Embalming has been practiced in many cultures
and is one of the earliest surgical procedures humanity undertook. In classical antiquity, perhaps the Old World culture that
had developed embalming to the greatest extent was that of ancient Egypt, who developed
the process of mummification. They believed
that preservation of the mummy empowered the soul after death, which would
return to the preserved corpse.
Other cultures that had developed embalming
processes include the Incas and other
cultures of Peru, whose climate
also favoured a form of mummification.
However the best preserved bodies in the world
are from Han dynasty China,
which preservation process isn't still completely understood. It seems a
special liquid, in which the bodies were embedded, was of major influence.
Embalming in Europe had a much more sporadic
existence. It was attempted from time to time, especially during the Crusades, when crusading
noblemen wished to have their bodies preserved for burial closer to home. Embalming
began to come back into practice in parallel with the anatomists of the Renaissance who needed
to be able to preserve their specimens.
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Contemporary embalming methods advanced
markedly during the American Civil War, which once again involved many
servicemen dying far from home, and their family wishing them returned for
local burial. Dr. Thomas Holmes received a
commission from the Army Medical Corps to embalm the corpses of dead Union
officers to return to their families. Military authorities also permitted
private embalmers to work in military-controlled areas. In the 19th and early
20th centuries arsenic was
frequently used as an embalming fluid but has since been supplanted by other
more effective and less toxic chemicals. There were questions about the
possibility of arsenic from embalmed bodies later contaminating ground water
supplies. There were also legal concerns as people suspected of murder by
arsenic poisoning could claim that the levels of poison in the deceased's body
were a result of embalming post mortem rather than evidence of homicide.
Embalming is distinct from taxidermy. Embalming
preserves the human body intact, whereas taxidermy is the recreation of an
animal's form using only the creature's skin.
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