18th-century monk’s anus was stuffed with wood chips and fabric to mummify him, researchers discover

by oqtey
Front (top) and back (bottom) of a human male mummy. His arms are crossed over his chest.

While analyzing an 18th-century Austrian mummy, researchers discovered that the man died from tuberculosis and was preserved in a very unusual way: with wood chips, twigs and fabric packed into his abdomen through his anus.

The mummified body was located in a church crypt in St. Thomas am Blasenstein, a small village in Austria near the Danube River. Known locally as the “air-dried chaplain,” the mummy was assumed to have been the preserved remains of a parish vicar named Franz Xaver Sidler von Rosenegg, who died in 1746.

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