Caput Mortuum

Chambers's Encyclopaedia, Volume 2: Beaugency to Cataract, p. 750

Caput Mortuum (Lat., 'dead head'), a phrase used by the old chemists for the residuum of chemicals after the volatile substances had escaped. It is still used metaphorically for a thing or institution which has been really destroyed though the form is left, the essence and valuable characters having been removed.

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