2015년 1월 26일 월요일

History of Embalming 3

 
History of Embalming 3

“On the fifteenth day the embalming should be completely terminated;
the mummy should be dry and light; the relatives send for it and
establish the most magnificent obsequies in their power. They sew up
the body in several folds of the skin, which they had prepared when
living, and they bind it with straps, retained by running knots. The
kings and the grandees were besides, placed in a case or coffin of a
single piece, and hollowed out of the trunk of the juniper tree, the
wood of which was held as incorruptible. They then finally, carried the
xaxos, thus sown and encased, to inaccessible grottoes consecrated to
this purpose.

“Another less expensive mode of preserving the dead, consisted in
drying them in the sun, after having introduced into the belly a
corrosive liquor: this liquor eats into the interior parts, where the
sun does not act sufficiently to prevent their corruption. Like the
other xaxos, the relatives sowed them in skins and carried them to the
grottoes.

“These mummies, such as they are found at the present day, are dry and
light; many have perfectly preserved their hair and beard, the nails
are often wanting; the features of the face are distinct, but shrunken;
the abdomen is contracted. In some, there exists no mark of incision,
in others are observed the trace of a rather large opening on the
flank. The xaxos are of a tanned colour, with generally an agreeable
odour; exposed to the air, out of the sacks of goat skin, which are
admirably preserved, they fall by degrees into dust; they are punctured
in many places; surrounded by the chrysalides of flies, proceeding
probably from maggots, deposited upon the body during its preparation:
these larvæ and chrysalides, which could not be reproduced, are
preserved whole and healthy like the mummies.

“The Chevalier Scory says, that these mummies are two thousand years
old: it is difficult to determine how long they have been preserved;
but we shall see in the sequel that it has been certainly more than
two thousand years since the Guanches embalmed. I willingly believe
that, in the corrosive composition which they employed in the second
kind of embalming, and probably in all cases, the Guanches made use of
the juice of the spurge; they doubtless employed the species proper
to their climate, which is acrid and milky; I have recognised whole
pieces in the chest of a mummy, in which, nevertheless, there existed
no traces of an incision. Leaves, also, it is said, have been taken
from the body in a good state of preservation, and have been recognised
as those of the laurel. During the exposure of the body to the sun,
they extend the arms of the men along the side of the trunk, and for
the most part crossing those of the women before the lower part of the
abdomen. From time to time new catacombs are discovered in the Canary
islands. In 1758, they found one at Palma; but the mummies were either
very old, or badly embalmed, they soon fell into powder. At Fer, there
was found on the tables where the xaxos had laid, the furniture which
the deceased had used during life. In this island they wall up these
caverns, to prevent them being used as retreats for birds of prey and
for crows.

“At the Canaries, they do not limit themselves always to placing
the mummies in grottoes; they elevated special tombs to certain
distinguished dead. These privileged dead, dressed in their garment,
called tamareo, were placed upon elevated planks of pine wood, with the
head turned towards the north; they afterwards constructed above, a
monument of hard stone, pyramidal in form, and often very high. Many
catacombs are known to exist in Teneriffe; the most celebrated is that
of Baranco de Herque, between Arico and Guimar, in the Abona country:
it was discovered during the time that Clarijo wrote his _Noticias_. He
states that they there met with more than a thousand mummies, whilst in
other cases only three or four hundred had been found at a time. From
hence they brought the xaxos, which are in the cabinet of the King of
Spain, and the two which M. de Chastenet-Puysegur sent in 1776, to the
Garden of Plants: one of them unfortunately wants the feet.”

We abstain from all reflection on the recital which precedes. Their
analogy to the Egyptian process will occur of itself to the mind of the
reader, in the description which follows. Nevertheless, we ought to
indicate a fact observed of two Guanch mummies; a fact omitted in the
preceding description.

M. Jouannet, a modest and laborious investigator, has proved, that two
Guanch mummies that were in his possession, had the eyes, nose, and
mouth, filled with bitumen, like some of the Egyptian mummies. The
skins which enveloped them were carefully closed, and nothing indicated
that the bitumen was an addition posterior to embalming.




CHAPTER IV.

EMBALMING AMONG THE ANCIENT EGYPTIANS.


Since the ignorance we are in, relative to the language of this great
nation, places it out of our power to know, of ourselves, the causes
and processes for the preservation of dead bodies, let us follow the
recital of ancient authors, let us endeavour to detect, not by the
imagination, but by positive facts, by the study of invariable exterior
conditions, the different data of the question of embalming among the
Egyptians.

In the first place, if we make allowance for all that the successive
perfection of the arts, luxury, or the love of distinction could add to
simple preservation, we shall arrive, with Rouelle, to this conclusion,
that the work of embalming is reduced to two essential parts: first,
the drying of the body, that is to say, removing the fluids and grease
which they contain; secondly, to protect the body thus prepared, from
external humidity and contact of the air. We have already seen all
the aid which they derived from their climate to fulfil the first
condition: a detailed description will teach us what their industry
enabled them to add to it. As to the second, the nature of their
caverns powerfully contributed.

These vast cavities, says Pelletan, sheltered from the inundations of
the Nile, have, without doubt, originally furnished the materials for
the monuments of Thebes, and the architects of the day thus hollowed
out the tombs of families in elevating their palaces. Their whole
surface, from the entrance, even to the deepest recesses of these dark
excavations, are covered with sepultures and fresco paintings. Each
framed subject forms so many little pictures which touch each other,
and the figures of which are not more than two or three inches in
height, so that the whole extent of these double walls, the development
of which is incalculable, has been the object of minute labour. The
sculptures are in bas-relief, and covered with equable tints, but
lively, _and in very good preservation_. The points of rock unconnected
with the work, have been covered with a composition perfectly solid,
and so durable, that, as yet, _no other degradation is observable, than
that produced by the efforts of some travellers to carry off fragments
of it_. Perspective is always wanting in these pictures; the bodies are
viewed in full, the faces in profile; but the design is pure and the
proportions just; we find nothing to indicate ignorance in the artist;
which presumes for the Egyptians, if not great perfection in the arts,
at least a great popularity in their practice. The subject of these
paintings are domestic scenes, and generally followed by a funeral
procession; from whence it may be inferred, that they refer to the life
of the man enclosed in each of the lateral niches. The temperature of
the caverns is 20° R.

It appeared to us convenient thus to give a summary of the conditions
of drying, and of the ulterior preservation, before presenting
descriptions which have been more or less accurately transmitted to
us, of the part that man has had in this operation.

Herodotus, Diodorus Sicculus, and Porphyrus, who have written with the
greatest detail on the funerals of the Egyptians, will afford us the
first instructions.

Herodotus. “Mourning and funerals are conducted after this manner: when
a man of consideration dies, all the women of his house (_oiketes_)
cover the head and even the face with mud; they leave the deceased in
the house, girdle the middle of their bodies, bare the bosom, strike
the breast, and overrun the city, accompanied by their relations.
On the other side, the men also girdle themselves and strike their
breasts; after this ceremony, they carry the body to the place where it
is to be embalmed.”

The following, after Diodorus Sicculus, (book 1st, vol. i. p. 102,
§ xcii.) is the ceremony of sepulture among the Egyptians: “The
relatives fix the day for the obsequies, in order that the judges,
the relations, and friends of the dead may be present, and they
characterize it by saying, he is going to pass the lake; afterwards
the judges, to the number of more than forty arriving, they place
themselves in the form of a semi-circle beyond the lake. A batteau
approaches the shore, carrying those who have charge of this ceremony,
and in which is a sailor, whom the Egyptians name in their language
_Charon_. They say, further, that Orpheus having remarked this custom
in his voyage in Egypt, took occasion from it to imagine the fable
of hell, imitating a portion of these ceremonies, and adding to them
others of his own invention. Before placing in the batteau the coffin
containing the body of the deceased, it is lawful for each one present
to accuse him. If they prove that he has led a sinful life, the judges
condemn him, and he is excluded from the place of his sepulture. If
it appear that he has been unjustly accused, they punish the accuser
with severity. If no accuser presents himself, or if the one who does
so is known as a calumniator, the relatives, putting aside the signs
of their grief, deliver an eulogium on the deceased without mentioning
his birth, as is practised among the Grecians, because they considered
all Egyptians equally noble. They enlarge on the manner in which he
has been schooled and instructed from his childhood; upon his piety,
justice, temperance, and his other virtues since he attained manhood,
and they pray the Gods of hell to admit him into the dwelling of the
pious. The people applauded and glorified the dead who were to pass all
eternity in the abodes of the happy. If any one has a monument destined
for his sepulture, his body is there deposited; if he has none, they
construct a room in his house, and place the bier upright against
the most solid part of the wall. They place in their houses those to
whom sepulture has not been awarded, either on account of crimes, of
which they are accused, or on account of the debts which they may
have contracted; and it happens sometimes in the end that they obtain
honourable sepulture, their children or descendants becoming rich,
pay their debts or absolve them.” Orpheus communicated to the Greeks
these usages of the Egyptians, applied to hell. Homer, following in his
steps, adorned his poetry with them: “_Mercury_,” says he, “his wand
in his hand, convoked the souls of the candidates.” And further on:
“They traversed the ocean, passed near Leucadia, entered by the gate of
the sun, (_Heliopolis_,) the country of dreams, and soon attained the
fields of Asphodelia, where inhabit the souls who are the images of
death.”

But to return to the recital of Herodotus. “There are in Egypt, certain
persons whom the law charges with embalming, and who make a profession
of it.

“When a body is brought to them, they show the bearers models of the
dead in wood. The most renowned represents, they say, _him whose name
I am scrupulous to mention_; they show a second, which is inferior to
the first, and which is not so costly; they again show a third of a
lower price. They afterwards demand after which of the three models
they wish the deceased to be embalmed. After agreeing about the price,
the relatives retire; the embalmers work alone, and proceed as follows,
in the most costly embalming. They first withdraw the brain through the
nostrils, in part with a curved iron instrument, and in part by means
of drugs, which they introduce into the head; they afterwards make an
incision in the flank with a sharp Ethiopian stone.

“The body being extended upon the earth, the scribe traces on the left
flank the portion to be cut out. He who is charged with making the
incision, cuts with an Ethiopian stone, as much as the law allows;
which having done, he runs off with all his might, the assistants
follow, throwing stones after him, loading him with imprecations, as
if they wished to put upon him this crime. They regard, indeed, with
horror, whoever does violence to a body of the same nature as their
own. Whoever wounds it, or in one word, whoever _offers it any harm_.”
(_Diodorus_, book I, t. i. p. 102.)

“They withdraw the intestines through this opening, clean them, and
pass them through palm wine, place them in a trunk; and among other
things they do for the deceased, they take this trunk, and calling the
sun to witness, one of the embalmers on the part of the dead, addresses
that luminary in the following words, which Euphantus has translated
from his vernacular tongue. ‘Sun, and ye too, Gods, who have given
life to men, receive me, and grant that I may live with the eternal
Gods; I have persisted all my life in the worship of those Gods, whom
I hold from my fathers, I have ever honoured the Author of my being, I
have killed no one, I have committed no breach of trust, I have done
no other evil: if I have been guilty of any other fault during life,
it was not on my own account, but for these things.’ The embalmer,
in finishing these words, shows the trunk containing the intestines,
and afterwards casts it into the river. As to the rest of the body,
when it was pure, they embalmed it.” (_Porphyr., De abstinentia ab esu
animalium_, book 17, § 10, p. 329.)

“Afterwards they fill the body with pure bruised myrrh, with canella
and other perfumes, excepting incense; it is then sown up. When that
is done they salt the body in covering it with _natrum_ for seventy
days.” (Natrum, with the intention of carrying off, and drying the
oily, lymphatic, and greasy parts; but this ought to have been the
first operation, for if they had commenced with filling the body with
myrrh and aromatics, previous to salting it, the natrum, acting on
the balsamic matters, and forming with their oils a soapy matter,
very soluble and readily carried off by the lotions, would have
destroyed the greater part of the aromatics. Besides, Diodorus does
not mention natrum.) “It is not permitted to let them remain longer
in the salt. The seventy days elapsed, they wash the body and entirely
envelope it in linen and cotton bandages, soaked with gum Arabic,
_commi_, which the Egyptians used generally in place of glue.[I] The
relatives now reclaim the body; they have made a wooden case of the
human form, in which they enclose the corpse, and put it in a chamber
destined for this purpose, standing erect against the wall. Such is
the most magnificent method of embalming the dead. Those who wish to
avoid the expense choose this other method; they fill syringes with
an unctuous liquor which they obtain from the cedar; with this they
inject the belly of the corpse without making any incision, and without
withdrawing the intestines; when this liquor has been introduced into
the fundament they cork it, in order to prevent its ejectment; the
body is then salted for the prescribed time. The last day, they draw
off from the body the injected liquor; it has such strength that it
dissolves the ventricles and intestines, which come away with the
liquid. The natrum destroys the flesh, and there remains of the body,
only the skin and bones. This operation finished, they return the body
without doing anything further to it.

  [I] It is not improbable that the use of these gummy bandages
  gave origin to the new and improved method of bandaging fractured
  limbs--the bandages being first soaked in a solution of gum Arabic,
  or in a preparation of starch, called dextrine.--_Tr._

“The third kind of embalming is only for the poorer classes of society.
They inject the body with a fluid named _surmata_; they put the body
into _natrum_ for seventy days, and they afterwards return it to those
who brought it. As to ladies of quality, when they are dead, they
are not immediately sent to the embalmers, any more than such as are
beautiful or highly distinguished; these are reserved for three or four
days after death. They take this precaution lest the embalmers might
pollute the bodies confided to their care.

“It is reported that one was surprised in the act, with a woman
recently dead, and that on the accusation of one of his comrades.”

The preceding recitals have been the subject of numerous commentations,
discussions, and researches. It is astonishing that Herodotus has
omitted desiccation; but it naturally took place during the time
consecrated to preparation. Some assert that the body was in the
first place salted, and subsequently penetrated with resinous and
balsamic substances, which, incorporating with the flesh, prevented
putrefaction: others pretend that the body, after having been salted,
was dried, and that it was not until after this desiccation that the
resinous and balsamic substances were applied. A simple inspection of
the mummies is sufficient to reject the first opinion. What union,
indeed, could these last named matters have contracted with the fluids
of the tissues? and how can we conceive from thence, that bodies often
filled with corrupted serosity, could have resisted the intestine
effects of such active causes in producing decomposition?

M. Rouelle thought that the _natrum_ was a fixed alkali, which acted
after the manner of quick-lime, despoiling the bodies of their
lymphatic and greasy fluids, leaving only the fibrous and solid parts.
Thus viewing in this manner the Egyptian process, it removes an error
into which Herodotus has fallen on the subject of the first class of
embalming. It is there stated, that they filled the belly of the corpse
with myrrh, canella, and other perfumes, except _incense_, and that
afterwards they put it into the _natrum_ and then washed it. But of
what use would have been these resinous matters, with which the alkali
of the _natrum_ would soon form a soapy mass, which the lotions would
have carried off, at least, in great part? It is much more reasonable
to suppose that these balsamic and resinous substances were not applied
to the bodies until after they were withdrawn from the _natrum_.

The same author points out another inaccuracy, in what Herodotus has
taught us on the bandages of the mummies. Very few mummies, says he,
are enveloped agreeably to the description of Herodotus, that is
to say, the linen bandages are not glued together with gum alone,
applied directly to the body when simply dried without any resinous
substances. Such kind of embalming is the least costly, although
Herodotus describes it as the richest and dearest. The mummy preserved
in the cabinet of St. Genevieve, and the two which are in that of the
Celestins, may throw some new light on this passage of Herodotus, and
confirm my conjectures. These mummies have two kinds of bandages; the
body and the limbs are each separately invested with linen bandages,
endued with resin or bitumen, and they are so intimately united
together that they form but one mass. This is doubtless the reason that
some authors have believed that this thickness was only embalmed flesh.
There are other linen bandages without any bituminous substance, which
envelope the whole body; both the arms are crossed upon the stomach,
and the legs are glued together; these mummies are swaddled in new
bandages, or, if you please, by this last bandage, just as infants are
swaddled; these bandages are yellow, particularly those of the mummy
of the cabinet of Saint Genevieve, and are absolutely destitute of
resinous substance. We may, then, readily conclude, that these bandages
have been only simply invested with gum. It appears that Herodotus had
forgotten to describe the use of the first bandage, employed to retain
the resinous matter on the surface of the body, and having probably
seen among the embalmers, or elsewhere, some bodies swaddled like
infants, he only described the second bandage.

If we examine with attention, the mummy of Saint Genevieve, and those
of the cabinet of the Celestins, it will be perceived that the second
bandage is equally a suit of ordinary embalming; for the mummy of
the Celestins, of which the first bandage has been removed, no doubt
in order to see the process of embalming, has the bands of the first
bandage of a very clear and coarse linen: the bands of that of Saint
Genevieve, on the contrary, are much finer, whilst the substances of
the embalming of the two mummies are the same.

I am persuaded that mummies seldom come to us with the second bandage,
and that the preservation of those of the mummies of the cabinet of
Saint Genevieve, and of the Celestins, is only due to the state of the
cases which hold them, or to the peculiar care of those who sent them.

In fine, Rouelle has analysed the substance of embalmings, and the
result of the analysis made on six mummies gave him for two, amber,
for the four others, Jew’s pitch or pisasphaltum, a mixture, into the
composition of which, Jew’s pitch enters. Rouelle met with no traces
of myrrh in any mummy. From these facts he arrives at the following
conclusion: “Our experiments, then, furnish us with three materially
different embalmings. The first, with Jew’s pitch; the second, with
a mixture of bitumen, and the liquor of cedar, or _cedria_; and the
third, with that mixture, to which they have added resinous and very
aromatic matters.”

We confine ourselves to these reflections upon the processes described
by the ancients, and given by them as those alone practised in Egypt.

We are going to cite some passages from the very remarkable memoir
of M. Rouyer, from which it will be readily perceived that they were
ignorant of several methods in use among these people. Nevertheless, it
is just to give here some explanations which throw new light upon the
sources which we have reproduced; they are principally extracted from
the memoir of the Count de Caylus.

The exhibition of models on the part of the embalmers, had reference
to the richness of the work demanded, and to the expense of the chosen
form. The first model, which Herodotus had scruples in naming, was
probably the figure of some divinity, (_Isis._) Herodotus does not
mention the price, and it is probable, that Diodorus has made his
valuations without being any too well acquainted with them. According
to his estimation, the first cost one talent, (about nine hundred
dollars of our money;) the second, twenty mina, (three hundred
dollars;) the third, a trifle, (vague.) Diodorus continues in these
terms: “The office of burying is a particular profession, which, like
all others, has been learned from infancy. Those who exercise it, go
to the relatives of the deceased with a scale or rate of charges, and
request them to make a selection. Having agreed, they take the body and
give it to the officers whose duty it is to prepare it.”

In the head, which was sent by M. de Caylus, the skull had been
actually pierced through the nostrils, and the bottom of the right
orbit opened. As to perfume, the exception in favour of the incense
is probably made out of respect to the divinity. He observed no trace
of incision, nor were they at all necessary. The extreme dryness of
the skin, and the solidity it acquires by the bitumen, renders such
operation useless.

The Egyptians employed their natrum as we employ lime, to prepare
and tan leather. Also kommi, or gum Arabic of Senegal. As respects
bandages, they had many kinds; whether as regards the quality of the
linen, or the manner of arranging them, more simple or more complex.
As many as a thousand ells of these narrow bands have been found on a
single mummy.

Diodorus, after speaking of those who make the incision, adds: “those
who salt come afterwards: these officers are highly respected in Egypt;
they hold commerce with the priests, and the entrance to sacred places
is open to them, the same as to persons who are themselves sacred. They
assemble around a corpse which has just been opened, and one of them
introduces his hand through the incision into the body, and withdraws
all the viscera, excepting the heart and kidneys. Another, continues
he, washes them in palm wine and odoriferous liquors; they afterwards
anoint the body for thirty days with cedar, gum, myrrh, cinnamon, and
other perfumes, which not only contributes to preserve the body in its
integrity a very long time, but which also causes it to shed a very
sweet odour. They then return to the relatives, the body restored to
its original form, in such a manner that even the hair of the eyelids
and eyebrows remain unruffled, and the corpse preserves its natural
expression of countenance and personal bearing. Many Egyptian families,
having, by this means, preserved a whole race of ancestors, experience
an inexpressible consolation in thus beholding them in the same figure,
and with the same physiognomy, as if they were still living.”

As regards those who have been killed by a crocodile, or who have been
drowned in the river, the inhabitants of the city nearest to which
the body has been cast ashore, are obliged to embalm it; to adjust it
in the most magnificent manner, and deposit it in the sacred tombs.
Neither the relatives or friends are permitted to touch these bodies;
they are embalmed alone by the priests of the Nile, considering them as
something above humanity.--(_Herodotus._) Are these sacred tombs those
of the God Apis? Were there places of sepulchre different from the
caves and pyramids?

The expense and care required for the embalming of princes must have
been immense, as may be conjectured by the following fact. A portion
of mummy preserved in the cabinet of Saint Genevieve, merits all the
eulogiums that could be given to an object of this kind. It consists of
the foot, leg, and thigh of an infant two or three years old; the care
with which this embalming was made, was known to those who presented it
to the cabinet, for they had written upon the box which contained this
precious relic of the art, _mummy of the little prince of Memphis_.
This denomination has no other foundation, perhaps, than the nature of
the work, and the sensible difference observed between this and other
mummies. The surface of the flesh is black, and so smooth that it may
be compared to a fine Chinese varnish; the flesh has not altogether
preserved its softness, but all the thickness and plumpness peculiar
to little children can be distinguished, as well as the articulations
and all the little wrinkles of the fingers. The nails are perfectly
preserved and well set on; they have neither colour nor gilding,
although they appear to have been gilded. The bandages do not appear
to have been imbued with the same bitumens used for other mummies; the
colour which they have acquired by the dried balsamic materials, as
might be anticipated, resembles that of canella, although the odour,
which is agreeable, has no analogy to that aromatic.

The bandages are fine, detached, and proportioned to the body which
they cover; they are arranged with the greatest care and repeated a
great number of times. Besides, the thigh bone, of which there is about
four fingers breadth uncovered, has suffered very little alteration
in its colour, nothing more than what the air alone might produce.
Rouelle, with whom M. de Caylus visited this mummy, remarked, on
piercing with a pin the sole of this foot, that the skin resembled
stretched parchment, and was empty beneath--all of which proves a
richer and more extensive preparation destined for princes. We may add
to this conjecture, that the cases of touchstone, or of basalt, always
expensive on account of their hardness, cases so rare that only three
or four have been found, may be supposed to have been made only for
princes, and even the more eminent of those.

We have not hesitated to include in this work the preceding
observations, because they appeared to us necessary to rectify or
complete the facts advanced by Herodotus, Diodorus Sicculus, Plutarch,
Porphyrus, and many others. But the whole of these materials have need
of new lights, drawn from researches made upon the spot. The scientific
commission of Egypt felt the necessity of this, and several of its
members applied themselves to personal examinations of the pyramids
and caverns; and one of them, M. Rouyer, in his memoir on Egyptian
embalming, traces us a history nearly complete. The following are the
most interesting details:

The art of embalming is totally unknown at the present day in those
places which gave it birth, and it has remained buried in profound
forgetfulness, since Egypt, which, long the home of the sciences and
the arts, has been overrun and successively ravaged by barbarian
nations, who have destroyed all its institutions, political and
religious.

“The historians, to whom we are indebted for all we know at the present
time of the ancient wonders of Egypt, and who have written during
the period when the Egyptians still possessed some of their customs,
could alone transmit to us the ingenious secret of embalming; but
their recitals prove, that they themselves possessed but an imperfect
knowledge of it.”

All the ancient authors agree, in saying that the Egyptians made
use of various aromatics to embalm the dead; that they employed for
the rich, myrrh, (the resin of a species of _Mimosa_,) aloes, (the
extracto-resinous juice of the _Aloe perfoliata_,) canella, (bark of
the _Laurus cinamomum_,) and the cassia lignea, (bark of the _Laurus
cassia_;) and for the poor, the cedria, (the fluid resin of the _Pinus
cedrus_,) bitumen, (_Bitumen judaicum_, derived from the Dead sea,) and
natrum, (a mixture of the carbonate, sulphate, and muriate of soda.)

“Although the recitals of Herodotus, and of Diodorus Sicculus, on
embalming, are not very complete, and that some details appear inexact
and improbable, as several of the French investigators have observed,
however, on placing in convenient order what Herodotus relates on
this subject, we shall soon perceive that he has described in a few
lines almost the whole theory of embalming. The Egyptian embalmers
knew how to distinguish from the other viscera, the liver, the spleen,
and the kidneys, which they did not disturb; they had discovered
the means of withdrawing the brain from the interior of the cranium
without destroying the bones of the latter; they knew the action of
the alkalies upon animal matter, since the time was strictly limited
that the body could remain in contact with these substances; they
were not ignorant of the property of balsams, and resins to protect
the bodies from the larvæ of insects and mites; they were likewise
aware of the necessity of enveloping the dried and embalmed bodies, in
order to protect them from humidity, which would interfere with their
preservation. These people had established invariable rules and a
certain method for the process of embalming. We remark, in effect, that
the labour of those who were charged with embalming the dead, consisted
in two principal operations, very distinct: the first, to subtract from
the interior of the corpse all that might become a cause of corruption
during the time allotted to dry it; the second, to secure the body from
any cause that might subsequently occasion its destruction.

“The odoriferous resins and bitumen not only preserved from
destruction, but also kept at a distance, the worms and beetles which
devour dead bodies. The embalmers, after having washed the bodies with
that vineous liquor which Herodotus and Diodorus call palm wine, and
having filled them with odoriferous resins or bitumen, they placed
them in stoves, where, by means of a convenient heat, these resinous
substances united intimately with the bodies, and these arrive in very
little time, to that state of perfect desiccation in which we find them
at the present day. This operation, of which no historian has spoken,
was, without doubt, the principal and most important of embalming.

“The most noted grottoes and pyramids have been sacked by the Arabs.
Also, in search of treasure, they have penetrated into the bosom of
mountains, and descended into those vast and deep excavations, where
they arrive only by long canals, with which some are encumbered. Here,
in chambers, or species of pits, worked into the rock, are found
millions of mummies, piled upon each other, which appear to have been
arranged with a certain symmetry, although many are now found displaced
and broken.

“Near these deep pits, which served for a common sepulture for several
families, we meet also with other smaller chambers, and some narrow
cavities in form of niches, which were destined to hold one mummy
only, or at most two. The grottoes of Thebes enclose a great number
of mummies, better preserved than those in the caverns and pits of
Saggarah. It is particularly, near the ruins of Thebes, in the interior
of the mountains which extend from the entrance of the valley of the
Tomb of Kings, to Medynet Abou, that I have seen many entire and well
preserved mummies.

“It would be impossible for me to estimate the prodigious number
of those which I have found scattered and heaped in the sepulchral
chambers, and in the multitude of caverns which exist in the interior
of this mountain. I have developed and examined a great number of them,
as much with the view of inquiring into their state, and examining the
preparation, as with the hope of finding idols, papyrus, and other
curious objects, that the most part of these mummies enclose beneath
their envelopes. I have not remarked, what Maillet asserts, caverns
specially destined to the sepulture of men, of women, and of infants;
but I was surprised to find so few infant mummies in the tombs which
I visited. These embalmed bodies, among which we meet with nearly
an equal number of men and women, and which at first view appear to
resemble each other, and to have been prepared in the same manner,
differ, nevertheless, in the various substances which have been
employed to embalm them, or in the arrangement and in the quality of
the linen employed to envelope them.”

The Count de Caylus, and the celebrated chemist, Rouelle, have supposed
that all the cloths that enveloped the mummies were of cotton; I have
found a great number of them which were enveloped in linen bandages,
of a much finer tissue than those of cotton, which are commonly
found around mummies prepared with less care. The mummies of birds,
particularly those of the Ibis, are also enveloped with linen bandages.

“On examining with attention and in detail some of the mummies found
in the tombs, I have distinguished two principal classes: those in
which they have made, on the left side above the groin, an incision
about two and a half inches long, penetrating into the lower cavity of
the belly; and those which have no incision whatever in any part of
the body. In both classes, we find many mummies with the partition of
the nose torn, and the ethmoidal bone entirely destroyed; but some of
the last class have the spongy bones untouched, and the ethmoidal bone
entire, which might make it appear that, sometimes the embalmers did
not disturb the brain. The opening found in the side of most mummies,
was doubtless made in all cases of select embalming, not only for the
purpose of withdrawing the intestines, which are not found in any of
these desiccated bodies, but also the better to clean the cavity of the
belly, and to fill it with a greater quantity of aromatic and resinous
substances, the volume of which contributed to preserve the body, at
the same time that the strong odour of the resins kept off the insects
and worms. This opening does not appear to me to have been sewn up, as
Herodotus asserts; the borders have only been brought together, and are
retained so by desiccation.

“1. Among the mummies with an incision in the left side, I distinguish
those which have been desiccated by means of tanno-balsamic substances,
and those that have been salted. The mummies that have been dried
by means of astringent and balsamic substances, are filled as with
a mixture of aromatic resins, and the others with asphaltum or pure
bitumen.

“Mummies filled with aromatic resins are of an olive colour; the skin
is dry and flexible, like tanned leather; it is rather contracted upon
itself, and appears to form but one body with the fibres and the bones,
the features of the face are recognizable, and appear to be the same
as in the living state; the belly and chest are filled with a mixture
of friable resins, soluble in part in spirits of wine: these resins
possess no particular odour rendering them recognizable; but, thrown
upon living coals, they shed a thick smoke and a strongly aromatic
odour. These mummies are very dry, and easily unrolled and broken; they
still preserve all their teeth, the hair of the head and eyebrows. Some
of them have been gilded over the whole surface of the body; others are
gilded only on the face, the natural parts, on the hands and on the
feet; these gildings are common to a considerable number of mummies,
which prevents me from partaking in the opinion of some travellers, who
suppose that this kind of decoration was restricted to princes, and
persons of a very distinguished rank.

“These mummies which have been prepared with great care, are
unalterable so long as they are retained in a dry place; but, unbound,
and exposed to the air, they promptly attract moisture, and after a few
days shed a disagreeable odour.

“Mummies filled with pure bitumen, are of a black colour; the skin
is hard and shining, as if it had been covered with a varnish, the
features of the face are not altered; the belly, breast, and head, are
filled with a resinous substance, black, hard, and with but little
odour. This matter, which I have taken from the interior of many
mummies, has presented the same physical characters, and has given, by
chemical analysis, the same results as the Jew’s pitch of commerce.
These sort of mummies, which are met with commonly enough in all
caverns, are dry, heavy, without odour, difficult to unfold and to
break. Almost all have the face, the natural parts, the hands, and the
feet gilded; they appear to have been prepared with much care; they are
very little susceptible of alteration, and do not attract the moisture
of the air. The mummies with an incision in the left side, and which
have been salted, are equally filled, the one with resinous substances,
and the other with asphaltum. These two sorts differ but little from
the preceding: the skin has also a blackish colour, but it is hard,
smooth, and stretched like parchment; there is a space existing beneath
it, and it is not glued against the bones; the resins and bitumen which
have been injected into the belly and chest are less friable, and do
not reserve any odour; the features of the face are somewhat altered,
very little hair remains, which falls when touched. These two sorts of
mummies exist in great numbers in all the caverns: when unwrapped and
exposed to the air, they absorb moisture, and become covered with a
light saline efflorescence, which I have ascertained to be sulphate of
soda.

“2. Amongst those mummies without an incision in the left side, nor in
any other part of the body, and from which the intestines have been
withdrawn from the fundament, I also distinguish two sorts; those which
have been salted, and then filled with a bituminous matter less pure
than that which historians and naturalists call _pisasphaltum_; and
those which have been only salted.

“The injections with _cedria_, or the surmaia for dissolving the
intestines, according to Herodotus, could not produce this effect; it
is much more reasonable to suppose that these injections were composed
of natrum rendered caustic, which dissolved the viscera; and that after
having emptied the intestines, the embalmers filled the belly with
cedria, or with some other fluid resin which dried with the body.

“The salted mummies, which are filled with pisasphaltum, no longer
retain any recognizable feature: not only have all the cavities of the
body been filled with this bitumen, but the surface is also covered
with it. This matter has so penetrated the skin, the muscles, and the
bones, that it forms with them but one and the same mass.

“On examining these mummies, we are led to believe that the bituminous
matter has been injected very hot, and that the bodies have been
plunged into a kettle containing bitumen in liquifaction. These
mummies, the most common and numerous of all those we meet with in the
caverns, are black, hard, heavy, of a penetrating and disagreeable
odour; they are very difficult to break; they have no longer either
hair or eyebrows, none have been found gilded. Some of them only have
the palm of the hands, the soles of the feet, the nails of the fingers
and toes tinged with red, with this same colour used by the natives of
Egypt of the present day, to stain the palms of the hand and soles of
the feet, (the henna, or _Lawsonia inermis_.) The bituminous matter
which I have taken from them, is greasy to the touch, less black,
and less friable than asphaltum; it communicates to every thing that
touches it, a strong and penetrating odour; it is only imperfectly
soluble in alcohol; thrown upon living coals it sheds a thick smoke,
and disagreeable odour; distilled, it yields an abundant oil, thick, of
a brown colour, and fetid odour. These are the species of mummies which
the Arabs, and inhabitants of the vicinity of the plain of Saggarah,
formerly sold to Europeans, and which became an article of commerce
for the use of medicine and painting, or as objects of antiquity;
those filled with Jew’s pitch were preferred, since it is to this
matter, which had for a long time remained in the body, they attributed
formerly such marvellous medicinal properties; this substance, which
was named _balm of mummy_, was subsequently in great request among the
oil painters; it is on this account, that at first the mummy filled
with bitumen was the only kind known in France. They are very little
exposed to alteration; exposed to humidity, they become covered with
a slight saline efflorescence with a base of soda. Mummies which have
been only salted and dried, are generally more badly preserved than
those in which are found resins and bitumen.

“Many varieties are met with in these last sort of mummies; but it
appears that this is due to the want of care and negligence of the
embalmers in their preparation. Some, still entire, have the skin dry,
white, smooth, and stretched like parchment; they are light, inodorous,
and easily broken; others have the skin equally white, but a little
supple; having been less dried, they have assumed a fatty state. We
find also in these mummies, masses of that fatty, yellowish matter,
which naturalists call _adipocere_. The features of the face are
entirely destroyed, the eyebrows and hair have fallen; the bones become
detached from their ligaments without any effort, they are as white and
clean as those of a skeleton prepared for the study of osteology; the
cloth which envelopes them, tears, and falls to pieces at the slightest
touch. These sort of mummies, commonly found in particular caves,
contain a considerable quantity of saline substance, which I have
ascertained to consist almost entirely of sulphate of soda. The various
species of mummies of which I have just spoken, are swarthed with an
art which it would be difficult to imitate. Numerous linen bandages,
several metres in length compose their envelope; they are applied one
over the other, to the number of fifteen or twenty thicknesses, and
thus make several revolutions, first around each member, then around
the whole body; they are so compact, and interlaced with so much
address and skill, that they appear to have endeavoured by this means,
to render to these bodies, considerably reduced by desiccation, their
original form and natural thickness.

“All the mummies are enveloped nearly in the same manner; there is no
other difference than the number of the bandages which surround them,
and the quality of the linen, the tissue of which is more or less
fine, according as the embalming was more or less precious. The body
embalmed, is at first covered with a narrow chemise, we find only one
large bandage enveloping the whole body. The head is covered with a
piece of square linen cloth, of a very fine texture, the centre of
which forms a species of mask; five or six are thus found sometimes
applied one upon the other; the last being generally painted or gilded,
and represents the figure of the person embalmed. Each part of the body
is separately enveloped by several bandages impregnated with resin. The
legs brought together, and the arms crossed upon the chest, are fixed
in this position by other bandages which envelope the whole body. These
latter, generally loaded with hieroglyphical figures, and fixed by long
fillets which traverse each other with much art and symmetry, finish
the envelope.

“Immediately after these first bands, are found various idols in gold,
bronze, varnished terra cotta, wood, gilded or painted, rolls of
papyri manuscripts, and many other objects which have no relation to
the religion of these people, but which appear to be only souvenirs of
objects cherished during life. It was in one of these mummies, placed
in the bottom of a cave of the interior of the mountain, (behind the
Memnonium temple of the plain of Thebes,) that I found a voluminous
papyrus, which will be found engraved in the work. (Vide the plates 61,
62, 63, 64 and 65, of the second vol. of the plates of antiquities, and
the description of the Hypogees of the city of Thebes.) This papyrus
was rolled upon itself, and had been placed between the thighs of the
patient, immediately after the first bandages of linen; this male
mummy, the trunk of which was broken, did not appear to me to have been
embalmed in a first rate manner; it had been enveloped in an ordinary
linen cloth, and had been filled with asphaltum: the nails of the toes
had alone been gilded.

“Almost all the mummies which are found in the subterranean caverns,
which can yet be penetrated, are thus enveloped with linen bandages,
with a painted masque on the face. It is rare to find any enclosed
in cases, of which some wrecks only remain at the present day. These
cases, which served doubtless, only for the rich, or for persons of
distinction, were double; those in which the mummies were deposited,
were made of a kind of carton or pasteboard, composed of many pieces
glued together; this case was subsequently enclosed in a second,
constructed of the wood of sycamore or cedar.”

It results, if we are not mistaken, from the analogy of so many
carefully made observations, a consequence to which we might not
have arrived by long continued reasoning: simple embalming might
have been practised among the Egyptians from the earliest period of
their civilization, without a very exact knowledge of the laws of
preservation of animal matter, and before the other arts were far
advanced. A description of the Plain of Mummies by M. de Maillet, will
give to this opinion, already so firmly established, the value of a
demonstrated truth.

“Opposite the borough of Manof, looking towards the west, is situated
the Plain of Mummies--approximated to the north by the southern
pyramids, which are a continuation of the cemetery which the
inhabitants of Memphis had on this side--a plain famous, from the
number of mummies which have been taken of late from the subterranean
caverns which exist beneath these sands, and by the still greater
numbers of the embalmed bodies which it encloses. This plain is
circular and level, and may be about four leagues in breadth or
diameter, so that it is certain that it is more than twelve leagues
in circumference. Its base is a very flat rock, which was formerly
covered by the waters of the sea, and which is covered at present with
five or six feet of sand. It is in this rock that those who did not
possess the means of building pyramids to enclose their bodies after
death, secured a repose which we know that the Egyptians held of great
consequence, and found a less difficult art of making asylums, which
they were persuaded would be sheltered from the fury and impiety of
men, and would secure to them the return of their souls to the same
bodies, in case that their tombs should not be violated. With this
view, they chose at first a place in this plain, where it was necessary
to commence by taking away seven or eight feet of moveable sand. After
having emptied a circumscribed space, and perfectly cleaned it, they
commenced penetrating the rock by a hole of a foot and a half or two
feet in diameter; and after having attained the depth of about five or
six feet, they laboured to enlarge the hole and form a chamber in the
rock. It was by this hole that the body descended to be deposited in these tombs; after which, they so accurately covered the opening with a stone, as not to admit either light or sand.

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