Mummy Widow Countess Spain 17th century Intact with her husband's Heart
MADRID – archaeologists revealed to have found corpses revealed near-perfect, though still preserved for long. The mummy is believed to be derived from Spain the nobility in Northern France in the 17th century.
Mummy estimated to be 350 years old, found still full religious dress, like a dress and shoes that are still used. Archeologists marveling at the Mummy preserved because as it still looks intact, such as hair, skin, and brain.
The French archaeologist from the Inrap Research Institute revealed that the mummy is the body of a widow named Countess Louise de Quengo, or Lady of Brefeillac. The widow is believed to died in 1658 at the age of sixty years, and is buried along with her husband who is also a heart count Toussaint Perrien.
This Mummy findings obtained from the excavations in a convent of the Jacobins in Rennes. There are as many as 800 tombs were found in the excavations of archaeologists. Now the excavation Center into the new Conference Centre.
Louise de Quengo or Lady of Brefeillac found in one grave a lead-lined coffin, but the rest of the coffin of Lady of the Brefeillac only a framework only. Possible ways of preserving the good done with the embalmed for the nobility at that time, because even though the visible shells but not really fragile.
During the autopsy of the Tin layer, scientists found that there is a part of the heart that has been cut with a good surgical skill. They also found kidney stones and Lung in the body de Quengo.
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