra, or holy theft, was practically a state-sponsored industry. In the Middle Ages, rival cities and even devout monks didn't view stealing a saint as a sin. They viewed it as a rescue mission to secure divine protection, power, and prestige for their own local towns.
From the impressive heist of Joan of Arc’s ring to the snatching of a vial containing the Brain of St. Bosco, are these modern incidents just isolated acts of vandalism, or are we witnessing the continuation of a centuries-old underground crusade to capture the physical anchors of history?
This case file, join the Theorists as we crack open the concrete, explore the history of holy smuggling, and decode the bizarre psychology of religious crime in… Holy Relic Heists

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