Bog body Essays

  • Bog Bodies Essay

    1631 Words  | 4 Pages

    contributed to our understanding of European Bog Bodies? Bog bodies are bodies that have either been forced or fell into a peat bog while still alive. A bog itself is a wetland that over years accumulates a matter called peat, which is a deposit of dead plant material (mainly sphagnum moss). Over time the moss in these bogs will die and it is replaced by new moss, however the old matter turns into what is known as ‘peat’, a thick fibrous layer. When the bog water interacts with the acids in the moss

  • The Bog Bodies of Northern Europe

    1709 Words  | 4 Pages

    year old Irish boy named Sean O’Leary wandered around a peat bog, accompanying his father who worked nearby in the fields. He was completely clueless to the secrets the mud was holding. As he explored the bog he encountered upon what he claimed was a forgotten toy. Once home when presented the object to his father, they realized the “forgotten toy” was a cadaver’s hand! Unbeknownst to them, this well-preserved body part came from a body that had been buried in a swamp a thousand years earlier, a common

  • Different Theories Proposed to Account for the Iron Age Bog Bodies

    898 Words  | 2 Pages

    There are numerous unanswered questions surrounding the Northern European Bog Bodies phenomenon including "How, or why, or even when, the bodies became immersed in quagmires." (Turner, R.C, Scaife, R.G (ed.),1995,p.169). Despite vast amounts of evidence there are still no easy answers that account for the Iron age bodies. However there are four main competing theories providing possible causes including: the Sacrifice theory, Punishment theory, Boundary theory and the Accidental death theory. All

  • The Tollund Man

    945 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Tollund Man is one of Europe's best-known bog bodies. He was found, alongside The Grauballe Man in the early 1950s. Bog bodies recovered from the past are quite wide spread throughout Northern Europe, especially in Denmark, Germany and Ireland. The peat perfectly preserves the bodies due to anaerobic conditions, although the bodies are found blackened, their fingertips, hair and clothing are all still intact. Seamus Heaney uses the bog bodies in his poetry to "uncover, in their meditations

  • Discuss some of the ways in which Seamus Heaney makes use of the past

    1605 Words  | 4 Pages

    of Heaney returning to his origins. Heaney evokes the rural landscape where he was raised and shows the care and skill of how his Father and ancestors farmed the land ‘My father, digging’. In the poem there are many monosyllabic words such as ‘bog’, ‘sods’ and ‘curt cuts’, which is also alliteration and assonance. The colloquial term, ‘By God, the old man could handle a spade’ shows Seamus Heaney’s pride of his Grandfather. “Irishmen are justifiably well known for digging, but Heaney shows

  • How does Heaney present Religion in ‘The Tollund Man’?

    1179 Words  | 3 Pages

    Idolisation of the bog man in the first stanza is undermined by the fact he is “naked”, implying he is vulnerable and not important, as he is carelessly “dug” up – This lack of dignity is also seen in Strange Fruit where Heaney describes the “prune-skinned”, “leathery beauty” of the girl. His lack of power in The Tollund Man is furthered as Heaney personifies the bog as an overwhelming female “goddess” who has “tightened her torc on him” and “opened”; waiting for a sacrifice. Whilst the bog man is first

  • Tollund Man Poem Analysis

    724 Words  | 2 Pages

    ” The voice becomes pitiful even indicates the sadness of the speaker. The second part of the poem dramatically shifts the previous tone as Heaney personifies the bog to Ireland and reflects the death of four Catholic brothers. The stillness of the tone suddenly shifts to agitation: “I could risk blasphemy, /Consecrate the cauldron bog” (lines 21-22). The speaker believes that violence associated with religion. The Tollund Man will not die if people don’t believe in Nerthus, and beliefs in religion

  • Historical Investigation on the Tollund Man

    1101 Words  | 3 Pages

    preservations of his body which gave them hard evidence to support their theories about Tollund Man’s death. The Tollund Man was found on the 6th of May 1950 by two brothers at Silkeborg, Denmark, in a peat bog. He was positioned on his side in a cradle position, naked with a leather belt around his waist, a pointed sheepskin cap with a leather strap that was positioned firmly under his chin and a noose around his neck. The substances in the peat bog prevented the body from decomposing. The bog contains Sphagnum

  • Postmodernism in Heaney's Poems Bogland and Tollund Man

    2849 Words  | 6 Pages

    classical poetry. Recently, his poems are considered as postmodern. To answer that how much his poems are traditional, modern or postmodern is the aim of this project. Key Words: postmodernism, myth, imagery, technique, poetry, deadly, violence, corpse, bog, imagination, freedom. Introduction This research is a case study including discussions and analysis of two poems by Seamus Heaney, one of the postmodern poets. The poems, which are going to be analyzed, are: Bogland and The Tollund Man. In

  • Bog Mummies Research Paper

    903 Words  | 2 Pages

    Bog Mummies In 1640 a bog body was discovered by a farmer in Holstein, Germany. This was possibly the first recorded instance of such a discovery, but what is a bog, how are human beings preserved in one, and how are bog mummies different from others? This essay will explain the one-of-a-kind characteristics of a bog and how all of these events can take place in one. To begin, wetlands, such as bogs, all have basic characteristics that group them together, however they still manage to maintain

  • Analysis: The Ghost Of The Murdered Kings

    790 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Ghost of the Murdered Kings Within the last few years, bodies have been found in bogs all across Ireland and Northern Europe. PBS took us through a documentary, named “The Ghost of the Murdered Kings”, in hopes to find some missing information on these peculiar bodies. Although they weren’t just skeletons, the bodies were preserved due to the highly acidic waters and peat that grows there. Grobbel Man, Old Croghan Man, Clonycavan Man, and several more have been found by everyday farmers. One

  • Bog Plants and Their Use in Medicine

    636 Words  | 2 Pages

    Bog Plants and Their Use in Medicine Although most of the modern world does not often resort to bog plants for medicinal uses when there are more widely accessible forms of medicine to treat certain health needs, there exists numerous medicinal uses for bog plants. The various medicinal uses of different bog plants have developed and changed over the course of history. Bog plants were more commonly used by Native Indians as medicine such as the Ledum groenlandicum (Labrador tea) for sore throats

  • Pollen Analysis

    932 Words  | 2 Pages

    the only environments which are truly hostile to this shell are abrasion, such as may be the case on sandy sites, and oxidation. However, the most favourable conditions for preservation of the pollen record are acidic, anaerobic sites such as peat bogs. This high degree of survivability combines with another factor inherent in the nature of pollen - the large amount produced - to make pollen analysis one of the most important tools available to the archaeologist. Though one further factor in the

  • The Tatler and the Spectator

    2719 Words  | 6 Pages

    feelings and thoughts. Their was one  topic in particular that fashioned their writings and that was the topic of love. Love was portrayed as being good and bad throughout the writings. Love was used repetitively due to it is a constant in every bodies life and they could easily relate to the characters. Allowing others to relate to their writings helped make them popular. Addison and Steele gave love a good and bad side to show the readers that love is not cracked up to what it really can be. It

  • Is the Body Ownable

    2167 Words  | 5 Pages

    Is the Body Ownable The way Jennifer Church approaches the issue of body ownership in “Ownership and the Body”, it sounds as though that we own our bodies is a given fact, and the controversy is over what follows from this and why it is important to have a discussion of this fact. I, however, intend to argue that it is a bad move to allow for the idea of self-ownership (or any sort of ownership of subjects), that it is more likely to perpetuate problems than to solve them to think in this

  • Spiritual Views in Emerson's The Poet

    1741 Words  | 4 Pages

    between the physical world and the mind and then praises the "highest minds" (such as Swedenborg, Plato and Heraclitus) who instead examine everything to its fullest manifold meaning. I find it interesting that in the lines "We were put into our bodies, as fire is put into a pan" and we are "but children of the fire, made of it, and only the same divinity transmuted, and at two or three removes, when we know least about it" that Emerson compares human souls to fire. Heraclitus believed that fire

  • Accounting Regulatory Bodies Paper

    721 Words  | 2 Pages

    Accounting Regulatory Bodies Paper Introduction The success of a company is very dependent upon its financial accounting. In accounting there are numerous Regulatory bodies that govern the accounting world. These companies are extremely important to a company because they set the standards when it comes to the language and decision making of a company. These regulatory bodies can be structured as agencies, associations, commissions, and boards. Without companies like the Security and Exchange

  • Personal Identity: Philosophical Views

    1388 Words  | 3 Pages

    Bob? One must consider both internal (mind) and external (body) perspectives. There are several general philosophical theories of this identity problem. In the following paragraphs one will find the body theory, soul theory, and a more detailed explanation of the conscious theory. One theory of personal identity is known as the body theory. This is defined as a person X has a personal identity if and only if they have the same body Y. However there are two problems with this definition. The

  • The Unexplained Massacre

    802 Words  | 2 Pages

    Prologue #1 The battle had been lost. She knew it before she even opened her eyes. She could feel pain all over her body and felt the familiar sensation of cold air on open skin. She tried to raise her arm but it was trapped under something. With what strength she had left she pulled. Her arm came free. Her eyes fluttered open and she immediately had to stop herself from screaming. In front of her was the corpse of her lover. Patches of his hair had been torn from his skull along with the flesh

  • Analysis Of John Locke's Theories Of Personal Identity

    837 Words  | 2 Pages

    Sameness of person consists not in sameness of soul nor the sameness of body, but in sameness of consciousness. According to the memory view, the personal identity is established by (genuine) memory-relations. Locke’s theory manifests the idea that rather than being tied to our physical bodies, our identity is bound to our consciousness. Locke, in one of his works states that consciousness is the perception of what passes in a man’s own mind. Essentially, meaning that consciousness equals memories