On
December 6, 1920 Rosalia, daughter of Official Mario Lombardo, died of
pneumonia at the age of two. Her grieving father couldn't settle for just
laying his daughter to rest and sought out Alfredo Salafia, a Sicilian
professor of chemistry, to preserve her. After he worked his magic, she was
placed in the Capuchin catacombs of Palermo in Sicily where she rests to this
day.
Her
near-perfect preservation has earned her the name "Sleeping Beauty"
since she appears to be a living child simply taking a nap. The secrets to her
embalming stayed unknown for years until Salafia's handwritten memoir was
uncovered by anthropologist and curator of the Capuchin Catacombs Dario Piombino-Mascali.
It revealed that her blood was replaced with a formula that prevented the body
from drying out and killed bacteria. The recipe translates to: "one part
glycerin, one part formalin saturated with both zinc sulfate and chloride, and
one part of an alcohol solution saturated with salicylic acid."
Her
unusually perfect embalming isn't the strangest part of Rosalia's story. Being
such a famous mummy, she is visited often and this was how it was discovered
that her eyes appeared to be opening. One person even took four images of her
face two hours apart and put them in a video to show the progress the eyelids
make. While some think it is the soul of the child causing this anomaly, there
are others who have more practical explanations. In an article from Discovery,
Piombino-Mascali stated: "It’s an optical illusion produced by the light
that filters through the side windows, which during the day is subject to
change." He claims her eyes were never really closed in the first place
which allowed this phenomenon to appear to happen.
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