In 1482, a Church decree outlawed entrail reading across Catholic Europe, forcing practitioners underground. This article examines how haruspices adapted under persecution — and what that period of covert practice contributed to the craft as we know it today.
Month
Month: February 2018
Why the Liver Speaks to Me But Not to You
Organ affinity in haruspicy is not a matter of preference — it reflects a practitioner's interpretive history, sensibility, and the questions they are most equipped to answer. This piece examines why the liver dominates some practices, why that need not be the standard, and how developing range across organs strengthens the quality of a reading.
Papyrus Scrolls and the Forgotten Visceral Code
The papyrus scroll was the working document of ancient haruspices — a systematic record of visceral correspondences consulted mid-reading and revised across careers. This article examines what those texts actually contain, how the visceral code functioned as a written interpretive system, and what contemporary practitioners can take from the tradition of careful, honest documentation.