Man Looks at His ‘Double’ In Sixteenth Century

It is said there are Seven people who resemble one.

Veracity of this statement , I wouldn’t know.

Couple of Days ago I was talking to some body when I mentioned how much fun if it would be if one had a ‘Double’ from the past.

This statement is not just for the news item to follow, but to insist on the Universal Consciousness when one thinks of some thing off the cuff as if from nowhere, one comes across the same information immediately from unexpected sources.

If one were to look for a word and its meaning, it comes to him from unexpected sources the same day!

Please read my blog on this.

Now to the post.

There was news item in the Mail online UK/Yahoo/ABC News that a Man came across his ‘Double’ of Doppelganger‘ in an Exhibitionform the 16th Century!

Read On:

Man Sees His Double in 16 Century_jpg.
Twins: Temple University student Max Galuppo discovered his doppelganger in a 16th century Italian painting by an unknown artist titled Portrait of a Nobleman with Dueling Gauntlet.

Max Galuppo would have fit right in with the Renaissance.

Galuppo, a Temple University student, found his doppelganger in a 16th century Italian painting by an unknown artist titled Portrait of a Nobleman with Dueling Gauntlet.

The painting came to the Philadelphia Museum of Art in 1917 with the works in the John G. Johnson collection.
“It was really weird. He goes to Temple so we’d been saying for a while we wanted to go to the art museum,” his girlfriend, Nikkie Curtis, told ABCNews.com. “We went into the armor exhibit and he loved the helmets. He was completely oblivious to it, and I walked past it and was like, ‘Do you see this painting right now? It looks just like you.'”

Although Galuppo’s resemblance to the dark haired, huskily built, bearded face seems obvious to the 735 Reddit users who have commented on the photo since Curtis uploaded it to the site late Sunday night, Galuppo, at first, said he failed to recognize the similarity.

“To be honest, I didn’t see it. I didn’t see the resemblance,” Galuppo said. “And then I saw the picture of me next to it, and you can’t deny that.”

http://gma.yahoo.com/blogs/abc-blogs/man-finds-doppelganger-16th-century-italian-painting-172050412–abc-news-topstories.html

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