Long before the modern lie detector and its harmlessly jittering graphs
and wires were invented, the superstitious and untruthful faced a much
more severe fate between the jaws of the Bocca della Verità , or Mouth of
Fate, an ancient carving which is said to bite the hands off of liars.
While no one is exactly sure when or why the frieze was created, there
are a number of theories.
Dating back to around the 1st century CE, the Mouth of Truth is a tall
stone disc carved into a humanoid face with hollow holes for eyes and
its gaping mouth. The original purpose of the large medallion has been
theorized as everything from a ceremonial well cover, to a piece of
fountain decoration, to a manhole cover. The face itself has been said
to represent a pagan god although exactly which one is up for debate
with scholars guessing at everyone from forest god Faunus, to sea god
Oceanus, to a local river god.
While the origin is up for debate the one unifying legend surrounding
the stone carving is that if one were to stick their hand inside the
disc's mouth and tell a lie, the rocky maw would bite the offending hand
off. This belief seems to have originated during the Middle Ages when
the disc was supposedly used during trials having the accused put their
hand in the slot and if found to be untruthful a hidden axeman would lop
off the appendage. While this use seems to be apocryphal, the
superstition persists to this day.
The Mouth of Truth, which now rests outside the doors of the Santa
Maria in Cosmedin church, has been used as a whimsical lie detector in a
number of movies and video games, most famously in the 1953 romance,
Roman Holiday, in which the carving was a major plot device.
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