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  2. Unknown years of Jesus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unknown_years_of_Jesus

    Edward T. Martin's book King of Travelers: Jesus' Lost Years in India (2008) was used as the basis for Paul Davids' film Jesus in India (2008) shown on the Sundance Channel. The book and film cover Martin's search for Notovitch's claimed "Life of Issa." [48]

  3. Paul Davids - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Davids

    Jesus in India The Movie (2008) – a documentary on "American adventurer" Edward T. Martin's quest for the supposed unknown years of Jesus and Russian Nicolas Notovitch's claimed lost Life of Issa. [3]

  4. Holger Kersten - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holger_Kersten

    Jesus Lived in India [3] promotes the claim of Nicolas Notovitch (1894) regarding the unknown years of Jesus between the ages of twelve and twenty-nine, supposedly spent in India. The consensus view amongst modern scholars is that Notovitch's account of the travels of Jesus to India was a hoax.

  5. The Aquarian Gospel of Jesus the Christ - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Aquarian_Gospel_of...

    There are 18 unknown years of Jesus' life missing in the Bible (ages 12–30). Like Nicolas Notovitch did before in his The Unknown Life of Jesus Christ: By the Discoverer of the Manuscript (1887), the Aquarian Gospel documents these 18 years as a time when Jesus travels to the centers of wisdom in western India, Tibet, Persia, Assyria, Greece, and Egypt.

  6. Lamb: The Gospel According to Biff, Christ's Childhood Pal

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lamb:_The_Gospel_According...

    Biff is resurrected in the 20th century to complete missing parts of the Bible, under the inefficient supervision of the angel Raziel, who places Biff into a motel room in order to prevent any distractions by the modern world. Biff begins his story by recounting his first meeting as a boy with the then six-year-old Joshua.

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  8. Nicolas Notovitch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicolas_Notovitch

    Nicolas Notovitch. Shulim or Nikolai Aleksandrovich Notovich (Russian: Николай Александрович Нотович; August 13, 1858 – after 1934), known in the West as Nicolas Notovitch, was a Crimean [1] Jewish adventurer who claimed to be a Russian aristocrat, [citation needed] spy [2] [3] and journalist.

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