Ferentillo-
Provincia di Terni, Umbria, Italia
Entrance to the museum |
A road sign points the way. |
In the lower
level of the Church of St. Stephen (Chiesa di Santo Stefano) is a
crypt. Through unique climatic conditions and a distinct
microorganism, the people that were buried in the crypt were
naturally mummified, they still have eyelashes, hair, teeth, nails
and remnants of their original clothes on. It is a snapshot in time.
In 1804-1806,
Napoleon issued the edict of Saint-Cloud forbidding the burial of
bodies within the confines of a town, (for health/sanitation
reasons). Thus the bodies interred beneath the church were unearthed
to be buried elsewhere. Excavators were expecting to find a pile of
bones, instead they found whole bodies complete with skin and
clothes, which had been naturally mummified. Santo Stefano church was
built in the 16th century over the ruins of an even older
church. The older ruins were used as a catacombs but the bodies were
not unearthed until after the Napoleonic edict. Scientific studies of
the remains determined that a fungus had populated the remains and
halted decay, preserving the bodies and leading to natural
mummification. The bodies have been conserved and encased in glass,
and the place has been made into a museum.
What makes
these remains unique is that they are not all special citizens or
religious figures who have been purposely preserved, they are regular
people. You can see a mother, who died in childbirth, and her infant,
art frescoes from the earlier 13th century church, and
along with the mummies are the stories of the people that used to be.
There are the Chinese tourists, supposedly on their honeymoon...the
husband died of the plague. The wife brought his body to the church
and prayed for him, she also wound up dying and they were both
interred in the crypt, where you can see them today.
One of the Ferentillo mummies |
You can also
see the man who was struck by the church bell and killed, with bell
damage plainly visible on his remains. There is the lawyer who was
murdered and buried in the crypt, and right beside him the lies the
body of his murderer (the hunchback Severino), possibly put there to
help his soul transition into the afterlife. The Capuchin monks were
the caretakers of the church and the crypt and what is known about
the persons buried there has been found in the church archives and
from oral tradition.
Inside the museum |
Ferentillo is
an interesting find in the hills of Umbria, if you ever have the
pleasure of visiting make sure you take a few hikes in this scenic
place, check out the remains of the castles, Rocca di Precetto
(Pentagonal Tower) and Mattarella (the Bell Tower), and the Church of
Santa Maria along with it's Renaissance art.
You tube
video: Le mummie di ferentillo by wunderk (5:19 min):
www.youtube.com/watch?v=M-HdfayJuQg
Matterella, ruins of the Bell Tower |
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