Ossuaries are buildings or containers where human skeletal remains are kept as way to reduce the space needed to store human remains. They are typically used in locales that need to re-use burial plots because space for graveyards is very… Read More ›
Ossuary
19th century pictures of workers building a city of the dead
Félix Nadar (1820–1910), born Gaspard-Félix Tournachon, was a French photographer best known for his portraits and aerial photography. Nadar also experimented with artificial light in his photography in the Paris Catacombs between 1861 and 1862. Because of Nadar’s early photographic experiments,… Read More ›
A map of Cambodia made with 300 human skulls
Charnel houses are monuments that serve as reminders that the physical world is fleeting, are shrines that honor patriotic sacrifice, places to commune with the dead, or memorialize the atrocities of genocide. The skull map of Cambodia at the Tuol… Read More ›
The charnel delights of Sedlec Ossuary
The Sedlec Ossuary is a charnel house filled with the remains of an estimated 40,000 people. This “bone church” is famous for its macabre human bone decorations that fill every corner of the building. Although impressive today, the intricate décor… Read More ›
The skull of a medieval martyr used to make medicinal powders
In the Cathedral of Otranto are five large display cases that contain the bones of the “martyrs of Otranto.” The skulls face the cathedral’s visitors and are mixed with long bones and bones of the pelvis. In one of the… Read More ›
A game of thrones written in bones: The skeletal collection from the Battle of Towton
The Battle of Towton took place on Palm Sunday in 1461 and was one of the grisliest battles of the Wars of the Roses (1455-1487). That conflict was so bloody that it’s estimated that tens of thousands of soldiers were massacred. In… Read More ›
Human remains as trophies of war
Soldiers have removed body parts from corpses to keep as trophies as souvenirs of war since ancient times. According to Katy Meyers Emery, mortuary archaeologist and bioarchaeologist, human remains as souvenirs of war can be divided into two categories, trophies… Read More ›
A Tibetan wall of skulls
Though the European bone houses are some of the most famous in the world, there are similar charnels in Asia. Located in Biru County in the Nagchu Prefacture in the Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR) is the Biru Skull Wall, or… Read More ›
The day the skulls are brought out to play
Every year in the week following the Day of the Dead, the citizens of La Paz, Bolivia gather at the chapel of the General Cemetery to celebrate Dia de los Natitas, or the Day of the Skulls. The skulls are… Read More ›
The patriotic ossuary of Custoza, Italy
In 1848 and 1866 the Italians fought two battles at Custoza, in northern Italy near Verona, during their struggle for independence against the Austrian Empire. An ossuary was built in 1879 to honor the thousands of soldiers who lost their lives… Read More ›
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