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ANCIENTDIMENSIONS ARTICLE:. |
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CUTTING GIANTS DOWN TO SIZE |
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In the olden times there were extraordinary stories of the giants
who lived in Patagonia. Some say that Magellan gave the name to
this country because its inhabitants measured 5 cubits. The
naturalist Turner says that on the river Plata near the Brazilian
coast he saw naked savages 12 feet high; and in his description
of America, Thevenot confirms this by saying that on the coast of
Africa he saw on a boat the skeleton of an American giant who had
died in 1559, and who was 11 feet 5 inches in height. He claims
to have measured the bones himself. He says that the bones of the
leg measured 3 feet 4 inches, and the skull was 3 feet and 1
inch, just about the size of the skull of Borghini, who, however,
was only of ordinary height. In his account of a voyage to the
Straits of Magellan, Jacob Lemaire says that on December 17,
1615, he found at Port Desire several graves covered with stones,
and beneath the stones were skeletons of men which measured
between 10 and 11 feet. The ancient idea of the Spaniards was
that the men of Patagonia were so tall that the Spanish soldiers
could pass under their arms held out straight; yet we know that
the Patagonians exhibit no exaggeration of height--in fact, some
of the inhabitants about Terra del Fuego are rather diminutive.
This superstition of the voyagers was not limited to America;
there were accounts of men in the neighborhood of the Peak of
Teneriffe who had 80 teeth in their head and bodies 15 feet in
height.
Discoveries of "Giants' Bones."--Riolan, the celebrated
anatomist, says that there was to be seen at one time in the
suburbs of Saint Germain the tomb of the giant Isoret, who was
reputed to be 20 feet tall; and that in 1509, in digging ditches
at Rouen, near the Dominicans, they found a stone tomb containing
a monstrous skeleton, the skull of which would hold a bushel of
corn; the shin-bone measured about 4 feet, which, taken as a
guide, would make his height over 17 feet. On the tomb was a
copper plate which said that the tomb contained the remains of
"the noble and puissant lord, the Chevalier Ricon de Vallemont."
Plater, the famous physician, declares that he saw at Lucerne the
true human bones of a subject that must have been at least 19
feet high.
Valence in Dauphine boasted of possessing the bones of the giant
Bucart, the tyrant of the Vivarias, who was slain by his vassal,
Count de Cabillon. The Dominicans had the shin-bone and part of
the knee-articulation, which, substantiated by the frescoes and
inscriptions in their possession, showed him to be 22 1/2 feet
high. They claimed to have an os frontis in the medical school of
Leyden measuring 9.1 X 12.2 X .5 inches, which they deduce must
have belonged to a man 11 or 12 feet high.
It is said that while digging in France in 1613 there was
disinterred the body of a giant bearing the title "Theutobochus
Rex," and that the skeleton measured 25 feet long, 10 feet across
the shoulders, and 5 feet from breast to back. The shin-bone was
about 4 feet long, and the teeth as large as those of oxen. This
is likely another version of the finding of the remains of
Bucart.
Near Mezarino in Sicily in 1516 there was found the skeleton of a
giant whose height was at least 30 feet; his head was the size of
a hogshead, and each tooth weighed 5 ounces; and in 1548 and in
1550 there were others found of the height of 30 feet. The
Athenians found near their city skeletons measuring 34 and 36
feet in height. In Bohemia in 758 it is recorded that there was
found a human skeleton 26 feet tall, and the leg-bones are still
kept in a medieval castle in that country. In September, 1691,
there was the skull of a giant found in Macedonia which held 210
pounds of corn.
General Opinions.--All the accounts of giants originating in the
finding of monstrous bones must of course be discredited, as the
remains were likely those of some animal. Comparative anatomy has
only lately obtained a hold in the public mind, and in the Middle
Ages little was known of it. The pretended giants' remains have
been those of mastodons, elephants, and other animals. From
Suetonius we learn that Augustus Caesar pleased himself by
adorning his palaces with so-called giants' bones of incredible
size, preferring these to pictures or images. From their enormous
size we must believe they were mastodon bones, as no contemporary
animals show such measurements. Bartholinus describes a large
tooth for many years exhibited as the canine of a giant which
proved to be nothing but a tooth of a spermaceti whale (Cetus
dentatus), quite a common fish. Hand described an alleged giant's
skeleton shown in London early in the eighteenth century, and
which was composed of the bones of the fore-fin of a small whale
or of a porpoise.
The celebrated Sir Hans Sloane, who treated this subject very
learnedly, arrived at the conclusion that while in most instances
the bones found were those of mastodons, elephants, whales, etc.,
in some instances accounts were given by connoisseurs who could
not readily be deceived. However, modern scientists will be loath
to believe that any men ever existed who measured over 9 feet; in
fact, such cases with authentic references are extremely rare
Quetelet considers that the tallest man whose stature is
authentically recorded was the "Scottish Giant" of Frederick the
Great's regiment of giants. This person was not quite 8 feet 3
inches tall. Buffon, ordinarily a reliable authority, comes to a
loose conclusion that there is no doubt that men have lived who
were 10, 12, and even 15 feet tall; but modern statisticians
cannot accept this deduction from the references offered.
From the original estimation of the height of Adam (Henrion once
calculated that Adam's height was 123 feet and that of Eve 118)
we gradually come to 10 feet, which seemed to be about the
favorite height for giants in the Middle Ages. Approaching this
century, we still have stories of men from 9 to 10 feet high, but
no authentic cases. It was only in the latter part of the last
century that we began to have absolutely authentic heights of
giants, and to-day the men showing through the country as
measuring 8 feet generally exaggerate their height several
inches, and exact measurement would show that but few men
commonly called giants are over 7 1/2 feet or weigh over 350
pounds. Dana says that the number of giants figuring as public
characters since 1700 is not more than 100, and of these about 20
were advertised to be over 8 feet. If we confine ourselves to
those accurately and scientifically measured the list is
surprisingly small. Topinard measured the tallest man in the
Austrian army and found that he was 8 feet 4 1/2 inches. The
giant Winckelmeyer measured 8 feet 6 inches in height. Ranke
measured Marianne Wehde, who was born in Germany in the present
century, and found that she measured 8 feet 4 1/4 inches when
only sixteen and a half years old.
Excerpted from 'Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine' by George M. Gould and Walter L. Pyle
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