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
(Page 2 of 2)
Either way, post-Crusade European society was not comfortable with what happened at Ma’arra, Rubenstein says. “Everybody who wrote about it was disturbed,” he says. “The First Crusade is the first great European epic. It was a story people wanted to celebrate.” But first they had to deal with the embarrassing stain.
Part of the problem was that cannibalism at Ma’arra simply didn’t fit in with the European self-image. In medieval times, cultural enemies—not military or religious heroes—were commonly depicted as cannibals or giants, “especially in narratives of territorial invasion and conquest,” argues Geradine Heng, in Cannibalism, The First Crusade and the Genesis of Medieval Romance. “Witches, Jews, savages, Orientals, and pagans are conceivable as—indeed, must be—cannibals; but in the 12th-century medieval imaginary, the Christian European subject cannot.”
By the 16th century, cannibalism was not just part of the mental furniture of Europeans; it was a common part of everyday medicine from Spain to England.
Initially, little bits of pulverized mummies imported from Egypt were used in prescriptions against disease, but the practice soon expanded to include the flesh, skin, bone, blood, fat and urine of local cadavers, such as recently executed criminals and bodies dug up illegally from graveyards, says University of Durham’s Richard Sugg, who published a book in 2011 called Mummies, Cannibals and Vampires: The History of Corpse Medicine from the Renaissance to the Victorians.
Medicinal cannibalism reached a feverish pitch around 1680, Sugg says. But the practice can be traced back to the Greek doctor Galen, who recommended human blood as part of some remedies in the 2nd century A.D., and it continued all the way into the 20th century. In 1910, a German pharmaceutical catalog was still selling mummy, says Louise Noble, who also wrote a book on the topic called Medicinal Cannibalism in Early Modern English Literature and Culture.
While Europeans ate “mummy” to cure their physical ailments, the same culture sent missionaries and colonists to the New World to cure New World indigenous people of their purported barbaric cannibalism, some of which was entirely fabricated as a rationale for conquest, Bowdler says. “It’s certainly possible that Europeans were consuming more human flesh at the time than people in the New World,” Sugg says.
“It’s a big paradox,” Noble adds. The term cannibal was being used to describe someone inferior while the “civilized in Europe were also eating bits of the human body,” she says.
The word cannibal first entered the English language in the mid-16th century by means of Spanish explorers, says Carmen Nocentelli, a 16th-century comparative literature and culture scholar at the University of New Mexico. It derives from the Spanish word Canibales, which was used by Columbus in his diaries to describe indigenous people of the Caribbean islands who were rumored to be eaters of human flesh, Nocentelli says. In his diaries, it is clear Columbus didn’t initially believe the rumors, she adds.
But the name stuck: Cannibal became a popular term used to describe people in the New World. It was certainly sexier than the Greek and then Latin word “anthropophagi,” which a 1538 dictionary defines as “people in Asia, which eate [sic] men,” Nocentelli says.
Because there’s evidence that colonists exaggerated accounts of cannibalism in the New World, some scholars have argued that all cannibalism reports in the colonies were fictitious. But the balance of evidence suggest some reports were certainly true, Bowdler says, namely, from human blood proteins found in fossilized feces at American Southwest sites to first-hand reports from reliable sources about cannibal practices among Mesoamerican Aztecs and Brazilian Tupinambá. “One of the reasons cannibalism is so controversial is because we have few detailed accounts of how it worked in society,” Bowdler adds.
Bowdler has been compiling a list of well-documented accounts of worldwide cannibalism that she will present at the conference this weekend. In particular, she’ll discuss categories of cannibalism where consuming human flesh is “not considered out-and-out bad” in the society where it is practiced, she says.
One such category is survival cannibalism, where people consume each other out of absolute necessity, such as the 16 survivors of a 1972 plane crash in the Andes mountains or the members of Sir John Franklin’s failed 1845 expedition to the Arctic.
Another category is mortuary cannibalism, the consumption of the dead during their funeral rites, practiced through the 20th century in the Eastern Highlands Province of Papua New Guinea and the Brazilian and Peruvian Amazon. “This is not, as we may instinctively imagine, morbid and repulsive,” notes the University of Manchester’s Sarah-Louise Flowers in her conference abstract, “but is instead an act of affection and respect for the dead person, as a well as being a means of helping survivors to cope with their grief.”
As some conference attendees compare culturally acceptable categories of human consumption with nefarious cases of cannibal serial killers, other conference presenters will pick apart the presence of cannibals in pop culture, such as the episode of revenge cannibalism in the animated sitcom South Park, the blockbuster popularity of the vampire romance novel series Twilight and the emergence of the Call Of Duty: Zombies video game.
With talk titles like “Flesh-Eaters in London: Cosmopolitan Cannibals in Late 19th-Century Fiction and the Press,” “Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner? Inside the Mind of the Cannibal Serial Killer,” and “Bon Appetit! A Concise Defense of Cannibalism,” one can only hope the conference canapés are vegetarian.
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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