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Up Close With A Jivaro Shrunken Head

Dec 19, 2018 | 5:00 PM

Featured in Ripley's Believe It or Not!

shrunken head

Shrunken Heads

With over 100 shrunken heads in the Ripley’s collection, they’re known as one of our most iconic exhibits. Robert Ripley collected his first shrunken head from a trader in Panama City in 1923, kickstarting the young adventurer’s curio of strange and unusual objects from around the world.

The process of taking human heads and shrinking them down to about the size of a fist dates back to the Ancient Incans about 1,000 years ago. Though the practice may have once been common across the reaches of the Ancient South American empire, by the time 19th-century explorers reached the region, only a few tribes practiced the tradition. The Jivaro are known as the most modern culture to continue the practice. The tribe is located in the mountainous jungle spanning Ecuador and Peru. Inhabiting such a remote part of the world, few people outside the Jivaro have ever seen a shrunken head, and even fewer have witnessed the process of making one. The process has been long kept a secret by native practitioners, though fakes can be found all over the world.

shrunken head

Genuine shrunken heads are called tsantsa natively and were valuable symbols of bravery or accomplishment for tribal warriors. A tsantsa was prepared by slitting the back of the victim’s neck and peeling the skin away from the skull. Once the bones were out of the way, the eyes and mouth were sewn shut. The Jivaro believed that the mouth must be bound together, in order to keep the head’s avenging spirit from coming out. Once the fresh head was prepared, it was stuffed full of hot stones, then boiled in a broth of special herbs. Finally, the skin was cured over an open fire.

shrunken head cavity

Once discovered by western explorers, shrunken heads became highly desirable by collectors around the world, so much so that natives began making “souvenir heads,” which were made as quickly and easily as possible and had no cultural value to the Jivaro themselves.

You can get your own shrunken head by entering the Ripley’s 12 Weirds of Christmas contest. Enter every day for a chance to win more prizes. If you win one day, you also win all of the prizes from previous days.

Enter Day 4 to win your own Shrunken Head along with Ripley’s illustrated directions for making one of your own. Better yet, you’re always entered for the grand prize, a trip for two to the VIP New Year’s Party at Times Square in New York City!

Good luck, and may your holidays be EERIE and bright!

Source: Up Close With A Jivaro Shrunken Head