Preserved body of a two-year-old girl is said to be the ‘world’s most beautiful mummy’

By Malavika Pradeep

Published Sep 16, 2022 at 09:00 AM

Reading time: 3 minutes

36130

In the depths of the Capuchin catacombs of Palermo, Sicily, lies the body of a two-year-old girl called Rosalia Lombardo—who tragically passed away due to pneumonia caused by the Spanish Flu on 6 December 1920. At the time, her father approached an embalmer and taxidermist named Alfredo Salafia so that he could preserve his child in a glass-topped coffin.

Today, over a century later, Lombardo’s mummified body lies intact with all her internal organs. Her skin still appears smooth as her hair remains tied back with a large silk bow on the top of her head. And, perhaps more hauntingly, Lombardo’s crystal blue irises are visible under her blonde eyelashes—making her seem like a child who is merely napping and could awake at any moment.

Resting on a wooden pedestal among 8,000 other mummies, thousands of people come to visit the two-year-old’s preserved body in the catacombs underneath the Capuchin convent. Her frame is covered with a blanket, leaving only her face visible to the crowd. Lombardo is now nicknamed the “sleeping beauty of Palermo” and is often described as being “the most beautiful mummy in the world.”

Preserved body of a two-year-old girl is said to be the ‘world’s most beautiful mummy’

Over the years, a number of bizarre theories have emerged about Lombardo’s remains, with some even claiming that her body is a fake wax replica. Several tests have since been reportedly performed for a History Channel documentary in the 2000s looking to debunk these statements. Not only did the MRI scans, X-rays and 3D images confirm the mummy to be the body of Lombardo, researchers even discovered that her skeletal structure and internal organs were still intact—including her brain, which had shrunk to 50 per cent of its original size.

However, there was one urban legend that continued to haunt visitors: many people have reported witnessing the young girl slowly open and close her eyes, in turn, earning her the title of “blinking mummy.” Several time-lapse videos featuring images of Lombardo’s body taken hours apart also went on to grip the broader internet—where she appeared to have opened her eyes by a fraction of an inch.

While some believed supernatural forces were at work, enabling the two-year-old’s mummified body to blink, others claimed this was due to the temperature changes inside the catacomb which compelled her eyelids to contract and produce the blink-like effect.

But it wasn’t until 2009, when Italian paleopathologist Dario Piombino-Mascali came aboard and debunked the mystery that the internet rested Lombardo’s unusual case. “It’s an optical illusion produced by the light that filters through the side windows, which during the day is subject to change,” the expert said in a statement, as noted by ScienceAlert.

Piombino-Mascali made this discovery when he noticed that workers at the museum had moved the mummy’s case, which caused her to shift slightly and allowed him to see her eyelids better than ever before. “They are not completely closed, and indeed they have never been,” he went on to state. In short, when the light changes and hits her eyes at different angles, it can appear as though the eyes are opening and closing.

By tracking down the embalmer’s living relatives, the paleopathologist also managed to uncover the elusive formula that was used for Lombardo’s noteworthy preservation. After going through several documents obtained from Alfredo Salafia’s family, Piombino-Mascali stumbled upon a handwritten memoir in which the embalmer had recorded the chemicals he injected into the two-year-old’s body.

Now, typical embalming procedures include the complete removal of organs. The empty body is then filled with natron salts, which help desiccate the remains. But Salafia did something different. In his memoir, he detailed that he had made a small puncture wound and injected a mixture of formalin, zinc salts, alcohol, salicylic acid, and glycerin into Lombardo’s body following her death.

While formalin—which is now used by embalmers worldwide—helped eliminate bacteria, salicylic acid removed any fungi present in the flesh and glycerin prevented the young girl’s body from drying out. But according to Melissa Johnson Williams, executive director of the American Society of Embalmers, zinc salts was the magical element that is responsible for Lombardo’s preservation.

“Zinc gave her rigidity,” Williams told National Geographic. “You could take her out of the casket, prop her up, and she would stand by herself.”

Today, Lombardo is housed in a new glass case filled with nitrogen, specifically curated to protect her remains from oxygen, light, and even tourists. “It was designed to block any bacteria or fungi. Thanks to a special film, it also protects the body from the effects of light,” Piombino-Mascali continued in his statement, adding that he hopes tourists will stop fabricating “totally unfounded stories” about the world’s most beautiful mummy.

Keep On Reading

By Eliza Frost

Glen Powell’s GQ photoshoot is a satiric look at modern day males—and he’s in on the joke 

By Eliza Frost

Kim Kardashian wants to know how much a carton of milk costs 

By Eliza Frost

Netflix is predicting your next favourite show based on your zodiac sign 

By Eliza Frost

Will Belly choose herself in the final episodes of The Summer I Turned Pretty?

By Eliza Frost

Bad Bunny is not touring the US due to fear of ICE raids at concerts

By Eliza Frost

How fans manifested Elle Fanning as Effie Trinket in The Hunger Games: Sunrise on the Reaping

By Eliza Frost

If everyone has an AI boyfriend, what does that mean for the future of Gen Z dating?

By Eliza Frost

NHS makes morning-after pill free at 10,000 pharmacies across England

By Charlie Sawyer

Gen Zers are taking out travel insurance policies for their Labubus ahead of summer

By Eliza Frost

Is Belly Conklin the problem in The Summer I Turned Pretty?

By Eliza Frost

Skibidi, tradwife, and delulu are among new words added to Cambridge Dictionary for 2025

By Charlie Sawyer

From breaking up families to spreading rumours about Joe Biden’s death, here’s what QAnons been up to

By Eliza Frost

Netflix’s new Trainwreck documentary exposes the rise and scandalous fall of American Apparel

By Eliza Frost

Misinformation spread by wellness influencers online is leading to falling contraceptive pill use

By Eliza Frost

Jennifer Lawrence weighs in on The Summer I Turned Pretty love triangle, revealing she is Team Jeremiah

By Eliza Frost

Why is everyone saying ‘Six-Seven’? The meaning behind the viral phrase

By Eliza Frost

Millie Bobby Brown reportedly accuses Stranger Things co-star David Harbour of harassment and bullying 

By Eliza Frost

Kendall Jenner reveals plans to quit Kardashian fame for a normal job

By Eliza Frost

How to spot a performative male out in the wild 

By Charlie Sawyer

Introducing Berlin’s latest tourist attraction Cybrothel, where men can request AI sex dolls covered in blood