And I can assure you that reading the story is quite far from actually living the experience of walking through these tunnels. Sometimes insane (like « get me out of there ! »), and sometimes it just make you think about your own mortality, thanks to the writings.
Disturbing, but in a constructive, human way. Well, at least for me.
It made me think of myself as a bag of cells that leave behind a mineral deposit after several decades. The large concentrated piles of such "mineral deposits" in the catacombs prompted me to consider all the people who contributed (physically, intellectually, artistically) to building the great city throughout the centuries. Definitely a worthwhile visit!
Interesting read, I think if I knew I was dying I would march out into the woods somewhere or the mountains, lay down, and die. The alternatives such as cremation or a casket burial don't settle quite right with me for some reason.
Medieval Christian cemeteries often overfilled, especially if the cemetery was thought especially holy. Demand was so high in some places graves were regularly reused: the bones were exhumed and stacked wherever they would fit.
For a spectacular answer to the "What do we do with all these bones?" question, check out the ossuary at Sedlec in the Czech republic:
One of the "Magnificent Seven" London cemeteries had an open day recently and I went into the Catacombs and learned about the history...
Popular in Europe so the shareholders of the Brompton Cemetery decided to speculate so constructed them but in the end it wasn't a money spinner and they went bust.
I wouldn't actually recommend going down into the Catacombs. Coffins falling to pieces on shelves basically.
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[ 2.0 ms ] story [ 16.2 ms ] threadDisturbing, but in a constructive, human way. Well, at least for me.
And profit-making, btw.
Edit: added missing « mortality »
For a spectacular answer to the "What do we do with all these bones?" question, check out the ossuary at Sedlec in the Czech republic:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sedlec_Ossuary?wprov=sfla1