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posted by on Sunday November 27 2016, @09:02AM   Printer-friendly
from the better-than-finding-potsherds dept.

Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story about terracotta body parts which have been found in Italy by archaeologists for decades:

One site contained 1,654 votive feet, made of terracotta. Another had more than 400 terracotta wombs. At Ponte di Nona, there were 8,395 votives recovered in the 1970s—of the 6,171 that were identifiable body parts, 985 were heads, about as many were eyes, and 2,368 were feet. Overall, at about 150 sites, archaeologists have uncovered tens of thousands of feet, legs, arms, hands, heads, eyes, ears, breasts, uteri, vulvae, phalluses, and sometimes whole midriff sections, with indistinct organs exposed.

[...] It's clear that these anatomical votives were connected in some way with health and well-being, but for years scholars have debated exactly who used them and how. Once it was thought that the votives were primarily used by rural people, but Flemming argues that it was a "wide-spread, accessible, and inclusive," popular inside cities and far out into the countryside, and available both to elites and lower classes.

Some scholars believe that the votives reflects pleas for the healing of particular body parts or were thank-you gifts for prayers answered. Some shrines may have specialized in particular illnesses—at least that's one explanation for why one place might have a great concentration of hands, another a great concentration of eyes, and another a great concentration of uteri.


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  • (Score: 1) by purple_cobra on Sunday November 27 2016, @06:09PM

    by purple_cobra (1435) on Sunday November 27 2016, @06:09PM (#433690)

    They made and buried them because Italians have a peculiar sense of humour. How else do you explain spaghetti?

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday November 28 2016, @07:50AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday November 28 2016, @07:50AM (#433941)
    What's so funny about spaghetti? The funny bit is the way many people eat it - twirling it and splashing sauce everywhere.

    That said I haven't yet dared to walk into an Italian restaurant and asked for a pair of chopsticks to eat their spaghetti ;).