Hanging coffins of Sagada
The tradition of hanging coffins is quite ancient, in China going back to 772 BC, although it is still practiced in some places, such as Sagada on Luzon Island in the Philippines. The reason for hanging coffins varies as much as the cultures that have practiced the burial tradition, ranging from practical reasons to avoid the dead being disturbed, to more spiritual beliefs like bringing the deceased closer to the heavens.
One of the biggest mysteries around the hanging coffins is how exactly they got up there. The ones on Dragon-Tiger Mountain from the Guyue people who lived as early as 2,500 years ago in China and shaped their coffins like ships to reflect the importance of the maritime to their life, weren't even known about until 1978 as they are up at such impossible heights. Some speculate that there were earthen ramps, others that people actually scaled the cliffs with the coffins in tow, although being that most of the coffins are quite hefty as they were carved from single pieces of wood, sometimes big enough to hold ten people, this seems almost impossible.
Sometimes the coffins are nestled into natural caves, other times they were carefully placed on handmade wood beams. Some had more curious rites attached to them, like in Sagada where you had to be both married and have grandchildren to receive the honor, and you carved the coffin yourself before your death, after which your bones were often bent to squeeze inside the narrow space. And in Gongxian in China, they are one of the few remains of the Bo people, who themselves strangely disappeared.
Below are a few photographs of these hanging coffins: