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10 Books Wrapped in Human Skin
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    Default 10 Books Wrapped in Human Skin

    Top 10 Books Wrapped in Human Skin

    The practice of binding books in human skin, also known as anthropodermic bibliopegy, is not just the stuff of dark legends and horror fiction. It was a real technique which, although frowned upon and considered ghastly by today’s standards, was officially practiced since the 17th century. The technique gained considerable popularity during the French Revolution and among the upper classes in the 19th century. The technique was used to bind such texts as anatomy books, last will and testaments, and judicial proceedings. Of course, there have been many legends concerning this practice, almost all of which have cast it in an evil light. But anthropodermic bibliopegy has a distinct history of being utilized for regular, and even mundane, texts. Below I have arranged ten confirmed examples of anthropodermic bibliopegy, arranged in order of when the versions bound in skin were published. Some of entries do not have a confirmed or recorded date of publishing, so I have had to take occasional liberties in making the list as chronological as possible.


    10. A True and Perfect Relation of the Whole Proceedings Against the Late Most Barbarous Traitors, Garnet A Jesuit and His Confederates
    1606: Skin “Donor”: Father Henry Garnet



    This book was a recollection of failure and subsequent arrest and execution of the Gunpowder Plotters. The Gunpowder Plotters were a group of Catholic rebels who in 1605 tried to kill the Protestant King James I of England, his eldest son, and much of the English court and government. Their plan was to explode gunpowder during a session of the Houses of Parliament. The attempt, which was later named the Gunpowder Plot of 1605, failed. The participants were all discovered and executed. The most famous of these was Guy Fawkes. However, one of his co-conspirators was Father Henry Garnet, the head of the Jesuits in England. It was his flesh which was used after his execution to bind this book. The book has a Latin inscription on its cover which, when translated, reads “severe penitence punished the flesh.” This is one of the most famous examples of anthropodermic bibliopegy since many believe that you can make out the Father’s face, forever twisted in agony, on its cover.


    9. Practicarum Quaestionum Circa Leges Regias Hispaniae
    1632 (?): Jonas Wright




    In the rare book collection at the Langdell Law Library at Harvard University, there sits a strange tome several centuries old. The book is entitled Practicarum Quaestionum Circa Leges Regias Hispaniae. The text is a treaty of Spanish law. On the last page, a faint inscription can be made out. It reads:

    “The bynding of this booke is all that remains of my deare friende Jonas Wright, who was flayed alive by the Wavuma on the Fourth Day of August, 1632. King btesa 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.”

    The Wavuma are believed to be an African people that possibly existed in modern day Zimbabwe. This is a notable example of anthropodermic bibliopegy, as it is proof that the practice was sometimes used for memorial and sentimental reasons instead of for sheer macabre titillation.


    8. Leeds, England Ledger
    1700s: Skin “Donor”: Unknown




    n 2006, a 300-year-old ledger was discovered in downtown Leeds, England. It was found in the wake of a bungled burglary attempt. Not much is known about this ledger. However, it is of some curiosity that this ledger was written in French and dated back to the 1700s. This suggests that it might have been made during the French Revolution, a time when anthropodermic bibliopegy gained popularity. If this was indeed made during the French Revolution, then this ledger can stand beside other documents such as The Rights of Man and the French Constitution of 1793 which are also believed to have copies bound in human flesh.


    7. Virgil’s Georgics
    Virgil’s Georgics: Skin “Donor”: Jacques Delille




    Jacques Delille was a famous French poet who also excelled at translations. One of his most famous works was a verse translation of Virgil’s Georgics. Upon Delille’s death, someone stole some of his skin while he was laying in state. The stolen skin was then used to bind his translation of Georgics.


    6. Samuel Johnson’s Dictionary
    1818: Skin “Donor”: James Johnson




    Samuel Johnson was one of the most important writers and lexicographers of the English language. A Dictionary of the English Language is widely considered to be one of his greatest works. First published in 1755, Samuel Johnson’s dictionary listed 40,000 words, making it the most extensive work of its kind up to that point in history. In 1818, a criminal named James Johnson was hung in Norwich. His skin was then used to bind a copy of Samuel Johnson’s dictionary. There is no known connection between the two men.

    5. Red Barn Murder Judicial Proceedings
    1828: Skin “Donor”: William Corder




    The Red Barn Murder was an infamous killing that took place in Polstead, Suffolk, England in 1827. The case started when a young woman named Maria Marten had local rogue William Corder’s child out of wedlock, an offense that could lead to persecution from parish officers. The two arranged to meet and elope at a local Red Barn. However, upon meeting, Corder shot Marten and fled. Marten’s remains were later discovered and identified when her stepmother started having dreams about her being murdered and buried in the Red Barn. The murder and subsequent trial and execution of William Corder became a national sensation, inspiring songs, plays, and ballads that have survived to this day. After Corder was executed, his body was dissected and examined by medical professionals. His skeleton would become a teaching aid in the West Suffolk Hospital. His skin was tanned by a surgeon named George Creed and used to bind the account of the infamous murder. The book was inscribed by Creed:

    “The Binding of this book is the skin of the Murderer William Corder taken from his body and tanned by myself in the year 1828. George Creed Surgeon to the Suffolk Hospital.”

    The account is now held at Moyse’s Hall Museum.


    4. Narrative of the Life of James Allen, alias Jonas Pierce, alias James H. York, alias Burley Grove, the Highwayman, Being His Death-bed Confession to the Warden of the Massachusetts State Prison
    1837: Skin “Donor”: James Allen




    James Allen was an early 19th century Massachusetts highwayman who had an unusual last request upon his death. Allen had been put in prison as the result of trying to rob a man named John A. Fenno on the Massachusetts Turnpike. During the attempted robbery, Fenno resisted Allen’s attacks, even brushing off a gunshot wound. Not only did he stop Allen from robbing him, Fenno helped bring Allen to the authorities. Nearing his death, Allen requested that a copy of his memoir which had been transcribed by the prison warden be bound in his skin and given to Fenno. The cover of the book has the inscription “Hic Liber Waltonis Cute Compactus Est” which translates to “This book by [Allen] bound in his own skin.” The book has since been donated by Fenno’s ancestors to the Boston Anthenaeum.


    3. The Poetical Works of John Milton
    1852: Skin “Donor”: George Cudmore




    In 1830, Roborough ratcatcher George Cudmore poisoned his wife with arsenic via a roasted apple and milk. Cudmore was arrested and later hanged at the Devon County Goal at the Lent Assizes. After his death, he was taken to an Exeter hospital for dissection. While at the hospital, a piece of Cudmore’s skin made its way into the possession of Exeter bookseller Mr. W. Clifford. The skin was then flayed and tanned into a cover for a copy of The Poetical Works of John Milton. The front of the book bears an inscription that mentions Cudmore and the crime that led to his execution. The book is now kept at the Westcountry Studies Library in Exeter.


    2. Terres du Ciel
    1882: Skin “Donor”: Unknown French Countess




    Camille Flammarion was a prolific French astronomer and author who gained many fans during his day. One of his more “devoted” fans was a French countess who unfortunately died young of tuberculosis. The two never met in real life. However, she had a large piece of skin cut from her back upon her death and donated to Flammarion. She asked Flammarion to use it bind a copy of his next book. Incredibly, Flammarion consented. As a result, the first copy of his next book, Terres du Ciel, was bound with her skin. The book bears a golden inscription on its front cover: “Pious fulfillment of an anonymous wish/ Binding in human skin (woman) 1882.” The book now sits in the library of the observatory at Juvisy.


    1. El Viaje Largo by Tere Medina
    1972: Skin “Donor”: Unknown




    At Slippery Rock University’s Bailey Library there is a strange little book of erotic Spanish poetry entitled El Viaje Largo by Tere Medina. The book is wrapped in human skin, which is shocking considering that it was supposedly written in 1972. Inside on the first page, the following is written in both Spanish and English:

    “The cover of this book is made from the leather of the human skin,” it reads. “The Aguadilla tribe of the Mayaguez Plateau region preserves the torso epidermal layer of deceased tribal members. While most of the leather is put to utilitarian use by the Aguadillas, some finds its way to commercial trade markets where there is a small but steady demand. This cover is representative of that demand.”


    Source: http://www.toptenz.net/top-10-books-...human-skin.php

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    larali
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    From the looks of it, human skin isn't the best type of material to bind books in. :/

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    Quote Originally Posted by larali View Post
    From the looks of it, human skin isn't the best type of material to bind books in. :/
    You are absolutely correct. It is quite rough on the fingers when reading too.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Accountant View Post
    You are absolutely correct. It is quite rough on the fingers when reading too.
    LOL, how do you know this?

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    Ew.

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    Quote Originally Posted by larali View Post
    LOL, how do you know this?
    Just my slightly educated guess. Nothing to see here, please move on. No further comments will be given on this issue.

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