How A Dead Sorcerer Began The Concept Of Feasting For The Deceased

Posted by on August 31st, 2010

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The oldest known shaman died and was buried in a Northern Israeli cave. Everyone thought it would be a good idea to stuff their faces with food in her memory. Because of this, you ate a ham plate at your Uncle Barry’s wake.

Life is strange.

A study published Monday in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences by Grosman and Natalie Munro, a zooarchaeologist at the University of Connecticut, reveals that the shaman’s burial feast was just one chapter in the intense ritual life of the Natufians, the first known people on Earth to give up nomadic living and settle in villages.

The other traditions? Carried the dead bodies along with the party supplies up the mountains to their elevated resting places. Who’s got two thumbs and is pretty psyched we dropped that one?

[Nat Geo]

2 Responses to “How A Dead Sorcerer Began The Concept Of Feasting For The Deceased”

  1. JL_Frost Says:

    I’ve never felt quite right while eating at a death party. A kind of guilt I suppose. The worst of these experiences was after my father died, when my dumbass sister in law insisted on taking a family photo. Not really the ideal situation in which to create a new happy time memory. Wake feasts are indeed weird.

  2. Josh Bulloc Says:

    This Guy

    Josh Bulloc
    Kansas City, MO