Imagine you have lost someone you love. Before photography, before video calls, before any of the modern ways we have of holding on to a face — what would you keep? In Europe, for hundreds of years, the answer for some families was a death mask. A skilled craftsman would come to the house. The dead person's face would be gently oiled, then covered in wet plaster. The plaster would set in about thirty minutes, then be carefully removed in pieces. From the resulting negative mould, a final cast in plaster, wax, or bronze would be made. The result was a record of the face exactly as it had been — every line, every curve, every small mark — held in stone-like material that could last for centuries. The earliest European death masks date from around 1300. The tradition grew through the Renaissance and reached its peak in the 18th and 19th centuries. Death masks were taken of kings and queens, scientists and writers, musicians and revolutionaries, criminals and ordinary people. Some were made for memorial — so the family could keep a record. Some were made for study — early scientists thought the shape of the face revealed character. Some were made for sculpture — artists used them as references for statues and busts. After 1839, when photography was invented, the death mask began to fade. A photograph could capture a face faster, more cheaply, and from many angles. But death masks did not disappear all at once. Important figures continued to have masks taken into the 20th century. Beethoven had one in 1827. Lincoln in 1865. Tolstoy in 1910. James Joyce in 1941. The face shown in our cover image is one of the most famous death masks in history. It is Napoleon Bonaparte, taken in 1821 on the island of Saint Helena, where he died in exile after his fall from imperial power. Many copies of his mask exist around the world, each one slightly different, each with its own story. But the lesson is not just about Napoleon. It is about an entire tradition of how people preserved the dead. We will look at famous masks of kings and beggars, of musicians and unknown people. One of the most remarkable death masks of all is of a young woman whose name we still do not know — pulled from the river Seine in Paris in the 1880s. Her face, copied and recopied, eventually became the model for the CPR mannequin used to teach lifesaving techniques to hundreds of millions of people. A face lost to drowning became, eighty years later, a face used to teach people how to save lives. This lesson asks why this strange tradition existed, what the masks meant to the people who made them, and what they can still tell us today.
Because it worked. Before photography, there was no other way to capture a face exactly. Painters and sculptors could try to draw or carve the face, but their work was always interpretation — they brought their own style, their own hand, to the image. A death mask was different. It was a direct cast of the actual person. The shape of the nose, the lines around the eyes, the curve of the lips — these were not the artist's interpretation. They were the person themselves, recorded in plaster. This precision is what made death masks valuable for memory, for science, and for art. A family who wanted to remember exactly what their grandmother had looked like could keep her death mask. A scientist who wanted to study the relationship between facial features and intelligence (a popular but eventually discredited 19th-century idea called phrenology) could study the masks of famous people. An artist who wanted to make a posthumous bust of a king could use his death mask as the basis. The death mask was a kind of pre-photographic photograph — a technology of exact recording, in three dimensions. Students should see that 'old' technologies were often more sophisticated than they look. Plaster of Paris, used carefully, could capture details that no painter could match. The death mask was the best face-recording technology in the world for several centuries.
Because of what fame asks of a person's image. Famous people are remembered. Their faces become part of public memory. The death mask let later generations have an exact record of the actual face, not just a painter's version. This was useful for sculptors who wanted to make memorial busts, for biographers who wanted to describe the person accurately, for medical historians who wanted to study illness in the famous, and for ordinary people who wanted to feel they had seen the real face of someone important. The masks were also a kind of last witness. The dead person could no longer speak, no longer gesture, no longer change expression. But the face was preserved. People could look at it and feel a small connection to the person who had been there. This is part of what makes death masks emotionally complicated. They are not portraits exactly — they are records of a moment, the moment just after death. The expression they preserve is the relaxed, calm face of someone who is no longer animated by life. Some find this deeply moving. Some find it disturbing. Both responses are real. The tradition existed because both of these responses can also be a kind of remembering. The mask says: this person was here. They were exactly this size, this shape. They are gone now. We have kept this part of them.
That objects have lives we cannot predict. The pathologist or worker who ordered the mask in the 1880s wanted to preserve a face he found beautiful. He did not know that the face would inspire thousands of artists. The artists who hung copies in their studios did not know that the face would later become the model for a medical training device. Asmund Laerdal, choosing the face for his mannequin in 1958, did not know that hundreds of millions of people would press their lips to it over the next sixty years. Each generation that touched the mask added something to its meaning. The story is also full of real ethical questions. The young woman never agreed to have her face cast. She has had no voice in any of the uses her face has been put to. Some critics say her story is one of exploitation — a poor anonymous girl whose image was taken without consent and sold and reused for over a century. Others say her story is now one of life-saving good — the CPR mannequin has helped train people who have saved literally millions of lives. Both views have something to them. There are also questions about whether the mask is really of a dead woman at all. Some experts now think it was probably taken from a living model, perhaps a young woman who died of tuberculosis a few years later, perhaps a model who never died of drowning at all. The 'drowned Mona Lisa' story may be a romantic fiction. We do not know who she was. We may never know. Students should see that anonymous people, throughout history, have shaped the world in ways we cannot trace. The unknown young woman of the Seine is one of the clearest cases. Her face is everywhere; her name is nowhere.
Probably not its return. Photography, video, and now 3D scanning have replaced the death mask as the main way of recording faces, including faces of the dead. The slow, intimate, physical process of making a mask is unlikely to come back as a widespread practice. But the questions the death mask asked — what do we keep when someone dies? how do we remember a face? what does a precise record of a real person mean? — are still alive. New technologies pose new versions of the same questions. 3D scans of the dying are sometimes made today by people who want to preserve their faces. Holograms and digital reconstructions are increasingly used for the recently deceased, particularly performers (Whitney Houston, Tupac Shakur, Carrie Fisher). The ethics are complex. Sometimes the dead person consented in advance to such uses; sometimes their families decided afterwards. The technology is new, but the underlying human impulse is very old. People have always wanted, and worried about, ways of holding on to the faces of those they have loved or admired. The death mask is one answer from a particular period. We are still answering the same questions today, with different tools. End the discovery here. The masks are in their cases. The photograph of the next generation is being taken right now.
A death mask is a cast taken from a person's face shortly after death, used to preserve a record of their features. The tradition is mostly European, with the earliest known examples from around 1300. It reached its peak in the 18th and 19th centuries, when famous death masks were taken of figures including Sir Isaac Newton (1727), Voltaire (1778), Napoleon Bonaparte (1821), Ludwig van Beethoven (1827), Abraham Lincoln (1865), Leo Tolstoy (1910), and James Joyce (1941). Masks were made by spreading wet plaster of Paris over the face, allowing it to set, removing it in pieces, and casting a final positive mould from the resulting negative. Multiple copies could be made from each mould. Death masks were used for memorial, scientific study, and artistic reference. They declined sharply after the invention of photography in 1839, but did not completely disappear until the 20th century. One of the most remarkable death masks is L'Inconnue de la Seine — the unidentified young woman whose face was cast in Paris around the 1880s. Her mask, mass-produced by the Lorenzi workshop, became hugely popular among artists and writers in early 20th-century Europe. In 1958, the Norwegian toymaker Asmund Laerdal used her face as the model for the first CPR training mannequin, Resusci Anne. Hundreds of millions of people learning CPR around the world have practised on a mannequin with her face. The death mask tradition now mostly belongs to history, but the questions it asked — about memory, mortality, and how we keep a face — are still alive in new forms today.
| Question | What many people assume | What is actually true |
|---|---|---|
| What is a death mask? | A spooky decoration | A precise plaster cast of a real person's face, taken shortly after death, used to preserve their features |
| How old is the tradition? | Just a Victorian thing | The earliest European death masks date from around 1300; the tradition was widespread for over 600 years |
| Who had death masks made? | Only kings and queens | Royals, scientists, writers, musicians, criminals, and ordinary people. Famous examples include Newton, Beethoven, Lincoln, Tolstoy, and Napoleon |
| Are death masks still made today? | Never | Rarely. The Lorenzi workshop in Paris still makes copies of L'Inconnue de la Seine. Some artists still make occasional commemorative casts |
| Why did the tradition decline? | It was found to be morbid | Photography (invented 1839) was faster, cheaper, and could capture motion and colour. The slow expensive process of plaster casting was no longer needed for most purposes |
| What is the most reproduced death mask in history? | Napoleon's | Probably L'Inconnue de la Seine — the unidentified young woman whose mask became the model for the Resusci Anne CPR training mannequin in 1958, and has been touched by hundreds of millions of people learning CPR |
Death masks were morbid Victorian curiosities.
They were a serious craft tradition, lasting in Europe from around 1300 to the early 20th century, with practical functions in memorial, scientific study, and artistic reference. They were not unusually popular in the Victorian period — they were popular for centuries before.
Calling old practices 'morbid' usually says more about modern attitudes than about the practices themselves.
All death masks are of dead people.
A 'life mask' is the same casting process applied to a living person. Many famous figures had life masks taken — Lincoln had one in 1860, before his assassination. Some historical 'death masks' may actually be life masks taken of the same person earlier. The L'Inconnue de la Seine mask is now widely thought to have been a life mask of a model, not a death mask.
The terminology is sometimes ambiguous and the truth has been lost in particular cases.
Photography immediately replaced death masks.
Photography was invented in 1839, but death masks continued to be made for important figures into the 20th century. Beethoven's mask (1827) was before photography; Lincoln's (1865), Tolstoy's (1910), and Joyce's (1941) were all after. The decline was gradual and the two practices coexisted for decades.
New technologies often coexist with older ones for longer than people think.
L'Inconnue de la Seine is definitely the face of a real drowned woman.
The traditional story is that her body was pulled from the Seine in the 1880s and a pathologist made a death mask. Many experts now think the mask was probably taken from a living model — perhaps a young woman who later died of tuberculosis, perhaps just a model in a sculptor's studio. The 'drowned Mona Lisa' story is romantic but probably partly fictional.
The truth about historical objects is sometimes less neat than the famous story.
Treat death masks as records of real human beings, not as curiosities or props. The people whose faces appear in these masks were real. They had families, lives, and stories. The masks have a quiet dignity that the lesson should respect. Use precise language: 'death mask', 'life mask', 'cast', 'plaster', 'mould'. Avoid horror-film vocabulary like 'creepy', 'spooky', 'eerie' even if students gravitate to it. The masks are calm objects when treated calmly. Be careful with the L'Inconnue de la Seine story. The traditional story involves the suspected suicide of a young woman by drowning. Tell this honestly without sensationalising. Mention that recent scholarship suggests the mask may not be from a drowned woman at all — this is honest and removes some of the morbid weight from the story. If students seem distressed by any aspect of the topic, slow down and let them talk about it. Be aware that some students may have lost loved ones recently. Death is a sensitive topic. The lesson should not feel like a forced confrontation with mortality. It should feel like a thoughtful exploration of a historical practice, with respect for both the dead and the living. Be balanced about the uses of death masks. They were used for memorial (positive), for art (mostly positive), and for the pseudo-science of phrenology (negative — it was used to justify racism and prejudice). Mention all three. Do not romanticise the death mask tradition; do not condemn it. It existed, it had complex uses, it has mostly ended. Be respectful of CPR and Resusci Anne. The CPR training that uses Anne's face has helped save millions of lives. This is genuinely good. Mention it with appropriate seriousness. The fact that the face originally belonged to a young person who probably died young adds layers, but does not undo the lifesaving work. Be careful about the photograph showing Napoleon's death mask. It is the calm, closed face of a dead man. Some students will find it striking; some may find it slightly disturbing. Treat it matter-of-factly. The face is preserved; the man has been gone for 200 years; we look at the record with respect. Be respectful of religious and cultural traditions around death. Different communities have very different practices. The European death mask is one tradition. Other traditions — open coffins, cremation, sky burial, photography of the dead, family altars with images — are equally valid responses to the same human reality. Mention this without going into detail. Avoid jokes about CPR mannequins or 'kissing the most kissed face'. The phrasing is sometimes used jokingly online, but it can feel disrespectful when applied to a young person who probably died young. Mention the CPR connection respectfully. The mannequin has saved real lives. Finally, end the lesson on the present. Death masks are mostly historical, but the questions they asked — what do we keep when someone dies? — are still asked today, in new forms. The story continues.
Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about the death mask tradition.
What is a death mask, and how is one made?
When and where was the death mask tradition strongest?
Who is L'Inconnue de la Seine, and why is her death mask famous?
How did L'Inconnue's face become connected to CPR training?
Why did the death mask tradition decline in the 20th century?
These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.
Different cultures keep different things to remember the dead. What does your community keep, and what does this say about how we remember?
L'Inconnue de la Seine never agreed to have her face cast or used. Is the way her face has been used over 130 years a kind of exploitation, or a kind of immortality?
If you could have a death mask of any historical person, which one would you choose, and why?
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