By Emily Bach, WPAMC Class of 2022
Overview
An old adage muses that one should never judge a book by its cover and yet, historically, binding materials were purposefully chosen and often aligned with a book’s contents or purpose. A book cheaply bound in paper-covered boards could signify a temporary binding while a bible encased in supple leather and embellished with gilded tooling denoted its spiritual importance. Bookbinders and customers had a variety of options from which to choose — sheepskin, calf, goat, cloth, vellum, and wood. On rare occasion, however, someone chose a more peculiar binding material — human skin.
Most current scholarship resides in the virtual world of blog posts associated with museums, universities, and the Anthropodermic Book Project, the leading initiative in identifying extant human skin bound books. The team uses an innovative science called Peptide Mass Fingerprinting, or PMF, that tests for specific amino acid sequencing unique to each mammalian source. Currently, there are fifty supposed anthropodermic books that exist and of these, the project has tested thirty-one. With the application of PMF science, the project has confirmed that of the thirty-one books examined, eighteen are actually bound in human skin.
Such a small number of surviving anthropodermic books highlights the rarity of these anomalously bound books. Despite this, however, references to these macabre books existed in the sixteenth century and the practice reached a peak in popularity during the late-nineteenth century. Early scholars of this subject have attempted to uncover the mythological and historical origins, such as Lawrence S. Thompson with his 1949 work, Religatum de Pelle Humana, and Rigby Graham in his 1965 article “Bookbinding with Human Skin.” Thompson recollected a multitude of fables and ancient myths considered to involve human skin leather, including the tale of northern abolitionists spreading propaganda that claimed slaveowners tanned the skins of enslaved men and women to bind their family bibles. Graham continued this search for origins by referencing prisoners who were skinned as punishment, people who desecrated graves and skinned the corpses of those they admired, and erotica novels bound in women’s breasts.
With the introduction of PMF technology and definitive identification of anthropodermic books, contemporary scholars, in contrast to Rigby and Graham, have dedicated their writings to interpreting these books to answer the questions that naturally arise when contemplating this subject: Who created these books and why did they choose this material? What genre of text was typically bound in this macabre material? Who was the willing and, more often than not, unwilling donor? According to medical historian Lindsey Fitzharris, people chose human skin to cover their texts for three major reasons: collections, punishment, and memorialization.
Books confirmed as anthropodermic are often associated with the human condition and became valuable relics for collectors. The Historical Medical Library located within the Mütter Museum of Philadelphia houses the most extensive collection of human skin bound books. Of its five confirmed titles, three were bound in the skin of Mary Lynch (Figure 1), a widowed Irish immigrant who, on July 15, 1868, was admitted as a tuberculosis patient at Old Blockley, Philadelphia’s almshouse. Unfortunately for Mary, after eating pork products contaminated with trichinella spiralis, a parasitic roundworm that attacks the intestines and circulatory system, she tragically passed away on January 16, 1869.
Dr. John Stockton Hough autopsied her and confidentially removed skin from her thigh, which he tanned into leather. He did not use her skin, however, until 1887 when he bound three books, Speculations on the Mode and Appearances of Impregnation in the Human Female (1789), Les Nouvelles Découvertes sur Toutes les Parties Principales de l’Homme et de la Femme (1680), and Reveuil des Secrets de Louise Bourgeois (1650). Each of these books dealt with female health, conception, and reproduction. As Megan Rosenbloom wrote in her article “A Book by Its Cover: The Strange History of Books Bound in Human Skin,” Hough’s exploitation of Mary Lynch’s condition reflected a larger trend in anthropodermic bibliopegy of doctors being the ones who wielded the knives. During the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries, doctors enjoyed newfound wealth and authority. With this growing prestige, possessing an exceptional rare book collection visually proclaimed a doctor’s knowledge and status. Hough was no different, as exemplified by him waiting almost twenty years to use Mary’s tanned skin for medical tomes related to female anatomy.
Another collector, Dr. Ludovic Bouland, also partook in the phenomenon of binding books in human skin to increase their perceived value. In the mid-1880s, French writer Arsène Houssaye presented Bouland with his book Des Destinèes de l’Ame, which is now housed within Harvard University’s Houghton Library. Bouland completed the book’s binding in human skin because of its philosophical reflection on the human soul. Within the text, he inscribed:
This book is bound in human skin parchment on which no ornament has been stamped to preserve its elegance. By looking carefully you easily distinguish the pores of the skin. A book about the human soul deserved to have a human covering: I had kept this piece of human skin taken from the back of a woman…
Both Hough and Bouland demonstrated how skin was often acquired without consent. Books confirmed as anthropodermic inherently commoditized the human body as people viewed them as extremely valuable and desirable due to the uncommon material.
Another reason for anthropodermic bibliopegy was the implementation of punishments that ensured a criminal’s eternal humiliation and accountability. England’s Murder Act of 1751, for example, ordered not only the execution of convicted murderers, but also denied them proper burial. Removing a criminal’s skin and using it to craft objects provided a way to keep the body above ground. On display at the Surgeon’s Hall Museum in Edinburgh is a pocket book constructed from the skin of William Burke, a serial killer who murdered sixteen people in 1828. Similar to collectors’ human skin bound books that contemplated the human soul and body, punishments that resulted in the creation of objects or book covers from a criminal’s skin materialized the person.
Lastly, anthropodermic bibliopegy also related to the memorialization of the deceased because these objects physically represented the body. At the Boston Athenaeum Library survives the Narrative of the Life of James Allen (1837), an autobiographical account that chronicled the crimes of a man named James Allen. Before his death, he requested that his skin be used to cover two copies of his book as gifts to his doctor and the one victim who stood up to him. While this is one specific example, generally all books bound in human skin memorialized the deceased person in one way or another, whether intentionally or not. Anthropodermic bibliopegy reveals important themes of exploitation, commoditization of the human body, associations with valuable collectables, memento mori practices, and punishments, all of which are reflected by the covers we’re so often told not to judge.
Diagram of an Anthropodermic Book
Glossary of Terms
Annotated Bibliography
This section in the Anthropodermic Book Project’s website and blog goes into detail about the scientific process of Peptide Mass Fingerprinting.
Full Citation: “Analyzing Alleged Human Skin Books Via Peptide Mass Fingerprinting.” Anthropodermic Book Project, https://anthropodermicbooks.org/about/the-science/.
In this blog post, Simon Davis discusses the origins of the human skin binding practice and references a panel discussion on anthropodermic bibliopegy during a conference on mourning and morality called Death Salon. During this panel discussion, the medical historian Lindsey Fitzharris stated these books were created for three reasons: punishment, memorialization, and collection. Davis includes examples that fall into these reasons, which are helpful when understanding how human skin leather related to a book’s contents.
Full Citation: Davis, Simon, “The Quest to Discover the World’s Books Bound in Human Skin.” Mental Floss, October 19, 2015, https://www.mentalfloss.com/article/70048/quest-discover-worlds-books-bound-human-skin.
Graham provides a wide variety of examples of suspected anthropodermic books. He provides a mythological context to the use of human skin by discussing ancient Greek myths that referencing the flaying of men or gods. Graham also includes the tanning process.
Full Citation: Graham, Rigby. “Bookbinding with Human Skin.” The Private Library 6 (January 1965): 14-19. https://irp-cdn.multiscreensite.com/20a7b9b8/files/uploaded/Journals-vol_6_number_1_863.pdf.
Beth Lander from the Historical Medical Library of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia, which is located within the Mütter Museum, writes extensively about the library’s three anthropodermic books bound in the skin of Mary Lynch. In this blog post, Lander provides information about Mary and her institutionalization at Old Blockley, Philadelphia’s almshouse. This article delves into Dr. Hough, the man who autopsied Mary’s corpse and later bound his books about women fertility and sexuality in the skin he took from her thigh.
Full Citation: Lander, Beth. “The Skin She Lived In: Anthropodermic Books in the Historical Medical Library.” Fugitive Leaves: A Blog of the Historical Medical Library of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia, October 1, 2015, https://histmed.collegeofphysicians.org/skin-she-lived-in/.
Lochhaas’s blog post provides an overall background on the practice of binding books in human skin. She raises the questions associated with anthropodermic bibliopegy: who created these books and why did they choose this material? Who was the willing, or more often unwilling, donor? What genre of text was bound in this macabre material? As she attempts to answer these questions, she discusses whose skin was typically tanned and provides specific examples: Harvard University’s Des Destinées de l’Ame and the Mütter Museum’s three anthropodermic books bound in Mary Lynch’s skin. She also mentions the three main reasons for this trend: the passion for collecting odd items, memorialization of the deceased, and lasting punishment for a criminal.
Full Citation: Lochhaas, Sherry. “The Macabre of Bookbinding: Anthropodermic Bibliopegy.” Bookbinding Technique of the Month, American Bookbinders Museum, October 24, 2016, https://bookbindersmuseum.org/category/bookbinding-technique-of-the-month/.
Rosenbloom provides a detailed analysis on the history of books bound in human skin and the legendary origin stories associated with them, such as the Meudon tannery during the French Revolution. She notes how behind a confirmed anthropodermic book is often a doctor wielding the knife and skinning a deceased patient. With her examples, this article documents the overall theme of exploitation that targeted institutionalized patients who lacked agency.
Full Citation: Rosenbloom, Megan. “A Book by Its Cover: The Strange History of Books Bound in Human Skin,” Lapham's Quarterly, October 19, 2016, https://www.laphamsquarterly.org/roundtable/book-its-cover.
Thomson discusses the mythological and historical origins of the use of human skin as leather. One example is the legend of abolitionists spreading propaganda that slaveowners skinned their favorite enslaved men and women and used the skin to bind their family bible. He also describes the appearance of human skin leather as soft and white.