For most people, the concept of time travel is considered a very fascinating subject. The ability to go back and forth on time can give rise to many options.
However, this mystery will probably become even more mysterious if someone claims to have witnessed an important historical event by going back in time using a time travel machine.
We are talking about a certain invention called Chronovisor, with the help of which, reportedly, scenes from the life of Jesus Christ are recorded on photographic film. And now this device, as one believes, is kept in particularly strict confidentiality in the Vatican.


This story started with a man named Marcello Pellegrino Ernetti (1925-1992), who was born in Italy. He was a respected Catholic who devoted his entire life to the service of the church. He had many followers and students.
He was also known as an exorcist, one of the most popular in Venice, a musician, a Bible student and also a scientist. And one day, just before the outbreak of the Second World War, he claimed that he was part of a group that had created a time travel machine that they called the chronovisor.
Other members of the 12-person group are supposed to have recorded Enrico Fermi and Wernher von Braun, the famous Italian physicist and no less famous German rocket scientist.
Ernetti Further said That by the chronovisor, which appeared appearance on a television with a screen and a special keyboard, he with his own eyes saw the speeches of Cicero, Napoleon and scenes with the participation of Jesus Christ.
To support his statement, He showed A certain photo with Jesus, who is reportedly taken by the chronovisor.
News about the time travel machine spread like an ongoing fire. Many believers sincerely believed that the Vatican now has a mysterious and powerful device with which people can not only return to the past, but can also film and observe what happens in real time.
This photo was published in 1972 in the Italian magazine La Domenica del Corriere as the same photo of the chronovisor. And it was quickly proven that it was fake, because the image exactly copied the old postcard.


This revelation significantly undermined the credibility of Ernetti’s claims and the alleged existence of the chronovisor. Nevertheless, Ernetti claimed that the published photo was not an authentic representation of images produced by the chronovisor, stating that their device yielded images of a different quality.
In a further attempt to validate his claims, Ernetti also published a transcript of a lost game by the Roman poet Quintus Ennius, in Latin, which he attributed to the possibilities of the chronovisor.
François Brunet, a friend of Ernetti, claimed another layer to the mystery and claimed that tangible proof of the existence of the chronovisor, including a real photo of Christ, was destroyed during the Second World War. According to Brunet, Pope Pius XII and Benito Mussolini reportedly considered the device a threat to society.
Under their pressure, Brunet explained, Ernetti stopped the chronovisor project and probably dismantled the device. Brunet itself, however, remained skeptical about the full destruction of the device, which suggests that it could still live in Vatican archives, possibly in secret use.
Much of the information about the chronovisor was publicly by Brunet’s book from 2002, Le Nouveau Mystère du Vatican. Now that Ernetti passes a decade earlier, the truthfulness of these accounts remains uncertain, causing the lines between fact and speculation to fade.
Skeptical researchers often point out that although the theoretical possibility of some forms of time travel is discussed within physics, the chronovisor as described does not miss scientific plausibility.
In particular, the deceased physicist and cosmologist Stephen Hawking time travel concepts, which suggests that future journeys may be feasible by reaching extremely high speeds in space.
Similarly, physicist Fred Alan Wolf has theoretized that time travel could entail a nuanced interplay between consciousness and matter.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ndXF3kmkCpy