Europe’s Hypocritical History of Cannibalism
From prehistory to the present with many episodes in between, the region has a surprisingly meaty history of humans eating humans
- By Sarah Everts
- Smithsonian.com, April 25, 2013, Subscribe
In 2001, a lonely computer technician living in the countryside in Northern Germany advertised online for a well-built man willing to participate in a mutually satisfying sexual act. Armin Meiwes’ notice was similar to many others on the Internet except for a rather important detail: The requested man must be willing to be killed and eaten.
Meiwes didn’t have to look far. Two hundred and thirty miles away in Berlin, an engineer called Bernd Brandes agreed to travel to Meiwes’ farmhouse. There, a gory video later found by police documented Brandes’ consensual participation in the deadly dinner. The cannibalism was both a shock to the German public and a conundrum to German prosecutors wanting to charge Meiwes with a crime.
Cannibalism might be humanity’s most sacred taboo, but consent of a victim typically eliminates a crime, explains Emilia Musumeci, a criminologist at the University of Catania, in Italy, who studies cannibalism and serial killers.
More technically, cannibalism is not designated as illegal in Germany’s extensive criminal code: Until that point, laws against murder had sufficed to cover cannibalism. If Brandes had volunteered his own life, how could Meiwes be accused of murder?
Because of his victim’s consent, Meiwes was initially found guilty of something akin to assisted suicide, and sentenced to eight years in jail. Had there not been widespread uproar about the seemingly lenient penalty, Meiwes would be out of jail by now. Instead, the uproar led to a subsequent retrial, where Meiwes was found guilty of killing for sexual pleasure. He will likely spend the rest of his life in jail.
The unusual Meiwes case is just one of the topics to be discussed this weekend at an interdisciplinary cannibal conference to be held at the Manchester Museum—the world’s first, say many attending the meeting.
The idea of a cannibalism conference might sound like the basis for a macabre joke about coffee-break finger food. However, there’s serious cannibal scholarship taking place in many disciplines, says conference organizer Hannah Priest, a lecturer at Manchester University, who has previously hosted other academic meetings on werewolves and monsters under the banner of her publishing company Hic Dragones. “From contemporary horror film to medieval Eucharistic devotions, from Freudian theory to science fiction, cannibals and cannibalism continue to repel and intrigue us in equal measure,” advertises the conference’s website.
When the call for abstracts went out last fall, “our first response was one from anthropology, another one was on heavy metal music and the third was on 18th-century literature,” Priest says. “Academics will quite happily discuss very disturbing things in quite polite terms and forget that not everybody talks about this stuff all the time.”
It is perhaps fitting that the conference should take place in Europe because the region has a long chronicle of cannibalism, from prehistory through the Renaissance, right up to the 21st-century Meiwes case. In addition, the area has bequeathed us a bounty of fictional cannibals, including Dracula, who is arguably the world’s most famous consumer of human blood and a gory harbinger of the current pop culture fascination with vampires and zombies.
Europe boasts the oldest fossil evidence of cannibalism. In a 1999 Science article, French paleontologists reported that 100,000-year-old bones from six Neanderthal victims found in a French cave called Moula-Guercy had been broken by other Neanderthals in such a way as to extract marrow and brains. In addition, tool marks on the mandible and femur suggested that tongue and thigh meat had been cut off for consumption.
The cannibalism at Moula-Guercy wasn’t an isolated incident in prehistory. In the past decade, researchers have reported other evidence that Neanderthals continued eating each other until just before their disappearance. In one particularly grisly discovery at the El Sidrón cave in Spain, paleontologists discovered that an extended family of 12 individuals had been dismembered, skinned and then eaten by other Neanderthals about 50,000 years ago.
When early Homo sapiens began engaging in cannibalism is a topic of debate, although it is clear they eventually did, says Sandra Bowdler, an emeritus professor of archeology at the University of Western Australia. Evidence is scant that this happened in early human hunter-gatherer communities, she says, although in 2009 Fernando Rozzi, at the Centre National de la Récherche Scientifique, in Paris, reported finding a Neanderthal jaw bone that may have been butchered by early humans.
Even if Europe’s Homo sapiens didn’t consume each other in prehistory, they certainly did in more modern times. References to acts of cannibalism are sprinkled throughout many religious and historical documents, such as the reports that cooked human flesh was being sold in 11th-century English markets during times of famine, says Jay Rubenstein, a historian at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.
However, the world’s first cannibal incident reported by multiple, independent, first-hand accounts took place during the Crusades by European soldiers, Rubenstein says.
These first-hand stories agree that in 1098, after a successful siege and capture of the Syrian city Ma’arra, Christian soldiers ate the flesh of local Muslims. Thereafter the facts get murky, Rubenstein says. Some chroniclers report that the bodies were secretly consumed in “wicked banquets” borne out of famine and without the authorization of military leaders, Rubenstein says. Other reports suggest the cannibalism was done with tacit approval of military superiors who wished to use stories of the barbaric act as a psychological fear tactic in future Crusade battles.
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Comments (12)
The oldest human remains ever found in Europe when first discovered, found in a cave in Spain, were victims of cannibals. These people lived hundreds of thousands of years before the first Hsn saw the light of day.
Posted by Dwight E. Howell on May 12,2013 | 08:20 PM
The old world still believed that cannibalism is an American invention...?
Posted by David on May 8,2013 | 12:52 PM
Yup. Definitely hypocritical. But no real surprise, in either case, whether it is hypocritical that we hide it from plain view now, or that we actually ate people back then. Where do you think the Draculas and Zombie ideas and stories come from, and why such stories are more prevalent in Western culture, even to this day?
Posted by Chew on May 6,2013 | 12:31 AM
Hypocritical? Oh please! One modern case, one from the Middle Ages and some dating all the back to the Paleolithic.
Posted by Jeff Wallick on May 6,2013 | 09:10 PM
Oh look, anti-white history revisionists on Smithsonian.
Posted by Digitoxin on April 30,2013 | 10:24 PM
Yes the missing link between apes and human beings is man. Human beings consider even the slaughtering and eating of animals as equivalent to cannibalism of small children. Please, only human beings reply. I've heard all the excuses mankind has conjured up.
Posted by hp on April 30,2013 | 02:43 PM
Is this predictive programming for the shift to a soilent green diet? As an aside - it seems the truly wicked haven't made their appearance yet. Even the unlovable A. Hitler, they say, was a vegetarian.
Posted by dimitri boris on April 30,2013 | 07:33 AM
The real horror of cannibalism is as noted in the article, the universal accusation against native peoples that justified the conquest and enslavement of tens of millions.
Posted by Jim Geraghty on April 29,2013 | 01:01 PM
Really, we are ALL in denial. While objectionable for valid reasons in the modern world, our ancestors weren't fools. Run down a horned, hoofed mammal or knock off a slow-witted local? Long-Pig has a long history of being enjoyed around the world. Do you think markets in exotic locals only offer Pangolin meat? In China there are restaurants serving every endangered animal you can imagine...it is not a broad jump to include man!
Posted by Lee Findley on April 28,2013 | 09:36 PM
Why no mention of the continuing Christian practice of eating the Host, the body of Christ? Talk about cultural blindness.
Posted by michel on April 28,2013 | 10:05 AM
Cannibalism--how much sodium in that?
Posted by Wayne A. Silkett on April 28,2013 | 09:41 AM
Regarding the Carib origin of the word 'cannibal' one should note Douglas Taylor's short note "Carib, caliban, cannibal" IJAL 1952 24: 156-8 where he shows that the Carib word that became "cannibal" means 'cassava eater' in the Carib language.
Posted by Karel Rei on April 28,2013 | 03:25 AM