The museum of the mummies of Quinto (Aragon) exhibits a set of 15 mummified bodies in a natural way, exposed where they were buried and exhumed. The mummies are accompanied by decorative elements, complements of the funeral rite and all this in a deconsecrated Mudejar church that is pure history.
Narcisa died at the age of 67 in Quinto de Ebro. She was given the habit of Santa Teresa and was buried in the old church of the ᴀssumption or better known as El Piquete, a beautiful Mudejar church from the beginning of the 15th century that crowns a hill in this municipality of Zaragoza. Narcisa was a tiny woman, 1.37 meters tall, who married the mayor of the village. She may have lived between the 18th and 19th centuries and in her long life she had ten children, although only five of them reached adulthood, two single men and three women who married men from the municipality, giving rise to very frequent surnames in the family tree of the current inhabitants of Quinto. This is all that is known about her.
Granny Narcisa, as she is known to many in Quinto de Ebro, is one of the 15 mummies found in the archaeological excavation between 2011 and 2017 under the burials and coffins found in the most superficial layer of the ancient church of the ᴀssumption of Quinto de Ebro. Now, it gathers the only Museum of Mummies in Spain that currently presents in an expositive way a set of mummified bodies in a natural way. The museum opened to the public in 2018 after years of remodeling has tried to recompose the history and cultural and human heritage of Quinto through the remains of those who were neighbors or visitors to the municipality from the respect and scientific rigor.
The bodies, eight children and seven adults, date from the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries and can be seen where they were buried and later exhumed. This is what makes this museum unique in Spain and of national and international interest. Because it is not the only one in the national territory where a mummy can be observed, but no other shows the bodies where they were buried and then exhumed and whose mummification lacks artificial means. This compendium makes it so special.
Other places in the world such as Palermo (Italy) or Guanajuato (Mexico) have a museum of naturally mummified bodies, but what also makes the Quinto museum stand out is the good state of preservation not only of the individuals, but also of their original clothing, which has made it possible to exhibit them dressed as they were found. “This is due to the conditions of constant temperature and humidity in the building and the aridity of the subsoil of the soil that we have in this area. It is very important that the soil is very dry and that the bodies already had a certain degree of dehydration, people who were already quite ill and deteriorated,” says Encarna, museum guide.