WARNING: Some of the following images are graphic and may be upsetting. 
In 1790 the astute surgeon Everard  Home wrote of ‘a species of lusus naturae so unaccountable,  that, I believe, no similar instance is to be found upon record’. He  was writing of the Boy of Bengal after observing drawings and  collecting and reviewing the accounts of several of his peers. 
The Two-Headed Boy of Bengal was born in the  village  of Mundul Gait in Bengal in May of 1783 into a poor farming  family. His remarkable life was very nearly extinguished immediately  after his delivery as a terrified midwife tried to destroy the infant by  throwing him into a fire.  
Miraculously, while he was  rather badly burned about the eye, ear and upper head, he managed to  survive. His parents began to exhibit him in Calcutta, where he  attracted a great deal of attention and earned the family a fair amount  of money. While the large crowds gathered to see the Two-Headed Boy his  parents took to covering the lad with a sheet and often kept him  hidden – sometimes for hours at a time and often in darkness.
 As  his fame spread across India, so did the caliber of his observers.  Several noblemen, civil servants and city officials arranged to showcase  the boy in their own homes for both private gatherings and grand galas –  treating their guests to up close examinations.  One of  these observers was a Colonel Pierce who described the encounter to the  President of the Royal Society, Sir Joseph Banks and it was Sir Banks  who later forwarded the account to the surgeon Everard Home.
The term  ‘Two-Headed’ may be a bit misleading as rather that two heads side by  side, the Boy actually had head atop the other. When compared to the  average child, both heads were of an appropriate size and development.  The second head sat atop the main head inverted and simply ended in a  neck-like stump. The second head seemed to, at times, function  independently from the main head. When the boy cried or  smiled the features of the second head did not always match. Yet, when  the main head was fed, the second head would produce saliva. 
Furthermore,  if the second head was presented with a breast to suckle – it would  attemp to do so. While the main head was well formed the  secondary head did posses some irregularities. The eyes and  ears were underdeveloped. The tongue was small and the jaw  malformed but both were capable of motion. When the Boy  slept, the secondary head would often be observed alert and awake – eyes  darting about.
Despite the attention the Boy of Bengal  received, none of it was medical in nature. There were no  intensive first hand medical examinations of the Boy on record and the  vast majority of the press attention given to the Boy focused no on his  condition, but rather his ‘freakish’ appearance. The Boy,  who seemed to suffer no serious ill effects in relation to his  condition, died at the age of four from a cobra bite. It  was only then, after much unseemly business, that medicine was able to  examine the case.
The Boy was buried near the Boopnorain   River, outside the city of Tumloch but the grave was soon robbed by Mr.  Dent, a salt agent for the East India Company. He dissected the  putrefied body himself and gave the skull to a Captain Buchanan of the  East Indian Company. Buchanan brought the skull to England, where it  ended up in the hands of his close friend- Everard Home. 
When Mr. Dent had dissected the heads he  discovered that the brains were separate and distinct.  Each brain was also enveloped in its proper coverings and it  appeared as though both brains received the nutrition required to  sustain life and thought. The skull of the Boy of Bengal can still be  seen at the Hunterian  Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons of  London.
The classification of this condition is today  known as Craniopagus parasiticus and technically falls under  the category of parasitic  twins however many of the early naturalists have attempted to  classify the Bengal case as a case of conjoined  twins due to the signs of independent life given by the  secondary head.
Previous to 1783 teratology texts listed no  fewer that eight suspected cases of  Craniopagus  parasiticus however the Boy of Bengal case is not only the           earliest well documented account, but also the first account of such a  case surviving past infancy.   
Recently on December 10,  2003, Rebeca Martínez was born in the Dominican   Republic with this  rare condition and she was also the first baby born with the condition  to undergo a surgical removal of the second head. 
Sadly, Rebeca did not survive the  11-hour operation and died on February   7, 2004. 
                                                             X-ray of Rebeca Martinez's skull
 On February 19, 2005, Manar and Islaam Maged–  also born with the same condition- underwent a successful 13-hour  surgery in Egypt, but tragically, they died on March 25, 2006 due to repeated infection. 
"She [Manar] was admitted to hospital in a very bad way," said  Abla el-Alfy, a consultant paediatrician involved in her care. 
"She had a very severe infection in the brain and she  wasn't able to fight it." 
Doctors at the Benha Children's Hospital had regarded the  fact that Manar survived the initial 13-hour operation as a success. 
Her condition improved after the surgery, but she  continued to suffer regular  infections, Mr Alfy told Reuters news  agency. 
The second head [Islaam] contained eyes, a nose and a mouth, but  was not connected to any internal organs and whether it was capable of  independent thought is unclear. 
Islaam could smile, blink, cry, and tried to  suckle   but never developed a full body (only a small remnant), or lungs and  heart, and instead was dependent on oxygen and nutrients provided by  Manar.  
                                                                   10 month old Manar Maged
                                                          Manar post surgery. 
Adapted from Jan  Bondeson’s book: The   Two Headed Boy 
Information taken from  BBC news  Sunday,  26 March 2006, 22:11  GMT 23:11 UK       
images : 1. Hunterian Museum at The Royal College of Surgeons (London) 2. Postcard from the Hunterian Museum of London 3. Hand drawings of the Boy of Bengal by Mr. Smith 4. Hand-colour drawings of The Boy of Bengal by Mr Dent. 5. www.oprah.com/oprahshow/Its-a-Miracle 6. USA Today news 2004.
 d 

Oh man.
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