Tuesday, April 14, 2026

The Cadaver Synod Was the Most Disturbing Trial in History and the Defendant Was Already Dead

 In January of 897 Pope Stephen VI ordered that the body of his predecessor Pope Formosus be exhumed from its grave.


Formosus had been dead for nine months.


Stephen had the corpse dressed in papal vestments, propped up in a chair, and placed on trial before a church court. A deacon was assigned to speak on behalf of the dead man since Formosus could not speak for himself.


Stephen himself reportedly shouted accusations at the corpse and at one point demanded to know why Formosus had usurped the papacy when he had no right to it.


This event is called the Cadaver Synod. It is real. It is documented. And it is one of the most extraordinary things that has ever happened in the history of organized religion.


What Was Actually Going On


The Cadaver Synod was not pure madness. It was politics dressed up as theology, which is not unusual in the history of the church.


Pope Formosus had been involved in a series of political conflicts between competing noble factions that were fighting for control of the papacy and the Italian states around Rome. He had crowned a particular claimant as Holy Roman Emperor. Stephen VI was aligned with a different faction that wanted that coronation invalidated and that wanted to retroactively delegitimize Formosus's actions.


By convicting Formosus of crimes posthumously Stephen could invalidate every ordination and act Formosus had performed during his papacy. This had enormous practical political consequences for the factions involved.


The trial proceeded. The corpse was found guilty. The three fingers on Formosus's right hand that he had used for ordinations were cut off. The body was stripped of its vestments, dressed in regular clothes, and thrown into the Tiber River.


What Happened Next


The Cadaver Synod did not end well for Stephen VI.


The Roman populace was outraged by what had happened. A popular uprising seized Stephen, removed him from the papacy, and threw him in prison. He was strangled in his cell a few months later.


His successors reversed the Cadaver Synod. The body of Formosus was retrieved from the Tiber and reburied with honor. The convictions were annulled. The ordinations were declared valid.


All of that accomplished nothing politically because the underlying power struggle between the factions continued for years afterward.


What This Story Tells Us


The Cadaver Synod is extreme. The image of a sitting pope shouting accusations at a dressed-up corpse is extraordinary. But what it describes is not extreme at all by historical standards.


It is an institution using every tool available to it, including the most bizarre and theatrical ones, to serve the political interests of the faction that currently controlled it.


Using religious authority and religious proceedings to settle political scores is one of the oldest patterns in the history of institutions. The Cadaver Synod is just the most dramatic example you will ever find.


It is also a reminder that the closer you look at history the stranger it gets. Most people know that medieval church politics were complicated and sometimes violent. Almost nobody knows that one pope put a dead pope on trial and screamed at the body.


Now you know.


Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston South Carolina.

Sudan Has More Ancient Pyramids Than Egypt and Almost Nobody Knows They Exist

 When most people think of pyramids they think of Egypt. The Great Pyramid of Giza. The Sphinx. The monuments along the Nile that have defined how the world imagines ancient civilization.


What most people do not know is that Sudan has more pyramids than Egypt.


Not fewer. More.


Sudan has approximately 200 to 255 pyramids compared to around 130 in Egypt. They are concentrated in several sites in the northern part of the country. And most people in the western world have never heard of them.


The Kingdom That Built Them


The pyramids of Sudan were built by the ancient Kingdom of Kush and its successor states, a civilization that existed in the region of Nubia for roughly three thousand years.


Kush was not a minor culture on the margins of ancient history. At its peak the Kingdom of Kush conquered Egypt. For several decades in the 8th and 7th centuries BC, Kush actually ruled Egypt as its 25th dynasty. The Kushite pharaohs ruled from Memphis and were recognized as legitimate rulers of both kingdoms.


The Kushite rulers who controlled Egypt built their own pyramids in the Nubian style, steeper and narrower than the Egyptian ones, as royal tombs. Even after Egypt was lost to Assyrian invasion the tradition of pyramid building continued in Nubia for centuries.


The pyramid sites at Meroe, Nuri, and El-Kurru contain hundreds of these structures, many still standing and well-preserved despite being virtually unknown outside of archaeological circles.


Why They Are Not Better Known


The short answer is that African history has been systematically underrepresented in the way the ancient world gets taught in western schools.


The ancient civilizations of sub-Saharan and northeastern Africa built remarkable things. The Kingdom of Kush built sophisticated cities, developed its own writing system, maintained long-distance trade networks, and produced a tradition of monumental architecture that lasted for thousands of years.


But the standard narrative of ancient history focuses heavily on Egypt, Greece, Rome, and Mesopotamia. The civilizations that existed alongside and sometimes ahead of those better-known cultures, particularly the African ones, tend to get much less attention.


The result is that millions of people learn about the pyramids of Giza in school and never learn that a civilization south of Egypt was building pyramids at the same time, for the same purposes, and in some respects doing it more prolifically.


The Nubian pyramids are still standing. They are accessible to visitors. UNESCO has designated several of the sites as World Heritage Sites. They are real, significant, and extraordinary.


They just did not fit into the history that most people were taught.


Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston South Carolina.

The Bronze Age Collapsed Overnight and Historians Are Still Figuring Out Why

 Around 1200 BC the world as people knew it ended.


Not gradually. Not slowly over centuries. Within roughly fifty years almost every major civilization in the eastern Mediterranean either collapsed entirely or shrank to a shadow of what it had been.


The Mycenaean Greek civilization vanished. Their palace cities were burned and abandoned. The writing system they used, Linear B, was lost and would not be redeciphered until the 20th century. Greece entered a dark age that lasted hundreds of years.


The Hittite Empire, which had been one of the most powerful states in the ancient world and had fought Egypt to a standstill, ceased to exist almost overnight. Their capital Hattusa was burned. Their empire dissolved.


Cyprus, a wealthy trading hub, was devastated. City after city in the eastern Mediterranean shows destruction layers from this period. Ugarit, one of the most cosmopolitan and wealthy cities of the ancient world and a major trading center, was destroyed around 1185 BC and never rebuilt.


Even Egypt, which survived, shrank dramatically. The New Kingdom which had been one of the greatest empires in history contracted to a fraction of its former power.


What Caused It


Here is the honest answer. Nobody fully knows.


Historians and archaeologists have been arguing about this for decades and the debate is still active. The current leading theory is that it was not one single cause but a combination of factors that hit simultaneously.


Climate change appears to have played a significant role. Evidence from pollen records and other sources suggests a severe drought hit the eastern Mediterranean around this period. Agricultural collapse followed, leading to famine.


There are also mentions in surviving records from this period of a mysterious group called the Sea Peoples who were attacking and raiding coastal cities across the Mediterranean. Who they were and where they came from is still debated. They may have been climate refugees displaced by the same drought, displaced populations looking for new land after their own societies collapsed.


Trade network breakdown was also a factor. The Bronze Age economies were deeply interconnected. Bronze itself required mixing copper and tin that came from distant sources. When trade routes were disrupted the entire economic system that depended on them started to fail.


Earthquakes may have played a role. Evidence of earthquake destruction exists at several Bronze Age collapse sites.


Systems collapse theory suggests that all of these factors together created a cascading failure. Each problem made the others worse until the whole interconnected system fell apart at once.


Why This Should Make You Think


The Bronze Age Collapse is not just ancient history. It is a documented example of complex civilizations failing in ways that were rapid, widespread, and hard to reverse.


The people living through it did not know the world was ending. They were writing administrative tablets about grain shipments and tax records right up until the moment their cities burned.


The interconnectedness that made Bronze Age civilization wealthy and sophisticated also made it fragile. When multiple stresses hit simultaneously the whole system came apart faster than anyone could respond.


Climate disruption. Supply chain breakdown. Waves of displaced populations. Governments that lost legitimacy because they could not provide security.


None of those things are unique to 1200 BC.


Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston South Carolina.