Sunday, June 19, 2011

Five places to see shrunken heads

Filed under: , , , , ,

srunken head, shrunken heads
Call me sick, but I've always been fascinated with shrunken heads.

"OK, you're sick!"

Fine, but you're still reading this, aren't you?

Throughout history many cultures took heads as trophies, including the ancestors of many Gadling readers--the Celts. Celtic warriors used to cut the heads off of enemies and attach them to their chariots to look extra intimidating in battle. Japanese samurai, Maori warriors, and angry peasants in the French Revolution all took enemy heads as trophies.

Yet only one culture, the Jivaro of South America, actually shrank heads. Living in the Amazon rainforest of Ecuador and Peru, the Jivaro people developed the strange custom of cutting off an enemy's head and shrinking it down to the size of a man's fist. Called tsantsa, these shrunken heads served not only as proof of a warrior's valor but also as a way to destroy the victim's spirit, which might otherwise take revenge.

The process was gruesome but simple. Different sources give different recipes. This one comes from the well-researched site Head Hunter. Once you get a head, cut open the back so the skin and hair can be peeled from the skull. Throw the skull into a river as an offering to the anaconda. Sew the eyes shut, and close the mouth with wooden spikes or thorns. Boil the head for no more than two hours, then turn the skin inside out to clean off any nasty residue. Turn the skin right side out and sew up the slit you cut in the back.

Continue reading Five places to see shrunken heads

Five places to see shrunken heads originally appeared on Gadling on Fri, 17 Jun 2011 12:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/weblogsinc/gadling/~3/5HuEDABjK0w/

walt disney campground campfire recipes luxury rv campgrounds pa state parks camping stores

No comments:

Post a Comment