an axe and a kodak
everyillman:

theossuary:

This is what’s left of a man in his early twenties who lived in Ireland sometime between 362 and 175 B.C. He’s just a partial torso and arms, and from the span of the arms they know that he stood about 6 feet 6 inches: exceptionally tall for that time. (I’ll say. That’s exceptionally tall for today.)
He’s known as Old Croghan Man, and he was found in 2003 near Croghan Hill, north of Daingean in Ireland’s County Offaly. Like all bog bodies, his real identity is unknown, but researchers have posited that he was a man of high status. His hands were well manicured, his last meal was wheat and buttermilk (possibly a ritual meal), and in the months leading up to his death he ate lots of meat. He wore a braided leather band and copper amulet around one bicep.
Despite the comfortable life suggested by nice nails and meaty diet, Old Croghan Man did not die a nice death. From Archaeology: 

He had a defensive wound on his upper left arm where he may have tried to protect himself, and had been bound by a hazel branches (withies) threaded through holes in his upper arms, stabbed in the chest, struck in the neck, decapitated, and cut in half. 

I recently watched an episode of Nova from 2006 (The Perfect Corpse), which featured Old Croghan Man and Clonycavan Man, a bog body from around the same time period who was found near Dublin, also in 2003. 
Eamonn P. Kelly of the National Museum of Ireland (where the bodies now reside) has some interesting theories about a number of Irish bog bodies, including these two. From Archaeology:

Examining the details of both men’s lives and deaths has led Kelly to suggest a new way of looking at the meaning of eight well-preserved Irish bog bodies. “I believe these men were failed kings or failed candidates for kingship who were killed and placed in bogs that formed important tribal boundaries.” Both Clonycavan and Old Croghan men’s nipples were pinched and cut. “Sucking a king’s nipples was a gesture of submission in ancient Ireland,” says Kelly. “Cutting them would have made him incapable of kingship.”

Image source: Photograph by Mark Healy, via Wikipedia.

i took a class back in college called DEATH & THE BODY.  it was just like this, and i was in heaven.

everyillman:

theossuary:

This is what’s left of a man in his early twenties who lived in Ireland sometime between 362 and 175 B.C. He’s just a partial torso and arms, and from the span of the arms they know that he stood about 6 feet 6 inches: exceptionally tall for that time. (I’ll say. That’s exceptionally tall for today.)

He’s known as Old Croghan Man, and he was found in 2003 near Croghan Hill, north of Daingean in Ireland’s County Offaly. Like all bog bodies, his real identity is unknown, but researchers have posited that he was a man of high status. His hands were well manicured, his last meal was wheat and buttermilk (possibly a ritual meal), and in the months leading up to his death he ate lots of meat. He wore a braided leather band and copper amulet around one bicep.

Despite the comfortable life suggested by nice nails and meaty diet, Old Croghan Man did not die a nice death. From Archaeology

He had a defensive wound on his upper left arm where he may have tried to protect himself, and had been bound by a hazel branches (withies) threaded through holes in his upper arms, stabbed in the chest, struck in the neck, decapitated, and cut in half. 

I recently watched an episode of Nova from 2006 (The Perfect Corpse), which featured Old Croghan Man and Clonycavan Man, a bog body from around the same time period who was found near Dublin, also in 2003. 

Eamonn P. Kelly of the National Museum of Ireland (where the bodies now reside) has some interesting theories about a number of Irish bog bodies, including these two. From Archaeology:

Examining the details of both men’s lives and deaths has led Kelly to suggest a new way of looking at the meaning of eight well-preserved Irish bog bodies. “I believe these men were failed kings or failed candidates for kingship who were killed and placed in bogs that formed important tribal boundaries.” Both Clonycavan and Old Croghan men’s nipples were pinched and cut. “Sucking a king’s nipples was a gesture of submission in ancient Ireland,” says Kelly. “Cutting them would have made him incapable of kingship.”

Image source: Photograph by Mark Healy, via Wikipedia.

i took a class back in college called DEATH & THE BODY.  it was just like this, and i was in heaven.

  1. thisisannas reblogged this from gennasside
  2. gennasside reblogged this from wethinktherefore
  3. whydontwefall reblogged this from theossuary
  4. outcasttothisgeneration reblogged this from thesearemyheartsongs
  5. outcasttothisgeneration reblogged this from thesearemyheartsongs
  6. thesearemyheartsongs reblogged this from dahmersfishisnamedalbert
  7. ofart reblogged this from averagearchaeologist
  8. claro3 reblogged this from theossuary
  9. keeperofthelostandfound reblogged this from setyourcompass
  10. mylifeasasassymannequin reblogged this from franzboas
  11. g4nim4 reblogged this from luminousinsect
  12. blood-fantasy reblogged this from anelvindream
  13. shadowkira reblogged this from alixjay
  14. hyperborean-hermit reblogged this from luminousinsect
  15. alixjay reblogged this from paulina
  16. joexgrimace reblogged this from spooky-pants
  17. spooky-pants reblogged this from discobloodfeast
  18. discobloodfeast reblogged this from itsthe80sinmypants
  19. itsthe80sinmypants reblogged this from profanecult
  20. exquisitecadavers reblogged this from maladymylady
  21. maladymylady reblogged this from scarygirl
  22. paulina reblogged this from digitaldelights
  23. lokikypo reblogged this from digitaldelights
  24. matthew-matthias reblogged this from luminousinsect
  25. dadoodoflow reblogged this from profanecult