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Shockingly intact mummy found perfectly preserved after bizarre ‘rectal twigging’ method scientists have never seen

Published on May 02, 2025 at 11:17 AM

A NEARLY 300-year-old mummy has been found “unusually well-preserved”; after undergoing a bizarre embalming method.

With its skin still remarkably intact, the 18th-century corpse was found with wood chips, twigs and fabric packed into his abdomen through his anus.

Mummified body lying on a metal surface.
The mummy’s upper body is well preserved, but the lower extremities and head show significant decay
Mummified remains of an individual.
The stuffing technique has never been seen before
Close-up of a mummy's decayed textile wrappings.
Upon opening the body, researchers found wood from fir and spruce trees, as well as fragments from branches
Fragment of embroidered textile.
There was also a number of different fabrics used, including linen, hemp and flax – which were popular at the time

Upon opening the body, researchers found wood from fir and spruce trees, as well as fragments from branches.

There was also a number of different fabrics used, including linen, hemp and flax – which were popular at the time.

The technique has never been seen before.

“The unusually well-preserved in the crypt of St Thomas am Blasenstein is the corpse of a local parish vicar, Franz Xaver Sidler von Rosenegg, who died in 1746,”; said study lead author Dr. Andreas Nerlich, a research at Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität that specialises in mummy research.

“Our investigation uncovered that the excellent preservation status came from an unusual type of embalming, achieved by stuffing the abdomen through the rectal canal with wood chips, twigs and fabric, and the addition of zinc chloride for internal drying.”;

The mummy’s upper body is well preserved, but the lower extremities and head show significant decay.

Researchers believe the combination of materials, and the addition of the drying agent zinc chloride, kept the mummy in good condition for nearly 300 years.

“Clearly, thewood chips, twigs, and dry fabric absorbed much of the fluid inside the abdominal cavity,”; said Nerlich.

Better-known methods, like those used by the , involve opening the body to prepare it.

Here, however, the embalming materials were stuffed through the rectal canal.

“This type of preservation may have been much more widespread but unrecognised in cases where ongoing postmortal decay processes may have damaged the body wall so that the manipulations would not have been realized as they were,”; suggested Nerlich.

Close-up of a small, round, gray object with a hole in it, found in earth.
Inside the mummy, researchers also found a single bead, which they believe could have been lost during the preparation of the body
Mummified remains in a wooden case.
The mummy is assumed to be the preserved remains of a parish vicar named Franz Xaver Sidler von Rosenegg, who died in 1746

Inside the mummy, researchers also found a single bead, which they believe could have been lost during the preparation of the body.

It is not entirely clear who the mummy once was – but there are theories.

Located in a church crypt in St. Thomas am Blasenstein, a small village in near the Danube River, the mummy is known locally as the the “air-dried chaplain”;.

It is assumed to be the preserved remains of a parish vicar named Franz Xaver Sidler von Rosenegg, who died in 1746.

There was a lack of stress signs on the skeleton, according to experts, which fit the life of a priest without hard physical activity.

The mummy is also believed to been between 35 and 45 years old when they died, between the years 1734 and 1780 – which match Sidler’s life.

People have long speculated the cause of the priest’s death.

An X-ray analysis in 2000 suggested his mummy contained a poison capsule.

But new research, published in the journalFrontiers in Medicine, squash this theory.

The team conducted extensive analyses, including , focal autopsy, andradiocarbon dating.

Instead, they found evidence of long-term and signs of tuberculosis in the lungs.

Aerial view of a church on a hilltop overlooking a valley.
St Thomas am Blasenstein
Collage of three images showing fragments from an Austrian mummy.
Researchers believe the combination of materials, and the addition of the drying agent zinc chloride, kept the mummy in good condition for nearly 300 years
Fragment of brown textile from an Austrian mummy.
More fabric from inside the mummy

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