Glob’s Bog People (1965) is well illustrated, finely detailed, and absolutely gruesome. I’ve never really given much thought to what happened to the bodies of all the millions and millions who died in antiquity. I figured they turned to dust and disappeared. But Professor Glob shows us that with the right conditions - acidic water in an anaerobic environment - human hair and skin can last millennia. While bones and cloth dissolve in peaty bogs, skin and organs react benignly with the tannic acids. What results is the leathery sheath of a body. Discovered centuries after their demise, these human "bags" retain the same expressions they took to their soggy graves. These semi-serene countenances, preserved for thousands of years under peat and now carefully displayed under glass, have made the bog people some of the most popular exhibits in the greatest museums of the world.
Glob’s minute study of the remains of these bodies will interest those who find autopsies entertaining. Without a doubt, his first three or four reports with their painstaking descriptions of the length of the hair, the color of the irises, or the partially digested contents of the stomach and large intestine are interesting. By the tenth, you too may feel bloated. This is not a book to be savored right after supper.
Interspersed with the dissection of the bits and pieces are brief allusions to the culture of the Iron Age. Tantalizing? Yes! but also disappointing. Glob doesn’t make strong links between the body on the dissecting table and the world of Iron Age Germania. It turns out that the bodies themselves give us few clues as to who these people were, how they lived, and how they came to be buried in a bog. To respond to these perplexing questions, Glob has to turn to already well-known classical sources: Caesar, Tacitus, Ptolemy, Strabo. Relying on these accounts, none of which are principally concerned with the northern Germani, Glob concludes that most of the bog people were willing human victims ritually sacrificed to a fertility goddess. Others appear to have been criminals or transgressors of social taboos who paid for their sins by being staked into the bog. Whether they were alive or already dead when their bodies were pinned to the peat remains unclear. In the end, the bog bodies, their manner of death, and burial offer some validation of the anecdotes recorded in the classical sources, but they don’t really help us see the world of Iron Age Germania more clearly.
The most disturbing part of the book, though, may be the dedication. Bog People was written for fifteen English schoolgirls from the Convent of the Assumption, Bury St. Edmunds. They learned of the bog men in their history course and then wrote to Glob for further information. His response was this book, a "long letter" as he calls it, dedicated to his "dear young girls," who entertained an interest in how well the bog people "have kept." I shiver to think how the young scholars, and their mistress, received Glob’s ghastly conclusion. Ewwwwwwwww!