![]() |
|
![]() | Home > Guanajuato Travel Guide > Legends > Mummies of Guanajuato |
![]()
![]() Where To Go? ![]() Towns & Cities ![]() Itineraries ![]() Exotic Spas ![]() Colonial jewels ![]() Museums ![]() What To Do? ![]() Adventure Sports ![]() Shopping ![]() NightLife ![]() Food & Drink
![]() Festivals ![]() History ![]() Typical dresses ![]() The Weather ![]() Useful Maps ![]() Useful Addresses ![]() Legends of Guanajuato
![]() Barcelona guide! ![]() Granada Guide! ![]() Madrid Guide! ![]() Salamanca Guide! ![]() Sevilla Guide! ![]() Tenerife Guide! ![]() Valencia Guide! ![]() Guanajuato Guide! ![]()
|
The mummification is thought to be due, though this is not a scientific opinion, to the quality of the air, given the altitude, rather than to the soil, since the same process occurs in tombs and in the ground. In any case it is certain that the phenomenon did not take place after the first corpses were exhumed from the Municipal Cemetery, after a set period of five years, and that mummification must have taken place previously.
This occurred during the epidemic of cholera morbus that swept the area around 1833. The present cemetery (1861), where mummification was verified, was still not in existence. The numbers of the dead were so great that it was necessary to open up new cemeteries on the hillsides of San Cayetano and part of the Cañada de Marfil.
The first mummified corpse to be exhibited, in 1965, corresponds to the French Dr. Remigio Leroy, and it still exists. For many years the mummies have been exhibited to the public in a crypt that is just below the place where this curious phenomenon was discovered. The macabre spectacle is offered in a gallery at the back, with the mummies forming a double line of about 15 metres, behind a large plate of glass.
|
|