16 August 2009

Vandaliziing mummies

From a travel anthology, describing a visit to Egypt in 1586:
The twenty-eighth of April, I went to see the pyramids and momia... The momia are thousands of embalmed bodies which were buried thousands of years past in a sandy cave, at which there seemeth to have been some city in times past. We were let down by ropes, as into a well, with wax candles burning in our hands, and so walked upon the bodies of all sorts and sizes, some great and small, and some emblamed in little earthen pots, which never had form. These are set at the feet of the greater bodies. They have no noisome smell at all, but are like pitch, being broken. For I broke off all the parts of the bodies to see how the flesh was turned to drug, and brought home divers heads, hands, arms, and feet for a show. We brought also six hundred pounds for the Turkey Company in pieces; and brought into England in the Hercules, together with a whole body. They are lapped in above a hundred double of cloth, which rotting and peeling off, you may see the skin, flesh, fingers, and nails firm, only altered black. One little hand I brought into England to show, and presented it to my brother, who gave the same to a doctor in Oxford.
Found at Lapham's Quarterly.

2 comments:

  1. I just died, a little. Though to be honest, nothing has changed with respect to history or antiquities, in the time since.

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  2. Ugh. As an archaeologist, this type of antiquarianism disgusts me so much. I wish people understood that once you remove something from context, it is utterly and completely useless, from a cultural standpoint.

    And, really... why do you want decaying flesh? Seriously?

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