The man that was buried was a confectionery salesman named Roland Ohisson. Though this might be what his family wanted for him in his dying wishes he asked to be buried actually in a chocolate coffin. Sounds fun right!? But the question that lingers with me is that what if the coffin melted it couldn't be just of chocolate could it? Could the body decomposing survive? I thought this would one thing that the builders thought most about but they seemed to have no problem in all the reserches I've made saying it was ALL out of chocolate! yum yum yum...
He built it for himself to be buried in
The answer to this riddle is a coffin. A coffin is made for a deceased person, who no longer has any need for it. The person who buys the coffin (typically for the deceased) has no use for it themselves. Once someone is buried in the coffin, they can neither see nor feel it.
It seems that Diana was buried in one of the coffins usually used for British Royals: an oak coffin in the shape of a hexagon, possessing an inner liner made of lead.
A coffin made from lead.
The person that made the first chocolate was are you ready for this..........................................................................Garrett Paxton made the first one and ate it!
lousin alberto manocohavin
Stuff
chocolate was made when chocolate was made
The Pope was buried in three coffins, the first of wood, the second of zinc, which is sealed, and the third, external one, which is also made of wood.
Sarcophagus looks like a coffin, but sarcophagus have faces and are painted with bright beautiful colors. Some of them are covered in gold if they were kings.
The French made the chocolate mousse and all the other types of mousses.
You're a coffin, honey. The person who made you doesn't want you, the person who bought you doesn't need you, and the person who uses you sure as heck doesn't know you. It's a dark and twisty little riddle, but hey, that's life for you.