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Thread started 02/23/15 5:35pm

XxAxX

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Surprise! 1,000-Year-Old Mummy Found in Buddha Statue

eek i've visited more than a few buddha statues in various temples and museums. now, i'm wondering how many had dead guys sealed inside. not that there's anything wrong with that. for sure i will never again regard a buddha statue in quite the same way....

from: http://www.livescience.co...mummy.html

Buddha Mummy

A Chinese statue of a sitting Buddha has revealed a hidden surprise: Inside, scientists found the mummified remains of a monk who lived nearly 1,000 years ago.

The mummy may have once been a respected Buddhist monk who, after death, was worshipped as an enlightened being, one who helped the living end their cycle of suffering and death, said Vincent van Vilsteren, an archaeology curator at the Drents Museum in the Netherlands, where the mummy (from inside the Buddha statue) was on exhibit last year.

The secret hidden in the gold-painted statue was first discovered when preservationists began restoring the statue many years ago. But the human remains weren't studied in detail until researchers took scans and samples of tissue from the mummy late last year.

The mysterious statue is now on display at the Hungarian Natural History Museum in Budapest. [Image Gallery: Inca Child Mummies]

Mysterious history

The papier-mâché statue, which has the dimensions, roughly, of a seated person and is covered in lacquer and gold paint, has a murky history. It was likely housed in a monastery in Southeastern China for centuries. It may have been smuggled from the country during the Cultural Revolution, a tumultuous period of social upheaval in Communist China starting in 1966 when Chairman Mao Zedong urged citizens to seize property, dismantle educational systems and attack "bourgeois" cultural institutions.

buddha mummy statue
A gold-painted papier-mâché statue of the Buddha contained the mummified remains of an ancient Buddhist monk who lived during the 11th or 12th century. Here, a researcher inspects the statue.
Credit: © Drents Museum

The statue was bought and sold again in the Netherlands, and in 1996, a private owner decided to have someone fix the chips and cracks that marred the gold-painted exterior. However, when the restorer removed the statue from its wooden platform, he noticed two pillows emblazoned with Chinese text placed beneath the statues' knees. When he removed the pillows, he discovered the human remains.

"He looked right into the bottom of this monk," van Vilsteren told Live Science. "You can see part of the bones and tissue of his skin."

The mummy was sitting on a rolled textile carpet covered in Chinese text.

Researchers then used radioactive isotopes of carbon to determine that the mummy likely lived during the 11th or 12th century, while the carpet was about 200 years older, van Vilsteren said. (Isotopes are variations of elements with different numbers of neutrons.)

In 2013, researchers conducted a CT scan of the mummy at Mannheim University Hospital in Germany, revealing the remains in unprecedented detail. In a follow-up scan at the Meander Medical Center in Amersfoort, Netherlands, the researchers discovered that what they thought was lung tissue actually consisted of tiny scraps of paper with Chinese text on them.

The text found with the mummy suggests he was once the high-status monk Liuquan, who may have been worshipped as a Buddha, or a teacher who helps to bring enlightenment after his death.

Last year, the mummy was on display at the "Mummies – Life Beyond Death" exhibit at the Drents Museum in Netherlands, before moving to the Hungarian Natural History Museum in Budapest.

Common practice

Mummies from this period are fairly common in Asia. For instance, researchers in Mongolia recently found a 200-year-old mummified monk still in the lotus position, the traditional cross-legged meditative pose.

It's not clear exactly how Liuquan became a mummy, but "in China, and also in Japan and Laos and Korea, there's a tradition of self-mummification," van Vilsteren said.

In some cases, aging Buddhist monks would slowly starve themselves to eliminate decay-promoting fat and liquid, while subsisting mainly on pine needles and resin to facilitate the mummification process, according to "Living Buddhas: The Self-Mummified Monks of Yamagata, Japan," (McFarland, 2010). Once these monks were near death, they would be buried alive with just a breathing tube to keep them holding on so they could meditate until death.

"There are historical records of some aging monks who have done this practice," van Vilsteren said. "But if this is also the case with this monk is not known."

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Reply #1 posted 02/24/15 10:51am

Graycap23

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I saw that............

FOOLS multiply when WISE Men & Women are silent.
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Reply #2 posted 02/24/15 4:55pm

XxAxX

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imagine mummifying yourself on purpose! whoa!

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Reply #3 posted 02/25/15 9:16am

morningsong

This reminds me of Anne Rice's book "Servant of the Bones", with Aziel(I think that's his name). It's supposed to be based on an ancient Babylonian practice.

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Reply #4 posted 02/25/15 10:37am

XxAxX

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i'm going to save funeral money and mummify myself. that way, when they've layered me over with paper mache painted gold i can sit in the lviing room like any other statue
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Reply #5 posted 02/25/15 4:22pm

morningsong

XxAxX said:

i'm going to save funeral money and mummify myself. that way, when they've layered me over with paper mache painted gold i can sit in the lviing room like any other statue

That's one way to keep a rule over things. Creepy, but effective.

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Reply #6 posted 02/25/15 5:10pm

XxAxX

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doesn't have to be in the living room, either. i'd make a great lawn ornament! thumbs up!

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Reply #7 posted 02/25/15 9:34pm

purplethunder3
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And then there's that creepy mummy museum in Mexico... eek

Mexico's bone-chilling Mummy Museum

Many of the mummies still have hair, teeth and fingernails.
Many of the mummies still have hair, teeth and fingernails. (Marek Zuk/Alamy)
By Bill Brubaker--Washington Post

The most disturbing thing about visiting the Mummy Museum in Guanajuato, Mexico, isn't the mummies themselves. After three visits over 10 years, I've grown accustomed to the mummies -- more than 100 of them, many staring back (dare I say helplessly?) from behind glass display cases, some upright, some lying down.

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Nope, it's the torture instruments that make me queasy.

El Museo de las Momias, surely one of the most bizarre cultural institutions anywhere, underscores Mexico's obsession with death. Every day is a Day of the Dead celebration in this popular, well-maintained museum, a short bus or cab ride from the leafy main square of Guanajuato, a town also known for its pottery, colonial charm and nearby silver mines.

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The torture gadgets are displayed alongside several cadavers to illustrate, I can only suppose, that death comes in many ways.

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One mummy has metal spikes jammed into every part of his body.

"Ay, Dios mio," I heard over and over from Spanish-speaking visitors as they passed this specimen. Omigod.

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The museum traces its roots to the 19th century, when cemetery space was at a premium in hilly Guanajuato, so relatives were charged an annual tax to keep their loved ones buried. Some folks couldn't afford the tax, and their loved ones were exhumed -- or so the legend goes. That's how workers at the main cemetery discovered that the dry mountain air and mineral content of the soil had mummified some of the corpses.

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Beginning in 1870, the mummies were placed in a room near the cemetery's administrative offices, according to www.guanajuatocapital.com, a privately owned tourism Web site. Foreign visitors discovered the mummies around 1894, and a museum followed.

Next to the torture victims, the collection of babies is the toughest to take. Some simply look like dolls.

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Many of the mummies still have hair, teeth and fingernails. Some are fully dressed, supposedly in the same clothes (shoes and socks included) in which they were buried.

Their facial expressions range from peaceful to anguished to surprised.

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All very tasteless?

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Perhaps, but utterly fascinating. And surely less clinical than the "Bodies" exhibit that has traveled around the United States.

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A self-guided tour of El Museo de las Momias (English-speaking guides are available) should take no more than an hour. And quite a bit less, I must add, for the squeamish.

Brubaker is a former Washington Post reporter.

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El Museo de las Momias, 011-473-732-06-39, http://www.momiasdeguanajuato.gob.mx. Open daily 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Take a cab or any bus marked "Momias" from downtown Guanajuato. Admission is about $4; $2.75 for students; $2.35 for ages 6-12.


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Reply #8 posted 02/26/15 5:25am

XxAxX

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hmmmm. aside from the instruments of torture, maybe this could become the hot new trend in post-life care. display cases and such. eek

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Reply #9 posted 02/26/15 2:54pm

morningsong

XxAxX said:

doesn't have to be in the living room, either. i'd make a great lawn ornament! thumbs up!

Okay. Bringing new meaning to "neighborhood watch".

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