A Disturbing Collection of History’s Most Brutal Rulers

A Disturbing Collection of History’s Most Brutal Rulers

Khalid Elhassan - April 30, 2022

A Disturbing Collection of History’s Most Brutal Rulers
Bust of Ferdinand I of Naples. Capodimonte Museum, Naples

28. The Brutal King of Naples’ Museum of Mummies

Ferdinand I of Naples was not satisfied with simply offing his enemies. He wanted to turn them and their fates into public examples and cautionary lessons to deter others from even thinking about betrayal. After he had them “taken care of”, the king of Naples ordered that the bodies of his enemies be mummified. He then put them on display in an exhibit hall in the Castel Nouvo, which he referred to as his “Black Museum”, and which came to be commonly known as the “Museum of Mummies“.

A Disturbing Collection of History’s Most Brutal Rulers
King Ferdinand I of Naples’ enemies propped up for a banquet, as depicted in Showtime’s ‘The Borgias’. Showtime

As a contemporary historian described the exhibit: “these dried cadavers were displayed, pickled with herbs, a frightful sight, in the dress they wore when alive and with the same ornaments, so that by this terrible example of tyranny, those who did not wish to be similarly served might be properly afraid“. Ferdinand liked to conduct personal tours of his macabre museum, which often served as an effective deterrent to those contemplating treason. To mix things up and keep them interesting, the king’s mummified enemies were sometimes propped up in mock banquets.

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