Mysteries of vernacular Sarcophagus Jessica Oreck and Rachael Teel

Transcriber: Andrea McDonough
Reviewer: Jessica Ruby

Mysteries of vernacular:

Sarcophagus,

a stone coffin typically adorned

with decorative carvings or inscriptions.

The history of the word sarcophagus

is so skin-crawlingly grotesque,

it seems to come right out

of a low-budget horror film.

Rather than having
a B-movie origin, however,

its roots can be traced back
to the early Roman Empire

where the Greek word sarkophagus

was used to describe the limestone

that a coffin was made of,

not the coffin itself.

According to the Roman
scholar Pliny the Elder,

citizens of the Empire believed

that limestone from a quarry near Troy

would dissolve flesh.

For this reason, it was quite desireable

in the construction of coffins.

Though it’s unclear
if the belief was widespread

or even accurately reported by Pliny,

what is certain is that sarkophagus

came from the Greek words sark,

meaning flesh,

and phagein,

a verb meaning to eat.

From flesh-eating stone

to stone coffin,

it’s a fitting etymology

for the final resting
place of the deceased.