Reverte Coma Forensic Museum: A Place Not For The Faint Of Heart

The morbid items in this small and hidden museum are not for the weak stomached.

Female skeleton

LOST IN A CORRIDOR OF the immense Faculty of Medicine building at the Complutense University in Madrid, there is a small museum that may be best avoided for those with more delicate sensibilities. Visiting this macabre museum can be, in a way, a somewhat horrifying experience to nonprofessionals.

View of the entrance of the museum

Among the 1,500-odd pieces on display are deformed skulls of ancient cultures, severed heads from executions, dissected fetuses, uncorrupted children’s skeletons, diseased bones, and torture devices like the real garrote vil that killed the famous Madrid serial killer, “Jarabo.”

Cut head of a hanging man
Manipulated skulls

There are many other macabre and grisly objects, like weapons made by inmates, pre-Columbian Andean and Egyptian mummies, fetishes, amulets, antique pharmaceuticals, a toxicology display of poisonous plants and animals, and a collection of some 800 skulls.

Trepanned skulls
mummified fetuses

But the intention of the museum is not attract the morbid attention of people. Rather, it’s to offer to students, and anyone interested in the subject matter, real and direct contact with the tools and history of forensic medicine and criminal studies.

Anthropomorphic fetish simulated by a manta ray fish
A corpse of a little girl that died of trichinosis
Fetish and voodoo objects

The museum is named for university professor Reverte Coma, who started the first forensic and paleopathology laboratory in Spain, founded in 1980. He was trained in the United States by FBI specialists, and the knowledge he acquired has helped solve many difficult murder cases in Spain.

Andean mummies

Related video:

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *