On top of the recent customs scandal, Noble cites news reports on the theft of organs of prisoners executed in China, and a body-snatching ring in New York City that stole and sold body parts from the dead to medical companies. However, it still continues - and in places you might not expect. Sugg found such examples as an Englishman, in 1847, being advised to mix the skull of a young woman with treacle and feed it to his daughter to cure her epilepsy (which he dutifully carried out, but allegedly it failed).Īnd in 1908, a last known attempt was made in Germany to swallow blood at the scaffold. In a dead thing insensate life remains which, when it is reunited with the stomachs of the living, regains sensitive and intellectual life.'Ĭannibalism is not a new phenomena - and can be found in many cultures across the world.Īccording to the The Smithsonian, the practice began to die out as science flourished - but it still existed in the 19th century. The other belief at the time was that human remains contained the soul of the body, with young men or virgin women seen as the 'freshest', and highly prized.Įven the great Renaissance man Leonardo da Vinci said: 'We preserve our life with the death of others.
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Sugg also quotes a French recipe from 1679, which describes how to turn blood into marmalade. He was a social leper with almost magical powers.' Sugg said: 'The executioner was considered a big healer in Germanic countries. Some followers advocated drinking blood fresh from the body, which does not seem to have caught on, but poor people could pay a small price for a cup of warm blood, served seconds after executions. The German-Swiss physician Paracelsus, in the 16th century, believed blood was good for drinking. Sugg also tells how fresh blood was highly valued for it's 'effects on vitality'. She found references in everything from John Donne’s 'Love’s Alchemy' to Shakespeare’s 'Othello'. Human fat was thought to cure gout, and German doctors soaked bandages in the fat for wounds.Ī clue to our grisly past can be found in our literature, says Noble, from the University of New England in Australia. Meanwhile the moss that grew over a buried skull, called Usnea, was used to cure nosebleeds and possibly epilepsy.
He explains how Thomas Willis, a 17th-century pioneer of brain science, brewed a drink for apoplexy, or bleeding, that mingled powdered human skull and chocolate. Sugg, from the University of Durham, told The Smithsonian: 'The question was not, "Should you eat human flesh?" but, "What sort of flesh should you eat?". Going back a little further in time, even King Charles II of England sipped 'The King’s Drops', a powder mix of human skull with alcohol.Īccording to a new book Medicinal Cannibalism in Early Modern English Literature and Culture, by Louise Noble, many Europeans - from royalty to scientists - routinely ate remedies containing human bones, fat and blood in order to solve everyday complains from headaches to epilepsy.Įven as the supernatural view of the world evolved into a scientific one, people still ascribed to the theory that eating a part of the body would help cure ailments in your own organ, for instance headaches could be cured by a potion of crushed skull, or drank blood to cure blood ailments.Īnother book, Mummies, Cannibals and Vampires: The History of Corpse Medicine from the Renaissance to the Victorians, by English university lecturer Richard Sugg, also shows the history of cannibalism in Europe. The world was, quite rightly, shocked by the reports - however two new books claim that Europeans saw no issue with cannibalism right into the 19th and 20th century.įrom creating candles made of human fat in the 1880s, to drinking blood at the scaffold, or making remedies out of crushed skull powder, many Europeans had no moral or ethical concerns about eating, drinking or otherwise using the bodies of dead people. The capsules, used as a medicinal 'cure-all', were thought to be the remains of aborted or still-born babies, which were stored, dried and crushed into powder. Only this week, it was reported that thousands of pills filled with powdered human flesh had been discovered by customs officials in South Korea. If Obama had a son, he'd look like them too!Įuropeans indulged in cannibalism until the 1900s, two new books claim Topic: Another Black Cannibal, but this time in Maryland! My profile | directory login | register | search | faq | forum homeĮgyptSearch Forums » Deshret » Another Black Cannibal, but this time in Maryland! EgyptSearch Forums: Another Black Cannibal, but this time in Maryland!