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Authors: Colin Dickey

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His words touched a nerve, and a month later the money was appropriated for a granite monument—decorated with images representing the four faculties of learning: an owl for philosophy, a snake for medicine, scales for law, and a cherub for theology— to house Swedenborg's remains. Much was made of the Swedish granite from Gylsboda and VÃ¥nga, as if to reflect the very Swedish origins of the dust and bone inside. Nyström's words echo something of what Adolfo Frederick had said to Nicholas II about Haydn so many years earlier: “How fortunate was the man who employed this Haydn in his lifetime and now possesses his mortal remains.” To own the remains of a great artist or genius, it would seem, is to own that man's legacy as well. In the twentieth century
it was not the phrenologists or even the museums who owned these heads, but their countries of origin.

T
HE REPATRIATION OF
Swedenborg's remains in 1908 received a great deal of attention, not just in the Swedish press but also in the English papers. Given the still relatively small following he had, it seems odd that so much ink was devoted to it. Perhaps it was the singularity of the event, the easy cooperation between two countries at a time when national alliances were increasingly fraught, or the pomp and reverence it received, but the repatriation made all the papers. And none of the newspapers could avoid making comparisons between this exhumation and the earlier, extralegal one that had separated Swedenborg's head from his body for a half-dozen years. In July 1908
Notes and Queries
ran a short note on the repatriation of the philosopher-scientist's remains, including a short reference to the matter of his skull.
205
Just above it, completely unrelated, was a short notice about some odd riddles a certain scholar used to put to grammarians, such as “Who was Hecuba's mother? What name did Achilles assume among the virgins? What was it that the Sirens used to sing?” The scholar's name was Sir Thomas Browne.

C
HAPTER
S
EVENTEEN
R
IVAL
S
KULLS

After reading a newspaper description of the destroyer
Fulgia
and its precious cargo, a man named William Rutherford sat down and composed a quick letter, which he sent to the “Swedish Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary” on April 1.

Sir,
I have noticed with interest the announcements in the press that the remains of Emanuel Swedenborg are to be transferred from St. George's in the East to Sweden.

Some forty years ago I knew a man in the East End of London who boasted of the possession of a human skull, said to have been taken from the broken coffin containing Swedenborg's remains during some excavations of the old church.

I am not aware whether an examination of the remains is intended now, but it would interest me to know
whether the man (generally a very veracious old gentleman) spoke the truth or not. The matter may also be of interest to the Swedish government, hence my main reason for calling your attention to the matter & my apology for addressing you.
I am, Sir,
Yours most obediently,
(signed) William Rutherford
206

Rutherford's letter was certainly odd—its randomness, his apologetic tone, the utter lack of particulars. It didn't present much to go on other than a vague notion that he intended to label the head now in transit to Sweden as inauthentic. More out of courtesy than curiosity, the pastor of the Swedish Church wrote back. “We would,” he wrote, “of course, be very interested to know all particulars you may know of. Have you any idea where the skull which the old man talked about is now? When the coffin has been brought to Stockholm there may be an examination of the remains by an expert.”
207
Rutherford's reply came the next day.

Rev:d & Dear Sir,
Please accept my thanks for Your letter of yesterday.

It was early in the “seventies” that the skull was being exhibited, but doubtless it could be traced in case
of need. Would it not be well, before taking any steps, to await the examination of the remains? If the coffin contains a skull & the experts accept it as authentic, there is no more to be said, but my impression is that the old antiquary in question
did
possess the one taken out of the coffin, i.e., the actual skull of Emanuel Swedenborg.

In any case I shall be glad to do what I can when occasion arises.
I am,
Rev-d & Dear Sir,
Yours truly,
(signed) W:m Rutherford
208

Who was William Rutherford? What was his interest in Swedenborg, or his skull? His letter didn't even mention that he had seen the skull, only that he had heard someone boasting of it forty years earlier. He certainly didn't profess to be a member of the New Church himself.

Still, there had been enough rumors over the years about the skull's authenticity that Rutherford's letter was passed along to the Royal Academy of Science. In May, when Swedenborg arrived in his homeland, the academy decided to open the casket and examine the remains to settle the matter once and for all regarding the provenance of the skull.

T
HE TEAM OF
scientists put in charge of the examination was made up of six members of the academy's Faculty of Medicine, including Johan V. Hultkrantz, who took the lead. None of them were forensic specialists, but Hultkrantz's research was incredibly thorough. Like Tandler, Hultkrantz knew there was no one test that would confirm the origin of the skull beyond a shadow of a doubt, so he subjected it to a battery of tests, hoping to build a solid case through the accumulation of circumstantial evidence.

Hultkrantz was meticulous throughout. First of all there was the cast that had been made of the skull in 1823, just before it had been reinterred. The skull and cast matched perfectly, and there could be no doubt whatsoever that it was the same head that Granholm had given to WÃ¥hlin, which had been displayed in Tulk's phrenological cabinet before going back into the vault.

Hultkrantz characterized it as a “well-shaped skull, of medium size,” and noted that there was no doubt that “the cranium in question is masculine and is that of a person of advanced years.” For the age, he relied on an examination of the sutures of the individual bones (which continue to grow closed over the course of one's life) and the teeth to conclude that “the skull is that of man over 50 years of age, and in no wise in disagreement with the assumption of an age of 84 years.”
209

The skull was not as decayed as the rest of the body, but this
was only to be expected since it had been out of the crypt from 1816 to 1823 and thus not subject as long to damp air and other unfavorable conditions. Hultkrantz also found pieces of the jawbone which had not been extracted with the rest of the skull and thus were in the same condition as the rest of the body. The jaw fragments, he surmised, could be used to match the head with the rest of the body. He was able to fit them together without difficulty, shellacking them so as to re-form the jaw. “To enable me to judge of the matter more exactly,” he explained, “I made a reconstruction of the missing parts on a plaster cast of the fragment of the lower jaw. The modeling was done free handed and with the guidance of a number of lower jawbones of older individuals from the collections of the Anatomical Museum.” Based on his reconstruction, Hultkrantz found that the close match of the jaw and skull suggested that they had once belonged to the same individual. “When the reconstruction was completed it was found to fit together surprisingly well with the cranium, only a very slight correction in the position of the articular processes being necessary.”
210

But Hultkrantz wanted to go beyond this; he did his best to achieve absolute certainty, to make sure that the head could only be Swedenborg's. He consulted the collection of “108 male crania” from “old burial places” around Uppsala, which dated from the eighteenth century and thus were likely contemporaries of Swedenborg, to make sure that the skull in question conformed to prevailing anthropological trends—it did. He then estimated
that the brain would have been between 1,350 and 1,450 grams, keeping within the average of 1,400 grams for European males. “This appears,” he wrote, “perhaps, at first glance, to diminish the probability of the cranium in question having been Swedenborg's,” since a genius's brain could be expected to greatly exceed the average. But Hultkrantz—quite rightly—dismissed this question immediately. While explaining that it was “not the place for an exhaustive critical review of the theory regarding dependence of intelligence upon brain-volume,” he did point out that “strong protests have been made against such hasty conclusions, which neither rest on sufficiently comprehensive material nor have been arrived at with the proper criticism and necessary regard to sources of error, which are in such investigations just as difficult to avoid as they are easy to point out.”
211
That Hultkrantz spent so little time on this question suggests its fading importance, and as the twentieth century progressed the argument that intelligence did not strictly correlate to brain volume would become more and more obvious and accepted.

Hultkrantz's description of his work runs close to a hundred pages, indicating the range of tests to which he subjected the skull. He next made a bust of the philosopher, using the skull as a basis, to see whether or not, in a rough sense, the skull could hold a reasonable facsimile of Swedenborg. “The purpose of the reconstruction was not the production of an artistic piece of sculpture,” he felt the need to disclaim, “but only to scientifically
test whether the man whose cranium was the basis for the bust could have had an appearance which agreed in its essential characters with Swedenborg's, as we know him from his portraits.”
212

He did not have a death mask of Swedenborg, so to match the skull to the head he had to rely on portraits. Like Browne, Swedenborg had had a relatively low forehead, and various painters had felt the need to correct this supposed defect in their portraits of him, resorting to a fair amount of
“poetica licencia”
when it came to his forehead and other elements of the face. “According to the esthetic conceptions of former times,” Hultkrantz noted, “the Greek nose was supposed to give the impression of ‘freedom from the passions,' of ‘equilibrium between intelligence and sensuality,' traits of character which an artist might well desire to introduce into his likeness of Swedenborg.”
213
Hultkrantz, unlike many who had come before him, recognized these ideas as so much nonsense and was unfortunately forced to compensate with his own studies. He saw that he could rely on the portraits only to a limited extent and that any divergences between the skull's forehead and the one depicted in the paintings meant not that the skull didn't fit but rather that the paintings were to be distrusted.

To map the skull onto the portraits, he placed a transparency of the painting over a camera lens, then lined up the skull on the other end so that the lines of the skull showed through the painting. The images he produced offer a strange
memento mori
: a ghostly
image of a skull creeping through from beneath the stately visage of the philosopher. Hultkrantz's bust of Swedenborg may not have had an artistic goal, but the superimposition of the skull on the portraits echoes a fundamental theme that has long obsessed artists—the presence of death in the full flowering of life.
“Et in Arcadia ego,”
the skull in Guernico's painting famously told the two young shepherds: “Even in idyllic Arcadia I exist.” Behind every proud portrait and testament to human genius, find this skull.

Portrait of Emanuel Swedenborg superimposed on Swedenborg's skull, by Johann V. Hultkrantz

After such exhaustive study, Hultkrantz felt confident of his conclusion. Having dispensed with the faulty methods of the last century and all its ideological biases, Hultkrantz produced a rigorous
and thorough analysis of the head of Emanuel Swedenborg, but even so, he did not want to rule out other possibilities.

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