Corpse medicine was a widespread practice for hundreds of years, with its popularity spanning from the Middle Ages up until the 1890s. This unusual approach involved using various human body parts as ingredients in medicinal remedies to treat a wide range of ailments.
Practitioners of corpse medicine utilized a variety of human tissues, including blood, fat, bone, and flesh, for their supposed healing properties. For example, the human liver was believed to be an effective treatment for epilepsy. However, one of the most popular remedies during the 16th and 17th centuries was derived from smuggled Egyptian mummies.
The mummified remains were typically ground into a powder and used as a treatment for a variety of conditions, such as epilepsy, bruising, and hemorrhaging. It was believed that the ancient preservation techniques imbued the mummies with powerful curative properties.
That’s nasty.
Old people who were near death who agree to become candied corpses will not eat or drink anything but honey. He was supposed to discharge honey through his fluids. At some point he would die and become a honey mummy.
Egyptian mummy is made entirely out of egyptian mummy and it didn’t keep them alive.
So that’s why mom and dad were covering each other in honey the other night
The mummies didn’t need to be candied to be used for medicine.