There's something undeniably creepy about big, expansive
libraries. The hushed whispers, the almost artificial quiet, and the
smell of dusty tomes combine to create a surreal experience. But when it
comes to creepy libraries, Harvard University might take the cake...
you see, three of its books are bound in human skin.
A few years ago, three separate books were discovered in Harvard
University's library that had particularly strange-looking leather
covers. Upon further inspection, it was discovered that the smooth
binding was actually human flesh... in one case, skin harvested from a
man who was flayed alive. Yep, definitely the creepiest library ever.
As it turns out, the practice of using human skin to bind books was
actually pretty popular during the 17th century. It's referred to as
Anthropodermic bibliopegy and proved pretty common when it came to
anatomical textbooks. Medical professionals would often use the flesh of
cadavers they'd dissected during their research. Waste not, want not, I
suppose.
Harvard's creepy books deal with Roman poetry, French philosophy,
and a treatise on medieval Spanish law for which the previously
mentioned flayed skin was used. The book,
Practicarum quaestionum circa leges regias… has a very interesting inscription inside, as
The Harvard Crimson reports.
The book’s 794th and final page includes an inscription in purple
cursive: ‘the bynding of this booke is all that remains of my dear
friende Jonas Wright, who was flayed alive by the Wavuma on the Fourth
Day of August, 1632. King Mbesa did give me the book, it being one of
poore Jonas chiefe possessions, together with ample of his skin to bynd
it. Requiescat in pace.’
According to Director of University Libraries Sidney Verba '53, there
might even be more of the creepy flesh-books out there, but while it's
possible to touch the three identified books in Harvard's rare book
room, the librarians aren't exactly fond of all the attention they've
received lately, for obvious reasons. In fact, they've made it a point
not to actively seek any more macabre volumes.
yourself, do us a favor - just don't read them out loud. We all know how
that ends.
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