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No Bones About It – The Sedlec Ossuary’s Amazing Relics
Once upon a time, around the mid 1200s
in what was then Bohemia, a Cisterian monk brought back some earth from
Jerusalem and sprinkled it on the monastery cemetery lot. Local people
thought this made it an especially holy spot and they all wanted to be
buried there.
While the graveyard would have had to expand
over the years anyway, its “population” boomed in 1318, with some 30,000
plague victims, and later, casualties of the Hussite wars. Because of this,
a chapel was erected in the late 1400s, with an ossuary underneath, for
the storage of bones from graves that had been unearthed to make room for
more “residents”.
While the graveyard would have had to expand
over the years anyway, its “population” boomed in 1318, with some 30,000
plague victims, and later, casualties of the Hussite wars. Because of this,
a chapel was erected in the late 1400s, with an ossuary underneath, for
the storage of bones from graves that had been unearthed to make room for
more “residents”.
Wood carver Frantisek Rint was hired to
use the bones of approximately 40,000 people, to decorate the Chapel. The
results are one of the most bizarre, and beautiful sights in all of Europe.
Among the most amazing creations of Rint,
is the massive chandelier, which contains at least one, of every bone in
the human body. His largest creations are the bells that decorate each
of the four corners of the Chapel. Other wonders include a local family’s
coat of arms, two monstrances, and a sign where he placed his name, made
entirely of bones.
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