Scatomancy

Scatomancy is the reading of a person's fortune by examining their bodily excrement, or by examining those of an animal. It is also known as spatalomancy, spatilomancy, copromancy, and spatalamancy.

Definition

Scatomancy is literally "divination by excrement".[1] The process by which excrement is scrutinized is referred to in modern medical terminology as a stool test (or, rarely, "scatoscopy"[2]) and is used to detect many conditions including some varieties of cancer.

History

In ancient times scatomancers were often influential members of their community called upon to assist in medical diagnosis and trial by ordeal.[3] In one of scatomancy's forms, popular in ancient Egypt, kleptoparasitic dung beetles were employed. These insects were held sacred and immortalized by the Egyptians. They shape, roll and weave dung balls as a sexual display and courtship attractor. The beetles speed and behavior, as well as the appearance of the dung balls, were all taken into consideration for the prognostications.

The examination of feces and urine by physicians and folk medicine practitioners has also been performed since ancient times. Medicine men and women were knowledgeable on it, and made predictions as well as diagnoses from feces examination, resembling today's medical professionals and laboratories.

References

  1. "scatomancy definition | Dictionary.com". dictionary.reference.com. Archived from the original on 2009-03-05.
  2. "scatoscopy, n.". OED Online. September 2021. Oxford University Press. https://www.oed.com/view/Entry/172147 (accessed September 30, 2021).
  3. "Dung and excrement and ordure and filth and feces and coprophilia and coprophagous and scatological and scatology". Archived from the original on 2009-06-28. Retrieved 2009-04-05.

Further reading

  • Dictionary of the Occult. Caxton Publishing
  • Dunwich, Gerina. A Wiccan's Guide to Prophecy and Divination. Carol Publishing Group
  • Pickover, Clifford A.. Dreaming the Future: The Fantastic Story of Prediction. Prometheus Books
  • Spence, Lewis. An Encyclopedia of Occultism. Carol Publishing Group
  • Walker, Charles. The Encyclopedia of the Occult. Random House Value
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