The Paris Morgue was built in 1864 on the Île de la Cité, one of the two islands in the Seine, just behind the Notre Dame de Paris, where the bodies of unidentified dead–most of them suicide cases–were displayed on marble slabs for friends or family to identify.
When arriving at the morgue, the bodies were first stripped, inspected, frozen and then wheeled out on black marble slabs for public display. As the morgue was not refrigerated until 1882, cold water would drip from the ceiling constantly, giving the skin of the dead a bloated and puffy appearance. Up to 50 visitors at a time would crowd around great windows overlooking the slabs, to gawk and gossip over the bodies. The dead would usually have to be removed after three days due to decomposition, at which point a photograph or a wax cast would take their place.
Details
Published:
3 years, 9 months ago
21 Apr 2021 00:41 CEST
Initial: 998f5837db1154ea01818f9fca52594f
Full Size: bd3439b90756458236f5e1556e717cb1
Large: 21bc29830742384a13c88e2de95d6899
Small: ed080ccb91f6a3d8d0d71e3b52b63f79
Stats
920 views
23 favorites
1 comment