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Why do some people hunt heads? Detailed answer

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Why do some people hunt heads?

Headhunting began in the Stone Age, and possibly earlier. It was carried out in one form or another almost everywhere. In fact, this hunting persisted on the Balkan Peninsula until the beginning of the XNUMXth century! And although the reasons for this act in different places and at different times were different, it had one main meaning. It was the belief that the soul was created from matter and all life depends on it.

It was believed that in people this spiritual matter was mainly in the head. When a community or a tribe could capture as many heads as they could, they believed that along with the heads they would also capture the souls. Thus, they had the feeling that they were increasing the supply of spiritual energy belonging to the community, as well as material wealth: the number of cattle and the size of the crops.

Many of us think headhunting only happened in Africa. But it is not. Indeed, they were headhunted there, especially in Nigeria. But in the British Museum there is a bas-relief depicting a battle that took place in the XNUMXth century BC. e. In the bas-relief, the Assyrians cut off and carry off the heads of their enemies.

Headhunting was widely practiced in many parts of India. In North America, the Indians did not take heads, but scalps. Perhaps they believed that souls were in the hair. In South America, not only hunted for heads. There, the practice of drying the heads and keeping them as trophies was common.

Author: Likum A.

 Random interesting fact from the Great Encyclopedia:

How did superspy James Bond get his name?

In 1953, the English writer Ian Fleming, while working on the novel "Casino Royale", was puzzled by the choice of a name for the main character - a secret agent. He wanted it to be "short, without any hint of romance and yet very masculine."

Fleming, a great bird watcher, found the ideal solution to the problem by reading Birds of the West Indies by James Bond, an ornithologist from Philadelphia.

In a letter to Bond's wife in 1961, Fleming wrote: "I must confess that your husband has every right to sue me ... In return, I can only offer your James Bond an unrestricted right to use the name Ian Fleming for any purpose he deems appropriate."

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