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Embalming Embalming is a mortuary custom, the art of preserving bodies after
death, generally by the use of chemical substances. It is believed to have
originated among the Egyptians, probably before 4000 BC, and was used by them
for more than 30 centuries. Much evidence demonstrates that embalming is
religious in origin, conceived as a means of preparing the dead for the life
after death. From the Egyptians, the practice of embalming spread to other
ancient peoples, including the Assyrians, Jews, Persians, and Scythians. Ancient
embalming methods consisted of removal of the brains and viscera, and the
filling of bodily cavities with a mixture of balsamic herbs and other
substances. The Egyptians immersed the body in carbonate of soda, injected the
arteries and veins with balsams, filled the cavities of the torso with
bituminous and aromatic substances and salt, and wound cloths saturated with
similar materials around the body. The Assyrians used honey in embalming, the
Persians used wax, and the Jews used spices and aloes.
Alexander the Great was
embalmed with honey and wax. The Egyptians were particularly adept at embalming;
the soles of the feet of mummies, when unwrapped after as much as 3000 years,
are often still soft and elastic. Historians estimate that by AD 700, when the
practice had died out among them, the Egyptians had embalmed approximately 730
million bodies. Although many were destroyed or disintegrated in the tropical
heat of northern Africa, a large number of mummies were preserved;
archaeologists estimate that several million are still preserved in undiscovered
tombs and burial places. From the ancient peoples of Africa and Asia, embalming
spread to Europe, where, in time, it became a widespread practice. Descriptions
of methods used in Europe for almost 1200 years, from about AD 500, have been
preserved in the writings of contemporary physicians. Embalming during the
Middle Ages included evisceration, immersion of the body in alcohol, insertion
of preservative herbs into incisions previously made in the fleshy parts of the
body, and wrapping the body in tarred or waxed sheets. The Danish king of
England, Canute II, was embalmed by the above, or similar methods, as were the
English monarchs William the Conqueror and Edward I. William's body was found
well preserved in the French city of Caen in the 16th century;
Edward's was also
found to be well preserved when it was disinterred in Westminster Abbey in 1700;
and Canute's body was still in a state of good preservation when it was
discovered in Winchester Cathedral in 1776. The first man to embalm by injecting
a prepared preservative chemical solution into the blood vessels is believed to
be the Dutch anatomist Fredrik Ruysch, but his technique is unknown. During the
19th century, French and Italian scientists perfected such techniques, thereby
enabling them to reach every part of the cadaver. Modern embalming is believed
to have begun in the U.S. during the American Civil War. The essential purposes
of modern embalming are preservation of the body to permit burial without
unseemly haste and prevention of the spread of infection both before and after
burial. Cosmetic work is used to restore injured facial features or for
aesthetic reasons. Embalming methods now consist essentially of the removal of
all blood and gases from the body and the insertion of a disinfecting fluid; the
viscera are removed and immersed in an embalming fluid and are then replaced in
the body, in which they are surrounded with a preservative powder. Most corpses
in the United States and Canada are embalmed, and the practice is widespread in
other countries.
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